Solitary vertebral metastatic glioblastoma in the absence of primary brain tumor relapse: a case report and literature review

Background Metastatic glioblastoma presenting as a solitary osteolytic cervical vertebral mass without primary brain tumor relapse is extremely rare with only 1 reported case in the literature. Because of its rarity, it can be easily overlooked and misdiagnosed, posing a diagnostic dilemma. Case presentation A 51-year-old man with right temporal glioblastoma was initially treated by tumor resection, radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Eighteen months after surgery, he was readmitted with complaints of neck pain for 2 weeks. Follow-up magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) revealed a solitary FDG-avid osteolytic lesion in the 4th cervical vertebral body without other abnormal FDG-uptake in the body and in the absence of local recurrence at the resection cavity. Because of the sudden worsening situation and intractable neck pain, the patient underwent tumor resection. Postoperatively, the pain was obviously reduced and the situation was improved. Interestingly, the immunohistochemical findings of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) indicated the characteristic of metastatic glioblastoma, despite that the histopathological findings of Hematoxylin & Eosin (H&E) staining was suspicious of osteoclastoma. According to the clinical history, imaging findings, pathological and immunohistochemical results, a final diagnosis of solitary vertebral metastasis from glioblastoma without central nervous system (CNS) relapse was confirmed. Then, the patient received radiotherapy on spine and adjuvant chemotherapy with temozolomide. However, he died suddenly 2 months after the tumor resection, nearly 21 months after the initial diagnosis. Conclusion We emphasize that metastatic glioblastoma should be considered in the differential diagnosis of a solitary FDG-avid osteolytic vertebral mass on PET/CT. And the diagnosis of extracranial metastasis (ECM) from glioblastoma can be achieved through clinical history, imaging findings, pathological examination, and immunohistochemical staining with GFAP.

[1]  J. J. Bernstein,et al.  Glioblastoma Cells Do Not Intravasate into Blood Vessels: 124 , 1995, Neurosurgery.

[2]  P. Zhen,et al.  Single Vertebra Tuberculosis Presenting with Solitary Localized Osteolytic Lesion in Young Adult Lumbar Spines , 2013, Orthopaedic surgery.

[3]  G. Sutherland,et al.  High levels of gelatinase-B and active gelatinase-A in metastatic glioblastoma , 2004, Journal of Neuro-Oncology.

[4]  P. Beauchesne Extra-Neural Metastases of Malignant Gliomas: Myth or Reality? , 2011, Cancers.

[5]  J. Egelhoff,et al.  Glioblastoma multiforme presenting as osteoblastic metastatic disease: case report and review of the literature. , 1990, AJNR. American journal of neuroradiology.

[6]  E. Chao,et al.  Metastatic Bone Disease: A Study of the Surgical Treatment of 166 Pathologic Humeral and Femoral Fractures , 1990, Clinical orthopaedics and related research.

[7]  K. Fujii,et al.  Glioblastoma multiforme metastasis to the axis. Case report. , 2005, Journal of neurosurgery.

[8]  S. An Aneurysmal bone cyst of the mandible managed by conservative surgical therapy with preoperative embolization , 2012, Imaging science in dentistry.

[9]  C. Patel,et al.  18F-FDG PET/CT demonstrating primary bone lymphoma of the extremities mimicking an inflammatory peripheral arthropathy. , 2015, Clinical nuclear medicine.

[10]  R. Mirimanoff,et al.  Radiotherapy plus concomitant and adjuvant temozolomide for glioblastoma. , 2005, The New England journal of medicine.

[11]  Hiroaki Nakamura,et al.  Eosinophilic granuloma presenting with local osteolysis in an adult lumbar spine , 2008, Journal of Clinical Neuroscience.

[12]  Mahlon D. Johnson,et al.  Glioblastoma multiforme in skin: a report of 2 cases and review of the literature. , 2008, The American Journal of dermatopathology.

[13]  H. Sugiura,et al.  Prognostic factors and a scoring system for patients with skeletal metastasis. , 2005, The Journal of bone and joint surgery. British volume.

[14]  F. Giangaspero,et al.  Extra Central Nervous System Metastases from Cerebral Glioblastoma Multiforme in Elderly Patients. Clinico-Pathological Remarks on our Series of Seven Cases and Critical Review of the Literature , 2008, Tumori.

