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P.073 Spontaneous fluctuation of contrast enhancement in adult pilocytic astrocytoma and other low-grade brain tumors

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 May 2024

T Rohringer
Affiliation:
(Toronto)*
SK Ong
Affiliation:
(Toronto)
AF Gao
Affiliation:
(Toronto)
P Alcaide-Leon
Affiliation:
(Toronto)
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Abstract

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Background: Pilocytic astrocytoma and other circumscribed low-grade brain tumors can exhibit spontaneous enhancement changes despite stable size and clinical status. We aimed to describe this phenomenon in adults. Methods: We performed a retrospective review of our MRI database (2011-2021) to identify cases with enhancement changes in otherwise stable tumors. We searched for reports containing: “pilocytic”, “pilomyxoid”, “RGNT”, “rosette”, “glioneuronal”, “DNET”, and “dysembryoplastic”. Exclusion criteria included WHO grade 3/4 tumors, patients <19 years, equivocal diagnostic findings, and no serial MRIs. We reviewed 238 patients. Results: We identified 12 adult patients with the desired phenomenon: 6 pilocytic astrocytoma, 1 pilomyxoid astrocytoma, 2 rosette-forming glioneuronal tumor, 1 unverified low-grade glioma, and 2 cases without biopsy. Seven were untreated, while five were residual or recurrent tumors. Six showed a pattern of new/increasing and subsequent decreasing/disappearing enhancement over 1-4 years. One exhibited spontaneous regression of enhancement over 1 year. Five showed repeating cycles of increasing and decreasing enhancement over longer monitoring periods of 7-15 years, with mean duration of increasing enhancement prior to decline of 21.4 months (SD 5.9). Conclusions: Spontaneous contrast enhancement fluctuation in adult pilocytic astrocytoma and other circumscribed low-grade brain tumors can occur, and on its own should not be misconstrued as evidence of tumor progression/regression.

Type
Abstracts
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Canadian Neurological Sciences Federation