Book Chapter10.1016/B978-0-12-811161-1.00014-1
Intracranial dural, calvarial, and skull base metastases
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TL;DR: Metastatic disease to the intracranial dura, the calvarium, and the skull base is relatively uncommon but presents unique diagnostic and management challenges in the patient with cancer.
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Abstract: Metastatic disease to the intracranial dura, the calvarium, and the skull base is relatively uncommon but presents unique diagnostic and management challenges in the patient with cancer. Modern imaging techniques have facilitated the detection of intracranial tumor deposits, leading to increased incidence. While dural and calvarial metastases often present with nonspecific symptoms, skull base metastases present with distinct clinical syndromes dependent on the local neurovascular structures affected. Intracranial dural metastases can often be confused with meningioma and pose a diagnostic challenge, as well as significant neurologic morbidity, especially in the setting of hemorrhage. Surgical intervention may be helpful in selected patients for symptomatic relief as well as survival benefit. Management paradigms need to take into account the relative risks, benefits, and likely outcomes for each possible modality of treatment. Surgical excision is useful in many patients and in combination with radiation therapy can provide significant palliation. While medical therapy is rarely an initial therapy in these entities, it may be of added benefit dependent on the underlying tumor histology and prior treatment history. Occasionally treatment with curative intent is justified.
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Citations
Metastatic disease in head & neck oncology
Pisani P,Mario Airoldi,Anastasia Allais,Paolo Aluffi Valletti,Mariapina Battista,Marco Benazzo,Roberto Briatore,Salvatore Cacciola,Salvatore Cocuzza,Andrea Colombo,Bice Conti,Alberto Costanzo,Laura Della Vecchia,Nerina Denaro,Cesare Fantozzi,Danilo Galizia,Massimiliano Garzaro,Ida Genta,Gabriela Alejandra Iasi,Marco Krengli,Vincenzo Landolfo,Giovanni Vittorio Lanza,Mauro Magnano,Maurizio Mancuso,Roberto Maroldi,Laura Masini,Marco Merlano,Marco Piemonte,Silvia Pisani,Adriele Prina-Mello,Luca Prioglio,Maria Gabriella Rugiu,F. Scasso,Agostino Serra,Guido Valente,Micol Zannetti,Angelo Zigliani +36 more
TL;DR: The aim of the present review is to provide an update on distant metastasis in head and neck oncology, with particular attention reserved to tumours with distant metastases and positive for EBV and HPV, and the oligometastatic concept.
Management of Skull Base Metastases.
Gautam U. Mehta,Shaan M. Raza +1 more
TL;DR: "Once a skull base metastasis is suspected, establishing a histologic diagnosis, dedicated imaging, and restaging are the first steps in management.
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Spontaneous acute epidural hematoma associated with chronic subdural hematoma due to dural metastasis of gastric carcinoma: a case report and literature review.
TL;DR: Dural metastases can cause EDH, chronic SDH can also be resulted from metastatic tumors of dura mater, and a detailed and purposeful systematic medical history review and physical examination is important in order to make more appropriate strategies for the clinic.
8
Imaging of brain metastases: Diagnosis and monitoring
Gabriel Garcia,Sophie Bockel,Michael Majer,Samy Ammari,Marion Smits +4 more
- 01 Jan 2020
TL;DR: In this chapter, imaging is central for patients’ care in brain metastases and it is seen that these lesions dramatically change patients' prognosis.
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Case Report - Solitary Calvarial Metastases: An Unusual Presentation of Thoracic Neuroblastoma
S. B. Grover,N. K. Pati,Sumita Saluja,KT Bhowmik +3 more
- 31 Dec 2003
TL;DR: The clinical, radiographic, CT features, and differential diagnosis of a large calvarial mass with sunray spiculation in a child, which was due to a solitary metastases from an occult thoracic neuroblastoma, are discussed.
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