Clinical features and surgical outcomes of primary spinal anaplastic meningioma: a cases series and literature review

Transl Cancer Res. 2023 May 31;12(5):1325-1334. doi: 10.21037/tcr-22-2505. Epub 2023 Apr 7.

Abstract

Background: Primary spinal anaplastic meningioma (PSAM) is a very rare entity in the spinal canal. Therefore, the clinical features, treatment strategy, and long-term outcomes remain poorly studied.

Case description: Clinical data of six patients with PSAM treated at one single institution were retrospectively analyzed and all previously reported cases in the English literature were reviewed. There were three male and three female patients with a median age of 25 years. The duration of symptoms before initial diagnosis ranged from one week to one year. PSAMs occurred at cervical level in four, cervicothoracic in one and thoracolumbar in one. In addition, PSAMs presented isointensity on T1 weighted imaging (WI), hyperintensity on T2WI, and hetero- or homogeneously marked enhancement with contrast. Eight operations were performed in six patients. Simpson II resection was achieved in four (50%), Simpson IV in three (37.5%), Simpson V in one (12.5%). Adjuvant radiotherapy was performed in five patients. With a median survival time of 14 months (4-136 months), three patients had recurrence, two experienced metastases, and four died of respiratory failure.

Conclusions: PSAMs are a rare disease, and there is limited evidence as to the management of these lesions. They may metastasize, recur, and portend a poor prognosis. A close follow-up and further investigation are therefore necessary.

Keywords: Primary spinal anaplastic meningioma (PSAM); World Health Organization (WHO) grade III; case series; malignant meningioma.

Publication types

  • Case Reports