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Spontaneous Regression Of Pineal Lesions: Ghost Tumor Or Pineal Apoplexy?

Mattogno et al., 2016Brain tumor

Mattogno, P. P., Frassanito, P., Massimi, L., Tamburrini, G., Novello, M., Lauriola, L., & Caldarelli, M. (2016). spontaneous Regression of Pineal Lesions: Ghost Tumor or Pineal Apoplexy?. World neurosurgery, 88, 64–69. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wneu.2015.12.080

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Pineal apoplexy (either hemorrhagic or ischemic) may complicate the course of a tumor at this site. This event usually is characterized by an acute clinical onset and requires emergency surgical management whereas the regression of the lesion is a much rarer outcome. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Three cases of pineal vanishing tumors in the pediatric population are reported and the pertinent literature is reviewed. RESULTS: In one case, radiologic findings were consistent with a diagnosis of pineal cyst, which became symptomatic after a spontaneous hemorrhage. This event may also explain its regression after the treatment of associated hydrocephalus. In the remaining 2 cases, neuroimaging examinations disclosed a solid tumor. One of them regressed after a surgical biopsy, probably because of an ischemic evolution, whereas the last one disappeared without any medical or surgical manipulation. Neither hemorrhage nor ischemia were noticed, thus the mechanism of regression remains controversial. CONCLUSIONS: Vanishing tumors of the pineal region may occur in different circumstances, resulting from absence of any medical and surgical action to minor manipulation of the tumor to obtain a biopsy. This variety may reflect different underlying mechanisms, leading to hemorrhagic or ischemic change of the tumor and its subsequent regression, although radiological imaging may fail to document hemorrhage or ischemia.

Case Details

Disease Location

Pineal gland

Personal Characteristics

3-month-old boy

Clinical Characteristics

Admitted for macrocrania. Normal neurologic examination. Brain ultrasonograph showed a supratentorial hydrocephalus.MRI of the brain disclosed a pineal solid tumor with homogeneous enhancement after gadolinium administration as the cause of hydrocephalus. Endoscopic third ventriculostomy with concomitant biopsy of the tumor was then performed. The histologic findings were consistent with a low-grade glio-neuronal tumor. The postoperative course was uneventful.

Remission Characteristics

According to the benign nature of the tumor, the child was managed with a wait-and-see policy. Brain MRI performed 3 months after endoscopy showed the complete disappearance of the tumor, without recurrence at 10-year follow-up

Treatment & Mechanisms

Proposed Remission Mechanisms

Tumor apoplexy related to ischemia secondary to biopsy

Clinical Treatment

Endoscopic third ventriculostomy with concomitant biopsy of the tumor.

Non-Clinical Treatment

None reported