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Neurocirugía - Linfomas primarios del sistema nervioso central en pacientes immunocompetentes

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Neurocirugía

versión impresa ISSN 1130-1473

Neurocirugía v.17 n.1 Murcia feb. 2006

http://dx.doi.org/10.4321/S1130-14732006000100006 

 

 

Primary central nervous system lymphomas in immunocompetent patients

Linfomas primarios del sistema nervioso central en pacientes immunocompetentes

 

 

T. Alécio-Mattei; J. Alécio-Mattei; P.H. Aguiar and *R. Ramina

Pinheiros Neurosurgery Clinic. São Paulo. Brazil. *Institute of Neurology Curitiba. Brazil

Correspondence

 

 


ABSTRACT

Objectives. Primary central nervous system lymphoma (PCNSL) is a rare pathology and is most often seen in immunodeficient patients. This article presents our casuistic of PCNSL in immunocompetent patients and make a literature review on this issue with focus on recent advances, investigations, and controversies in diagnosis and management of this pathology.
Matherial and methods
. Nine patients operated in the last years in our clinics are analysed in relation to sex, age, time of symptoms, procedures and adjuvant treatment. Posteriorly the results are compared with those in the preview literature.
Results
. The age ranged from 44-68 years (middle of 66 years); 62,5% of the patients were female. The mean time of symptoms, when the diagnostic was made, was 3.2 months (range 1-6 months). The most common symptoms were hemiparesis (present in 75% of the patients) headache (37.5%) seizures (25%) and ataxia (25%). The most common localization was the parietal, frontal and temporal lobe surface with 25% of the patients for each localization. Five patients (50%) were treated with stereotactic biopsy, three with surgery (37.5%) and one (12.5%) with both of them. Five patients (62,5%) were submitted to pos-operative radiotherapy as adjuvant treatment. In relation to the hystology, the most common cell type was Difuse B Cells.
Conclusions
. This study demonstrated that complete surgical ressection followed by radiotherapy have shown good results. In opposition to the literature, the authors regard chemotherapy as a secondary line treatment and recommend its use only in some selected cases.

Key words: Brain lymphoma. Immunocompetent. Malignant lymphoma. PCNLS


RESUMEN

Objetivos. En este trabajo presentamos nuestra casuística de linfomas cerebrales primarios en pacientes immunocompetentes comparandolo con los datos previos de la literatura, con especial enfoque en los recientes avaces, investigaciones, y controversias acerca del diagnóstico y manejo terapéutico de estas patologías.
Material y método
. Nueve pacientes operados el año pasado en nuestra clínica con diagnóstico de PCNLS son analizados en relación al sexo, edad, tiempo de sintomatología, procedimientos y tratamiento. Posteriormente, los resultados son comparados con los de la literatura.
Resultados
. La edad varió entre 44-68 años (media de 60,6 años); 62,5% de los pacientes fueron del sexo femenino; el tiempo medio de duración de los síntomas antes del diagnóstico de la enfermedad varió de 1-6 meses, con un rango medio de 3,2 meses. Los síntomas clínicos más frecuentes fueron : hemiparesia (75%), cefalea (37,5), crisis convulsivas (25%) y ataxia (25%). Las localizaciones predominaron en las superficies de los lóbulos parietal, temporal y frontal con un 25% para cada una de las localizaciones citadas. Cinco pacientes (50%) fueron tratados con biopsia estereotáxica, tres con cirugía (37.5%) y uno (12.5%) con ambas. Cinco pacientes (62,5%) fueron sometidos a radioterapia postoperatoria como tratamiento adyuvante. En relación con el tipo histológico predominó el linfoma de células difusas tipo B.
Conclusiones
. Este estudio demostró que la resección quirúrgica, combinada con biopsia por esterotaxia y la radioterapia dan buenos resultados. Los autores recomiendan la quimioterapia solamente como segunda línea de tratamiento, en pacientes seleccionados.

Palabras clave: Inmunocompetente. Linfomas cerebrales. Linfomas malignos. PCNLS.


 

Introduction

Primary central nervous system lymphoma (PCNSL) is rare and is most oftn seen in inmunodeficient patients. These tumors constitute 0.3-1.5% of all intracranial neoplasms in patients without AIDS26.

The majority are the Non-Hodgkin type and are high grade19. They are mainly B-cell lymphomas (96.4%) were T-cell type tumors3,21. Nevertheless, clinical manifestations, management, and outcome of T-cell lymphoma (3.6% of all PCNSL) are very similar to those of B-cell lymphoma28. Primary Burkitt lymphoma of the CNS in inmunocompetent individuals has rarely been reported19. The CNS lymphomas are associated with other CNS tumours as pontocerebellar angle schwannoma17, anaplastic oligodendrogliomas13.

