Tumefactive primary central nervous system vasculitis: Imaging findings of a rare and underrecognized neuroinflammatory disease

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Abstract

Primary central nervous system vasculitis (PCNSV) is a poorly understood neuroinflammatory disease of the CNS affecting the intracranial vasculature. Although PCNSV classically manifests as a multifocal beaded narrowing of the intracranial vessels, some patients may not have angiographic abnormalities. A rare subset of patients with PCNSV present with masslike brain lesions mimicking a neoplasm. In this article, we retrospectively review 10 biopsy-confirmed cases of tumefactive PCNSV (t-PCNSV). All cases of t-PCNSV in our series that underwent CTA or MRA were found to have normal large and medium-sized vessels. TPCNSV had a variable MR imaging appearance with most cases showing cortical/subcortical enhancing masslike lesion (70%), often with microhemorrhages (80%). Diffusion restriction was absent in all lesions. In summary, normal vascular imaging does not exclude the diagnosis of t-PCNSV. Advanced imaging techniques including MR perfusion and MR spectroscopy failed to demonstrate specific findings for t-PCNSV but assisted in excluding neoplasm in the differential diagnosis. Biopsy remains mandatory for definitive diagnosis.

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Suthiphosuwan, S., Bharatha, A., Hsu, C. C. T., Lin, A. W., Maloney, J. A., Munoz, D. G., … Osborn, A. G. (2020). Tumefactive primary central nervous system vasculitis: Imaging findings of a rare and underrecognized neuroinflammatory disease. In American Journal of Neuroradiology (Vol. 41, pp. 2075–2081). American Society of Neuroradiology. https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A6736

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