[15]  J. Y. Kim,et al.  PET/CT in Benign and Malignant Musculoskeletal Tumors and Tumor-Like Conditions , 2014, Seminars in Musculoskeletal Radiology.

[16]  M. Wada,et al.  Solitary plasmacytoma of the spine associated with neurological complications , 1998, Spinal Cord.

[17]  G. Gao,et al.  Occipital anaplastic oligodendroglioma with multiple organ metastases after a short clinical course: a case report and literature review , 2014, Diagnostic Pathology.

[18]  R. Erlemann Imaging and differential diagnosis of primary bone tumors and tumor-like lesions of the spine. , 2006, European journal of radiology.

[19]  A. Sloan,et al.  Extracranial metastasis of gliobastoma: Three illustrative cases and current review of the molecular pathology and management strategies. , 2015, Molecular and clinical oncology.

[20]  A. Taghian,et al.  Growth and metastatic behavior of five human glioblastomas compared with nine other histological types of human tumor xenografts in SCID mice. , 1995, Journal of neurosurgery.

[21]  T. Tamiya,et al.  Glioblastoma with metastasis to the spleen--case report. , 2003, Neurologia medico-chirurgica.

[22]  G. Carrera,et al.  Scintigraphic Skeletal “Doughnut” Sign Due to Giant Cell Tumor of the Fibula , 1984, Clinical nuclear medicine.

[23]  Z. Smith,et al.  Primary bony non-Hodgkin lymphoma of the cervical spine: a case report , 2010, Journal of medical case reports.

[24]  A. Grosu,et al.  Extensive local and systemic therapy in extraneural metastasized glioblastoma multiforme. , 2006, Anticancer research.

[25]  S. Gautam,et al.  The natural history of extracranial metastasis from glioblastoma multiforme , 2011, Journal of Neuro-Oncology.

[26]  S Paget,et al.  THE DISTRIBUTION OF SECONDARY GROWTHS IN CANCER OF THE BREAST. , 1889 .

[27]  C. Bettegowda,et al.  Extraneural Glioblastoma Multiforme Vertebral Metastasis. , 2016, World neurosurgery.

[28]  Hilde van der Togt,et al.  Publisher's Note , 2003, J. Netw. Comput. Appl..

[29]  F. Piedimonte,et al.  Bone Metastases from Secondary Glioblastoma Multiforme: A Case Report , 2001, Journal of Neuro-Oncology.

[30]  A. Vital,et al.  Subcutaneous tumoral seeding from a glioblastoma following stereotactic biopsy: case report and review of the literature. , 2005, Clinical neuropathology.

[31]  Biologic characterization of a secondary glioblastoma with extracranial progression and systemic metastasis. , 2003, Neuro-oncology.

[32]  C. Shieff,et al.  Metastasis to and from the central nervous system--the 'relatively protected site'. , 2002, The Lancet. Oncology.

[33]  P. Wen,et al.  Systemic Metastasis in Glioblastoma May Represent the Emergence of Neoplastic Subclones , 2000, Journal of neuropathology and experimental neurology.

[34]  A. Rademaker,et al.  Metastatic glioblastoma: case presentations and a review of the literature , 2012, Journal of Neuro-Oncology.

[35]  J. Renner,et al.  The hypermetabolic giant: 18F-FDG avid giant cell tumor identified on PET-CT. , 2014, Journal of radiology case reports.

[36]  K. Tomita,et al.  Surgical Strategy for Spinal Metastases , 2001, Spine.

[37]  R. Mansberg,et al.  False Positive F-18 FDG PET/CT of Skeletal Metastasis Due to Solitary Eosinophilic Granuloma , 2013, Molecular imaging and radionuclide therapy.

[38]  F. Gannon,et al.  From the archives of AFIP. Imaging of giant cell tumor and giant cell reparative granuloma of bone: radiologic-pathologic correlation. , 2001, Radiographics : a review publication of the Radiological Society of North America, Inc.

[39]  M. Juweid,et al.  Capillary Hemangioma as an Unusual Cause of Doughnut Sign on Bone Scan. , 2018, Clinical nuclear medicine.

[40]  S. Reske,et al.  Grading of tumors and tumorlike lesions of bone: evaluation by FDG PET. , 2000, Journal of nuclear medicine : official publication, Society of Nuclear Medicine.