 

Matherial and methods

Nine patients operated in the last years in our clinics are analysed in relation to sex, age, time of symptoms, procedures and adjuvant treatment. The neuroradiological exams, history of the disease, prescriptions, evolution, surgery report and anatomo-pathological exams are reviewed and analysed. Posteriorly the results are compared with those in the preview literature.

 

Results

The middle age of our series varied from 44-68 years, with a mean age of 60,6 years. The female sex was predominant with 62,5% of our patients. The time of symptoms at presentation ranged from 1-6 months with a mean of 3,2 months. The most common symptoms found at presentation were hemiparesis (75%), headache (37,5%), seizures (25%) and ataxia (25%). Other clinical finds were afasia, Parinaud syndrome, nistagmus, dismetry and intracranial hypertension. Histollogically there were predominance of Difuse B Type, followed by Big B Cells Type. In relation to anatomy, the tumors affected indistinctly the parietal, frontal and temporal lobe with the same frequency (25%). Other affected localizations were Sylvian fissure, paraventricular and posterior thalamic region.

Five patients were diagnosed with stereotaxic biopsy (56%), three patients were directly operated (37,5%) and one patient was treated with both procedures (12,5%). Five patients were submited to radiotherapy in the postoperatory (56%) and, one of these received also chemotherapy with BCNU + Procarbazina + Vincristina. We had a patient that did not accepted surgery or radiotherapy and was treated with pulsotherapy with solumedrol.

In table 1 we present the resume of data of our patients:

 

Discussion

Epidemiology

Although primary central nervous system lymphomas (PCNSL) represent only 1% of all non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHLs)1 in recent years there has been a dramatic increase in the frequency of PCNSL in the immunocompromised and immunocompetent patient21. In the past 10 years the incidence has tripled in patients without AIDS26.

Most patients presenting PCNSL are in the end of the fifth decade and the begining of the sixth3,5,18,23. Our results were similiar, with mean age of 60,6 years. In our series 67,5% of the patients with PCNSL were female, concording with the previous literature18. Literature relates that about 75% of PCNSL patients have unifocal disease with a supratentorial location in 87%3. In our series all the patients had focal disease and all the tumors were supratentorial.


Signs and symptoms

The time from first symptoms to the diagnosis ranged from a few days to 5 months. In our series, most of the patients had between 1 and 2 months of symptoms at the time of diagnosis. This is important because the good results with combined surgery and radiotherapy treatment demand early stage of the disease.

Headache and vomiting due to IICP (increased intracranial pressure) and corresponding neurofunctional disorders due to various location of the tumors are the main clinical manifestation. In the majority of patients, the leading symptoms are: headaches, motor weakness, aphasia and memory disturbance31.

In our study, we saw that tumours in parietal region usually affect the motor pathways leading to contralateral motor deficits in most of the patients. Seizures were also a frequent symptom in our series, although not related in previous reports.

Altough literature reports the frontal lobe as the most common site of involvement5, we also saw a high prevalence of tumours in temporal and parietal lobe. Tumor location in basal ganglia, corpus callosum, or fornix, infiltration of periventricular ependyma or a mirror pattern are strongly suggestive of a lesion of lymphomatous origin3.

Some studies indicate that nodular intracerebral lesions can reveal asymptomatic systemic lymphoma. When brain lymphoma is suspected or diagnosed, systemic workup including clinical, biological and radiological examinations is mandatory before assessing the primary or secondary nature of the disease. Node areas, skin, testis, Waldeyer's ring and adjacent structures are of special interest and should be carefully explored10.

Although metastasis of PCNSL are not reported in the previous literature, in our series 25% of patients with primary brain linfomas showed dissemination to lungs, showing that these lesions are not only locally agressive but can also show distant malignancy. In our opinion, all patients diagnosticated with PCNSL must be submitted to complete clinical and imagenological investigation, in order to discard the possibility of further lesions.


Diagnosis

Image Diagnostic

Typical neuroradiological patterns of PCNSL are15:

-iso- or hyper-density (85,5%) on unenhanced (Figure 1) with marked contrast enhancement (87,7%). -infiltration/contact of leptomeningeal mal spaces (97,3%)

-hyperintensity on T2 with moderate oedema (80,3%) Peripheral edema may be seen in MRI (Figure 2). Images shows low-real signals in T1 phase, but enhanced T2 phase (Figure 3)31.

Figure 1. Unenhanced axial CT demonstrating 
a frontal hyperdense lesion with an irregular
 central hypodensity. The histopathological 
diagnosis was agressive lymphoma (case 4).

