A Case of Metastatic Choriocarcinoma With Intracerebral Hemorrhage Caused by a Ruptured Pseudoaneurysm

Cureus. 2023 Feb 1;15(2):e34522. doi: 10.7759/cureus.34522. eCollection 2023 Feb.

Abstract

A rare cause of cerebral hemorrhage is the metastasis of choriocarcinoma from gynecology. Herein, we report a case of a patient with brain metastasis of choriocarcinoma with cerebral hemorrhage. A 14-year-old female who had undergone surgery for a hydatidiform molar pregnancy presented with a disturbance of consciousness due to cerebral hemorrhage. Imaging studies revealed the presence of a cerebral aneurysm and several mass lesions in the lung field, and high serum beta-human chorionic gonadotropin level was confirmed. Thus, we suspected cerebral hemorrhage caused by brain metastasis of choriocarcinoma. She went into a coma, and an emergency craniotomy was performed to remove the hematoma and aneurysm. The pathology of the aneurysm was pseudoaneurysm due to the rupture of the vascular wall caused by increasing metastatic cells from choriocarcinoma in the cerebrovascular wall. Therefore, multidrug chemotherapy was immediately initiated. The choriocarcinoma, including the metastatic lesions, is in remission. To improve the outcome of choriocarcinoma, it must be diagnosed early, and treatment should be immediately started. Moreover, neurosurgeons should be aware of such diseases and consider them as one of the differential diagnoses, particularly in females of reproductive age with cerebral hemorrhage.

Keywords: choriocarcinoma; intracerebral hemorrhage; intracerebral metastasis; metastatic choriocarcinoma; pseudoaneurysm; ruptured pseudoaneurysm; uncommon stroke.

Publication types

  • Case Reports