Radiology Case Reports (Jun 2020)

Desmoid fibromatosis following surgical resection of spinal meningioma

  • Bilal Mujtaba, MD,
  • Catherine Call, BS,
  • Fauniel Rowland, BS,
  • Rosario P. Spear, BA,
  • Behrang Amini, MD,
  • Raul Valenzuela, MD,
  • Sameh Nassar, MD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 6
pp. 697 – 701

Abstract

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A 42-year-old female patient with a history of cervicothoracic junction meningioma World Health Organization grade I, resected in early 2011, was admitted to the hospital with intractable headache and lower extremity weakness. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed an epidural mass compressing the spinal cord at the prior surgical site, which was interpreted as recurrent meningioma. Following surgical resection, histopathological analysis revealed desmoid fibromatosis (desmoid tumor). In retrospect, dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging performed prior to surgery should have allowed for prospective exclusion of meningioma as the recurrent mass and suggested an alternative diagnosis such as post-traumatic desmoid fibromatosis or the need for biopsy to confirm diagnosis.

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