 

Figure 2. MRI T1 -weighted axial slice of a right frontal 
hypesignal linfoma presenting with important perilesiona
l


Figure 3. Up: Axial T2-MRI showing homogeneous
 hyperintense lesion within the splenium of the corpus
 callosu
m (Case 7)Down: Enahnced sagittal T1 slice 
showing the posterio
r localization of the lesion
The stereotactic biopsy showed a Primary CNS B cell linfoma
.

 

Scintigraphy

The differential diagnosis of PCNSL must an abscess because computed tomography netic resonance imaging (MRI) exams of both have the same ring-like contrast enhancement.

In this purpose, leucocyte scintigraphy is allowing the differentiation between an abscess plasic lesion. The 99mTc-HMPAO leucocyte is positive in all abscess cases27.


SPECT

Some authors suggest that 123I-IMP SPECT can help to differentiate malignant lymphoma from benign lesions and other malignant brain tumors. In the case of B-cell malignant lymphoma the 123I-IMP SPECT shows increased uptake on both early and delayed images diffuse large30.


Stereotactic biopsy

Stereotactic brain biopsy was used to establish diagnoses of conditions in patients with brain tumors. In a series of 273 computer-assisted stereotactic brain biopsy procedures22, glial tumors accounted for the majority (44.4%) of biopsied lesions; metastases (12.9%) and lymphoma (11.6%) were also relatively common

Due to the high probability of develop intracranial bleeding after this procedure, all patients must be treated with a coagulopathy protocol that included preoperative and postoperative administration of coagulation factors14. The stereotactic biopsy was used by us to confirm the diagnosis in those patients who were not in conditions to be submited to surgery. All these patients, after confirmed the suspect of PCNSL were sent to radiotherapy.

In only one patient stereotactic biopsy was followed by surgery and posterior radiotherapy. In this patient the diagnosis suspect was other and, when the histopathological exam showed a PCNSL, it was decided that the patient would be submited to complete resection followed by radiotherapy.


Histopathology

Histopathological work-up includes conventional and immunohistochemical stains perfomed on formalin fixed and paraffin embedded bioptical specimen15.The high percentage of accurate histopathological diagnosis in our study was based on:

-great mean sample volume per biopsy site

-great number of biopsies in patients suspected to have cerebral lymphomas

-MR-guided stereotactic procedures if the lesion was not clearly identifiable on CT scan.

Histologically the tumor mass is grayish in color often with a blussed borders (those located in brain surface often have rough borders) to the naked eye. Under microscope tumor cell may be seen around blood vessels with decreased cytosol (figure 4), pathologic rayokinesis and sometimes focal hemorrhage necrosis31 The predominant histologic types of primary intracranial non-Hodgkin's lymphoma are diffuse large cell type (38%), large cell immunoblastic type (21%), and diffuse mixed small and large cell type (21%)24.

Figure 4. Histopathology of stereotactic biopsy 
showing small non-clived primary CNS lymphoma.
 Note the perivascular localization of linfocitic cells.

 

The histiocitic type of lymphoma is very rare. Nevertheless it can be easily due to its characteristic immunophenotype featuree: positive for CD68 and lysozyme; focally positive for S-100 protein, CD45RB, and CD4; and negative for CD3, CD20, CD21/CD35, CD1a, CD30, ALK1, myeloperoxidase, glial fibrillary acidic protein, and cytokeratin11.

 

Treatment

Surgery

The majority of articles in current literature regards surgery as having little role (if any) in the treatment of PCNSL and that its utility is limited to obtaining adequate tissue for diagnosis. Nevertheless, there are some case reports of five years disease free after total surgical resection of PCNLS26,31.

We recommend surgery as gold standart therapy for the early excision combined with postoperatory irradiation, once it's curative if the diagnosis is precoce and it's more tolerable than chemotherapy.


Radiotherapy

Historically, radiotherapy has been the standard treatment modality for this disease and median survival was in the 15-month range25. The radiation therapy has been proven to prolong survival but, its use is complicated by delayed neurological toxicity, particularly among the elderly20.

Although a high radiation dose was not associated with better prognosis16, better rates of complete radiographic response is observed following moderate doses of cranial irradiation (about 40 Gy followed by a 20 Gy boost to the tumor plus 2-cm margin). Although complete responders have a statistically significant survival advantage at 4 years, when compared with partial responders and nonresponders, the majority of patients who achieved complete response were dead of disease by 4 years following treatment. Based on this analysis there is no rationale for radiation dose escalation as a therapeutic strategy to combat PCNSL9.

In addition, stereotactic radiosurgey with conventional radiotherapy may be an effective therapeutic strategy to control malignant lymphoma30. In our series patients submitted to stereotactic biopsy followed by radiotherapy had poorer results than those submitted to surgical resection plus radiotherapy.


