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http://dx.doi.org/10.3340/jkns.2015.0707.011

Collision Tumor Composed of Meningioma and Cavernoma  

Weigel, Jens (Department of Neurosurgery, Paracelsus Medical University, General Hospital Nuremberg)
Neher, Markus (Department of Neurosurgery, Paracelsus Medical University, General Hospital Nuremberg)
Schrey, Michael (Department of Neurosurgery, Paracelsus Medical University, General Hospital Nuremberg)
Wunsch, Peter H. (Institute of Pathology, Paracelsus Medical University, General Hospital Nuremberg)
Steiner, Hans-Herbert (Department of Neurosurgery, Paracelsus Medical University, General Hospital Nuremberg)
Publication Information
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society / v.60, no.1, 2017 , pp. 102-107 More about this Journal
Abstract
A true collision tumor is a rare entity composed of two histologically distinct neoplasms coinciding in the same organ. This paper reports a unique case of cerebral collision tumor consisting of two benign components. On the first hand, meningioma which is usually a benign lesion arising from the meningothelial cell in the arachnoidal membrane. On the other, cerebral cavernoma which is a well-circumscribed, benign vascular hamartoma within the brain. To our knowledge, there is no previously documented case of cerebral collision tumor consisting of two benign components. A 56-year-old Caucasian male suffered in 2002 from an atypical meningioma WHO $II^{\circ}$ located in the left lateral ventricle. Three years after the tumor extirpation, the patient suffered from a hematoma in the fourth ventricle due to a recurrently haemorrhaged cavernoma. In 2008, a recurrence of the tumor in the left lateral ventricle was discovered. Additionally, another tumor located in the quadrigeminal lamina was detected. After surgical resection of the tumor in the left lateral ventricle, the pathological examination confirmed the diagnosis of a collision tumor consisting of components of a meningioma WHO $II^{\circ}$ and a cavernoma. Postoperatively, no adjuvant treatment was needed and no tumor recurrence is discovered up to the present. A possible explanation for the collision of those two different tumors may be migration of tumor cells mediated by the cerebrospinal fluid. After 5-years of follow-up, there is no sign of any tumor recurrence; therefore, surgical tumor removal without adjuvant therapy seems to be the treatment of choice.
Keywords
Collision tumor; Meningioma; Cavernoma; Tumor intraventricular;
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