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Pilocytic Astrocytoma

  • Background:
    • Pilocytic astrocytoma (PA) is the most common pediatric glioma and the most common pediatric cerebellar neoplasm.
    • The tumor is most often WHO grade I, with a high 10-year survival rate of over 90%.
    • Many PAs have abnormalities in the Ras/RAF/MAPK/ERK pathway, as did this tumor, which contained an ERC2-RAF1 translocation.
  • Clinical Presentation:
    • Most (75%) PAs present in the first 2 decades, therefore making the age of this patient slightly older than usual.
    • Symptoms are reflective of tumor location. For example, tumors within the cerebellum often cause headache, hydrocephalus, truncal ataxia, gait disturbance, and appendicular dysmetria.
  • Key Diagnostic Features:
    • This particular case of pilocytic astrocytoma is atypical in that the tumor is both completely solid and nonenhancing. However, certain features are helpful in arriving at the correct diagnosis.
    • First, the cerebellar hemisphere is one of the most common locations of PAs (the other being vermis).
    • Lack of surrounding edema and well-demarcated, smooth margins are typical, reflecting the benign behavior of the tumor.
    • Characteristic hyperintensity on T2 sequence and lack of diffusion restriction due to low cellularity also provide clues to the low tumor grade.
    • Unfortunately, the calcification seen in this case is not particularly helpful; one study of 80 PAs found a calcification rate of only 14%.
  • Differential Diagnoses:
    • Due to the unusual appearance of this PA, the standard differential does not apply. Instead, the differential should include:
      • nonenhancing, solid masses of the cerebellum, such as subependymoma (rarely intraparenchymal)
      • low-grade astrocytomas, such as diffuse fibrillary astrocytoma (more often supratentorial)
      • hamartoma: seen in patients with tuberous sclerosis or neurofibromatosis 1
      • dysplastic cerebellar gangliocytoma: thickened cerebellar folia with “tigroid” pattern, plus characteristic clinical syndromes
      • ganglioglioma: more likely to have cystic change and enhancement)
  • Treatment:
    • Surgical resection is usually curative.
    • Radiation and/or chemotherapy is used for tumors of the hypothalamic region or optic chiasm and for recurrent or disseminated tumors, which are rare.
July 6, 2017

A 23-year-old man with recurrent headaches associated with photophobia. Additional symptoms include a mildly unsteady gait and intermittent tingling of the hands and feet.

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