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Neuroradiology

Brain tumour

generic and comprehensive term that includes, from the neuroradiological point of view, all the neoplasias that involve the brain, and not only those originating from the brain tissue or structure.

Many classifications have been proposed for brain tumours (Table 1), mainly based on histological staining and type of cell from which the tumour originates.

Tumors:

  • Embryonal cell carcinoma
  • Yolk sac tumours (endodermal sinus tumours)
  • Choriocarcinoma
  • Teratoma
  • Mixed tumours
  • Pineal cell tumours
  • Pineoblastoma
  • Pineocytoma
  • Other cell tumours
  • Astrocytoma
  • Meningioma
  • Benign pineal cysts
  • Brain tumour, Table 1. Histological classification

    Primary brain tumours
    Glial tumours (gliomas)
    Astrocytomas
    Fibrillary astrocytomas
    Benign astrocytoma
    Anaplastic astrocytoma
    Glioblastoma multiforme
    Pilocytic astrocytoma
    Pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma
    Subependymal giant cell astrocytoma
    Oligodendroglioma
    Ependymal tumours
    Ependymoma (cellular, papillary)
    Anaplastic (malignant) ependymoma
    Myxopapillary ependymoma
    Subependymoma
    Choroid plexus tumours
    Choroid plexus papilloma
    Choroid plexus carcinoma
    Choroid plexus xanthogranulomas
    Nonglial tumours
    Neuronal and mixed neuronal-glial tumours
    Ganglioglioma
    Gangliocytoma
    Lhermitte Duclos disease
    Dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumours (DNETs)
    Central neurocytoma
    Olfactory neuroblastoma (esthesioneuroblastoma)
    Meningeal and mesenchymal tumours
    Meningioma

     

    Brain tumour, Table 2.  (from: Anne Osborn, MD, Diagnostic Neuroradiology. Mosby, S:t Louis, 1994)

    AetiologyProbably congenital
    PresentationLarge, bulky masses (bulging fontanelles)
    Hydrocephalus, macrocrania
    Seizure, focal neurological deficit
    LocationTwo thirds are supratentorial
    Primitive neuroectodermal tumour (PNET)
    Astrocytoma (often anaplastic, Glioblastoma multiforme)
    Teratoma
    Choroid plexus papilloma

     

    From the point of view of the neuroradiological diagnosis, attention should be focused primarily on some major questions that should be answered, in the interest of the best clinical management of the patient, such as:

  • Is there a lesion?

  • Is the space-occupying lesion a tumour, in the sense of a neoplasia, or is it non-neoplastic (abscess, cyst, haemorrhage, etc.)?

  • Where is it located (intra-axial, extra-axial, intraventricular, originating from dura, bone, at the base of the skull, at the vault, on the midine, etc.) (see intra axial tumour, extra axial brain tumour, skull base tumour of)?

  • What is its macroscopic structure (solid, cystic, mixed, haemorrhagic, with calcifications, highly vascularized, etc)?

  • What are its effects on the surrounding structures (infiltration, compression, dislocation, encasement of vessels, etc.)?

  • Is it single or multiple?

  • Is it primary or metastatic?

    All these questions can now be answered relatively easily from the neuropathological and neuroanatomical knowledge provided by MR and CT since imaging abnormalities closely reflect pathological changes. Angiography is nowadays only rarely needed for diagnosis.

    The incidence of primary intracranial tumours in the US is approximately 4,5 per 100,000 people and it is estimated that about 15,000 new cases are diagnosed every year.

    About 80-85% of all intracranial tumours occur in adults, the majority of which are situated in the supratentorial compartment. In the adult, the most common intra-axial supratentorial neoplasm is the glioblastoma (see Glioblastoma multiforme), while metastasis is the most common intra-axial tumour of the posterior fossa. In the paediatric population, the CNS is the second most common site of paediatric neoplasia. Excluding the first year of life and adolescence, the location of intracranial tumours in the paediatric age group is infratentorial in 60-70% of cases, of which 75% involve the cerebellum and 25% reside in the brain stem. Nearly all of these lesions are primary CNS tumours, but the spectrum of histology differs remarkably from that seen in adults (Table 2).

    Brain tumour, Table 2 a. Brain tumour in children less than two years of age.

  • Embryonal tumours
    Neuroblastoma
    Retinoblastoma
    Primitive neuroectodermal tumours (PNET)
    Medulloblastoma (posterior fossa PNET or PNET-MB)
    Cerebral/spinal PNET
    Cranial and spinal nerve tumours
    Schwannoma (neurinoma or neurilemmoma)
    Neurofibroma
    Malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumours (MP-NSTs)
    Haemopoietic neoplasms
    Lymphoma
    Leukaemia (granulocytic sarcoma or "chloroma"
    Plasmacytoma
    Pituitary tumours
    Cysts and tumour-like lesions
    Rathkes cleft cyst
    Dermoid cyst
    Epidermoid cyst
    Colloid cyst
    Enterogenous cyst
    Neuroglial cyst
    Lipoma CNS

    Brain tumour, Table 2 b. Brain tumours in children.

    Incidence15% of all neoplasms in infants and children are intracranial
    PresentationSeizure
    Hydrocephalus, macrocrania
    Nausea, vomiting (posterior fossa)
    Focal neurological deficit (e.g. visual abnormalities with chiasmatic glioma)
    Age
    Miscellaneous (Ganglioglioma, Oligodendroglioma are rare)
    48% infratentorialOne third cerebellar astrocytomas
    One quarter brain stem gliomas
    One quarter medulloblastomas (PNET-MB)
    One eighth ependymomas

    (Data from: Harwood-Nash DC: Primary neoplasms of the central nervous system in children, Cancer 67:1223;1223-1228, 1991.)

    A macroscopic radiological appearance of a brain tumour may vary tremendously according to size, histology and location. The very early intra-axial tumour may be barely detected as a faint T2 hyperintensity on MR and be completely missed on CT, in an adult patient with the first seizure of his life. A glioblastoma may present as a large space-occupying lesion with haemorrhages and necrosis; haemorrhage may, however, be encountered also in benign tumours such as neurinomas or pituitary adenomas (see intratumoral haemorrhage). Some tumours are completely solid, others are mainly cystic, such as pilocytic Astrocytomas or craniopharyngiomas.

    Calcifications may be found in meningiomas, craniopharyngiomas, ependymomas. Some lesions have a unique appearance, such as Lipoma CNS or epidermoid tumour.

    GS

     

    GS