Clinical Case Reports (Dec 2023)

Recurrent intracranial anaplastic ependymoma with late‐onset giant scalp metastasis

  • Gianluca Scalia,
  • Gianluca Ferini,
  • Bipin Chaurasia,
  • Francesca Graziano,
  • Stefano Priola,
  • Paolo Amico,
  • Giuseppe Emmanuele Umana

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ccr3.8324
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 12
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Key Clinical Message Ependymomas are primary brain tumors that predominantly affect individuals between 0 and 4 years of age. Although ependymomas have a propensity for recurrence and the potential to spread within the central nervous system through cerebrospinal fluid (resulting in drop metastases), reports of extra‐neural metastatic localizations are exceedingly rare in the existing literature. This case report presents a unique and rare instance of recurrent intracranial anaplastic ependymoma with a late‐onset giant scalp metastasis. Abstract A 55‐year‐old male patient with a medical history of partial resection of an atypical supratentorial left temporal ependymoma presented with a recurrent anaplastic ependymoma, which had been managed with surgery and radiotherapy. After a 4‐year follow‐up, the patient developed a subcutaneous mass in the left parietal region of the scalp. A multidisciplinary team of neurosurgeons and plastic surgeons performed a surgical procedure, which included en bloc removal of the scalp lesion, resection of 1 cm of unaffected skin, and craniotomy to address an osteolytic area in the parietal skull bone. Skin autografts were used for reconstruction. Histological examination confirmed metastasis of anaplastic ependymoma in the scalp. After a delay in starting chemotherapy due to concerns related to the COVID‐19 pandemic, the patient eventually initiated chemotherapy, leading to disease stability at a short‐term follow‐up. Scalp metastases from ependymoma are rarely reported in the literature. Management of such cases necessitates aggressive surgical resection, followed by adjuvant chemotherapy and radiotherapy. A multidisciplinary approach is recommended to ensure effective and targeted therapy, with a focus on preserving aesthetics, particularly in pediatric cases.

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