Published in:
01-06-2012 | Case Report
Paediatric clear cell meningioma with multiple distant recurrences after presumed intra-operative cell spread
Authors:
Onno Küster, Jens Schittenhelm, Oliver Schwartz, Richard Meyermann, Martin U. Schuhmann
Published in:
Child's Nervous System
|
Issue 6/2012
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Excerpt
Meningiomas are common neoplasms accounting for 24–30% of all primary intracranial tumours but are rarely seen during childhood [
1]. If there are no signs of atypia, brain invasion or mitotic activity, most tumours are classified as WHO grade I tumours, depending on their histological subtype. However, there are histological variants with known aggressive course such as rhabdoid and papillary meningiomas (WHO grade III) and chordoid and clear cell variants (WHO grade II). Of these, clear cell meningiomas (CCMs) account for 0.2% of all meningiomas, thus being the rarest variant [
2]. They tend to affect both children and young adults (mean age 29 years, range 2–82 years) [
2,
3]. CCMs occur most frequently in the cerebellopontine angle and cauda equina [
1], often show recurrences, occasionally cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) seeding and are generally associated with a more aggressive behaviour [
2]. The risk to develop a higher grade tumour is twice as high for males than for females [
4]. Tumours with a non-skull base location more likely have a WHO grade II or III than skull-based tumours [
4]. …