Chemotherapy

Primary CNS lymphoma (PCNSL) is distinguished from other brain tumours by its striking response to chemotherapy. Nevertheless, chemotherapy is poorly tolerated and largely palliative in old patients. It must be remembered that the majority of PCNSL patients are older than 60 years, and therefore, will certainly find some kind of collateral effect of chemotherapy18.

Progress in understanding the physiology of the bloodbrain barrier (BBB) and the pharmacology of chemotherapeutic agents has substantially improved the treatment and prognosis of this disease20. Administration of high dose of methotrexate and/or cytosine arabinoside may improve survival12. Some authors recommend a therapeutic regime including surgery, intrathecal injection and chemotherapy, especially those drugs capable of going through the bloodbrain barrier, for example high dose methotrexate MTX32. MTX is the single most effective agent.

The goal of delivering an adequate dose of MTX to the brain and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) has been achieved by a variety of strategies, including systemic high dose, intraarterial injection following pharmacological disruption of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and intrathecal administration. Some authors showed that survival was not longer in patients receiving intrathecal chemotherapy6,12. A possible complication of the systemic chemotherapy is myelosuppression, and aseptic meningitis is related as result of intraventricular chemotherapy6. Treatment-related toxicity was manageable, however delayed neurotoxicity is seen in disease-free survivors.

MTX-based combination chemotherapy has yielded the best results but the prognosis of patients with CNS lymphomas remains significantly worse than comparable patients with systemic non-Hodgkin's lymphoma20.


Multi-modality therapy

The role of multi-modality therapy combining radiation therapy with chemotherapy (systemic, intrathecal, and/or intra-arterial) in PCNSL is controversial. Some authors relate that multi-modality therapy (chemotherapy plus radiotherapy) significantly enhances survival over patients treated with single modality therapy alone2,12,23-25. The hypothesis is that chemotherapy may enhance the radiation effect on normal brain tissue as well as in the tumor24.

Nevertheless some authors showed, in a randomized trial, that there is no evidence of a benefit from postradiotherapy chemotherapy with cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone (CHOP) in immunocompetent adult patients with PCNSL18. An European survey recommends the treatment of primary intracerebral lymphoma with the following sequence: stereotactic biopsy sampling, chemotherapy with a methotrexate and anthracycline-based regimen, followed by cranial irradiation3.


Corticosteroids

Non-AIDS primary central nervous system lymphomas may respond totally or partially to corticosteroids. These corticoid-induced remissions seems to be very specific for this disease. They have been proposed as diagnostic test. The effect of these remissions on prognosis remains unknown.

Age was the only significant factor predicting remission. Duration of the first remission is of paramount importance on survival as well as the quality of first line therapy. In these conditions the absence of precise diagnosis due to corticoid-induced remissions could be dramatically deleterious11.

We used pulsotherapy with solumedrol in 2 patients. The first case because patient family rejected any other treatment, and the other in combination with chemo and radiotherapy. The authors regard corticoids only to these special cases and do not use it in the patients submited to the combined treatment proposed (surgery plus radiotherapy).


Prognosis

Complete response is observed in about 63% of the patients submitted to chemotherapy, but 64% of the complete responders developed recurrence16. Among patient -or tumor- related factors, higher age, worse performance status, presence of B symptom, multiple lesions, presence of meningeal dissemination, and elevated lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) level are associated with poorer survival, whereas no significant difference was observed in prognosis with respect to sex, T/B phenotype, or histological subclassification.

It seems that the influence of various prognostic factors is greater than the effect caused by different types of chemotherapy16. Other clinical, biological and radiological prognostic factors found to have a favorable impact on survival are: a) age < 60 years; b) radiation therapy but without evidence of a dose-response relationship; c) radiation therapy in addition to chemotherapy; d) the use of systemic chemotherapy consisting of anthracyclines3.

Taxes of recurrence with surgery are directilly proportional to the delay in diagnostic and treatment. Partial surgical resection is also an unfavorable prognostic factor4. The prognosis of patients submitted to steretactic biopsy followed by radiotherapy are poorer than those submitted to complete resection plus radiotherapy.

Local recurrence is the most common cause of failure24 An also common pattern of PCNSL recurrence is that of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) dissemination manifested as lymphomatous meningitis (LM)6. Literature reports that mean survival time, even with the best treatments is no greater than 18 months5. and the 5- and 10-year survival rates are about 15% and 8%, respectively16.

 

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Correspondence to:
Dr. Tobias Alécio Mattei.
Rua Capote Valente 725 ap. 302.
CEP (postal-code) 05409-002
São Paulo - SP - Brazil.

Recibido: 18-08-04.
Aceptado: 19-05-05

Abbreviations. IICP: increased intracranial pressure. NHL: non Hodgkin's lymphomas. PCNSL: primary central nervous system lymphomas