AI Article Synopsis

  • Ependymomas are unusual tumors that typically contain pigments like melanin or lipofuscin; a case study reports on a pigmented ependymoma in a 46-year-old woman who experienced symptoms such as hearing loss and headaches.
  • The tumor, found in the fourth ventricle, showed distinct histological features, including pigmented cells resembling macrophages, and was ultimately diagnosed as a type of ependymoma with favorable characteristics.
  • A review of 17 cases indicates that pigmented ependymomas are predominantly seen in middle-aged patients, primarily located in the fourth ventricle, with a generally good prognosis, although one case resulted in patient death due to complications.

Article Abstract

Ependymomas have rarely been described to contain pigment other than melanin, neuromelanin, lipofuscin or a combination. In this case report, we present a pigmented ependymoma in the fourth ventricle of an adult patient and review 16 additional cases of pigmented ependymoma from the literature. A 46-year-old female showed up with hearing loss, headaches, and nausea. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a 2.5 cm contrast-enhancing cystic mass in the fourth ventricle, which was resected. Intraoperatively, the tumor appeared grey-brown, cystic, and was adherent to the brainstem. Routine histology revealed a tumor with true rosettes, perivascular pseudorosettes and ependymal canals consistent with ependymoma, but also showed chronic inflammation and abundant distended pigmented tumor cells that mimicked macrophages in frozen and permanent sections. The pigmented cells were positive for GFAP and negative for CD163 consonant with glial tumor cells. The pigment was negative for Fontana-Masson, positive for Periodic-acid Schiff and autofluorescent, which coincide with characteristics of lipofuscin. Proliferation indices were low and H3K27me3 showed partial loss. H3K27me 3 is an epigenetic modification to the DNA packaging protein Histone H3 that indicates the tri-methylation of lysine 27 on histone H3 protein. This methylation classification was compatible with a posterior fossa group B ependymoma (EPN_PFB). The patient was clinically well without recurrence at three-month post-operative follow-up appointment. Our analysis of all 17 cases, including the one presented, shows that pigmented ependymomas are most common in the middle-aged with a median age of 42 years and most have a favorable outcome. However, one patient that also developed secondary leptomeningeal melanin accumulations died. Most (58.8%) arise in the 4th ventricle, while spinal cord (17.6%) and supratentorial locations (17.6%) were less common. The age of presentation and generally good prognosis raise the question of whether most other posterior fossa pigmented ependymomas may also fall into the EPN_PFB group, but additional study is required to address that question.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10240947PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.17879/freeneuropathology-2022-4076DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

pigmented ependymoma
12
case report
8
methylation classification
8
fourth ventricle
8
tumor cells
8
posterior fossa
8
pigmented ependymomas
8
pigmented
7
tumor
5
ependymoma tumor
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!