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Giant-cell glioblastoma
Giant-cell glioblastoma | |
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WHO Classification | |
Standard name | Giant-cell glioblastoma |
Structure |
Neuroepithelial tumors └►Astrocytic tumors └►Glioblastoma └►Giant-cell glioblastoma |
ICD-O Code & WHO Grade | |
ICD-O Code | 9441/3 |
WHO Grade | IV |
Synonyms & Acronyms | |
Synonyms | Monstrocellular sarcoma |
Epidemiology | |
Incidence | 0.15/100,000/y new cases/population/year |
Age peak | 42 |
M/F ratio | 1.6 |
Prognosis | |
Mean overall survival | 12 months |
Medicine WikiProject/Neurology task force |
The giant-cell glioblastoma is a histological variant of glioblastoma, presenting a prevalence of bizarre, multinucleated (more than 20 nuclei) giant (up to 400 μm diameter) cells.
It occasionally shows an abundant stromal reticulin network and presents a high frequency of TP53 gene mutations.
Symptoms and signs are similar to those of the ordinary glioblastoma. Methodology of diagnosis and treatment are the same.
Prognosis is similar to the ordinary glioblastoma (about 12 months). Some authors (see later) refer cases with a slightly better outcome.
Historical annotation
The giant-cell glioblastoma was originally termed "monstrocellular sarcoma", because of its stromal reticulin network, but the astrocytic nature of the tumor was firmly established through the consistent GFAP expression analysis.
Epidemiology
Incidence
The giant-cell glioblastoma is a rare neoplasia: its incidence is less than 1% of all brain tumors. It represents up to 5% of glioblastomas.
Age and sex distribution
The mean age at clinical presentation is 42. The age distribution includes children and has a wider range than other diffuse astrocytomas (diffuse WHO grade II astrocytoma, anaplastic astrocytoma, ordinary glioblastoma).
The giant-cell glioblastoma affects males more frequently. (The M/F ratio is 1.6.)
Prognosis
Most patients with giant-cell glioblastoma have unfavourable prognosis, but some authors report clinical results slightly better than the ordinary glioblastoma, in all probability because this variant seems less infiltrative, due to the nature of giant cells of this type.
See also
- Glioblastoma
- WHO classification of the tumors of the central nervous system
- Grading of the tumors of the central nervous system
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Note: Not all brain tumors are of nervous tissue, and not all nervous tissue tumors are in the brain (see brain metastasis). |