Radiology Case Reports (Nov 2024)

Giant metastatic mixed-type spinal ependymoma presenting with hydrocephalus

  • Anass Benomar, MD, MSc,
  • Abdelhakim Khellaf, MD,
  • Lynda Kadi, MD,
  • José Ferreira, MD,
  • Pascal Lavergne, MD,
  • François Bergeron, MD,
  • Mathieu Laroche, MD, MSc

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 11
pp. 4751 – 4754

Abstract

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Ependymomas are rare nervous system tumors that can arise anywhere in the neuraxis. While having a high propensity for leptomeningeal dissemination, retrograde dissemination (from the spine to the CNS) remains infrequent. We describe the case of a 31-year-old female who presented with hydrocephalus secondary to an intracranial leptomeningeal metastasis of a giant spinal ependymoma with mixed (classic and myxopapillary) histopathologic features, successfully treated with surgical resection and radiotherapy of the entire neuraxis. This case highlights the importance of including ependymomas in the differential diagnosis for lesions in atypical extra-axial locations, of systematically obtaining imaging of the entire neuraxis when suspecting it, and of considering retrograde dissemination when both intracranial and spinal lesions are present.

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