Emergence of a High-Grade Sarcoma in a Recurrent Meningioma: Malignant Progression or Collision Tumor?

Anaplastic meningiomas that resemble sarcomas often reveal clues to their meningothelial differentiation or develop in a plausible setting that confirms their meningothelial origin. Malignant mesenchymal neoplasms without obvious evidence of meningothelial differentiation or origin are more likely t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Archives of pathology & laboratory medicine (1976) 2011-07, Vol.135 (7), p.935-940
Hauptverfasser: Oz, Buge, Pekmezci, Melike, Dashti, Reza, Karaman, Kutlay, Kuday, Cengiz, Tihan, Tarik
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container_issue 7
container_start_page 935
container_title Archives of pathology & laboratory medicine (1976)
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creator Oz, Buge
Pekmezci, Melike
Dashti, Reza
Karaman, Kutlay
Kuday, Cengiz
Tihan, Tarik
description Anaplastic meningiomas that resemble sarcomas often reveal clues to their meningothelial differentiation or develop in a plausible setting that confirms their meningothelial origin. Malignant mesenchymal neoplasms without obvious evidence of meningothelial differentiation or origin are more likely to be true primary or metastatic sarcomas. Because of their clinical and biological differences, it is important to distinguish anaplastic meningioma from a sarcoma. We present a 67-year-old woman with multiple meningiomas, who developed a high-grade spindle cell tumor 6 months after the resection of a World Health Organization grade I meningioma. It was not clear whether this tumor represented a malignant transformation of meningioma or a primary sarcoma. Malignant transformation of a meningioma is exceptional within this short period and a coexisting sarcoma and meningioma are equally uncommon. Even though these malignant neoplasms are rare in general, they appear to be more prevalent in patients with multiple meningiomas including those with neurofibromatosis type 2.
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source Allen Press Journals; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals
subjects Brain cancer
Breast cancer
Criminal investigation
Development and progression
Magnetic resonance imaging
Medical prognosis
Meningioma
Metastasis
Nervous system
Radiation therapy
Sarcoma
Stem cells
Tomography
Tumors
title Emergence of a High-Grade Sarcoma in a Recurrent Meningioma: Malignant Progression or Collision Tumor?
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