Widespread neuroendocrine malignancy within the central nervous system: A diagnostic conundrum

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Abstract

A 75 year old female presented with a sellar tumour, and was subsequently found also to have a cauda equina tumour, a parietal dural tumour, a pontine tumour, an intradural spinal tumour, and several vertebral body tumours. Histological examination revealed a neuroendocrine tumour forming cell nests surrounded by reticulin. There was moderate nuclear pleomorphism, prominent mitoses, and focal necrosis. Immunohistochemistry showed diffuse positive staining with cytokeratins, chromogranin and 5- hydroxytryptamine, and focal positive staining with S100. This case is an unusual and ultimately insoluble, diagnostic problem; however the differential diagnoses include pituitary carcinoma, malignant paraganglioma, and atypical carcinoid.

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Hopster, D. J., Robinson, S. F. D., Chadwick, L., & Geddes, J. F. (1997). Widespread neuroendocrine malignancy within the central nervous system: A diagnostic conundrum. Journal of Clinical Pathology, 50(5), 440–442. https://doi.org/10.1136/jcp.50.5.440

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