Study Design: Retrospective data analysis. Objective: To clarify the clinical features and surgical management of spinal cord hemangioblastomas in patients with von Hippel-Lindau disease (VHL). Setting: Clinical VHL Research Group in Japan, Japan. Methods: Forty-eight out of 66 patients with associated spinal cord hemangioblastoma among 142 VHL patients were retrospectively examined with respect to clinical features, accompanying lesions and outcome of surgical treatment. Results: Among these 48 patients, 46 of them (95.8%) also had a central nervous system (CNS) hemangioblastoma at another site: 42 (87.5%) with cerebellar hemangioblastoma and 11 (22.9%) with brain stem hemangioblastoma. Twenty-three patients (47.9%) had more than one spinal cord hemangioblastoma. The 48 patients with spinal cord hemangioblastomas collectively had a total of 74 tumors. The tumor was accompanied with a syrinx in 64 and without it in 10 patients. Forty of the 48 patients underwent surgical treatment for their spinal cord hemangioblastomas, and 7 of these 40 underwent surgical treatment twice. When functional changes in the patients after these 47 operations were examined by postoperative evaluation by McCormicks classification, 39 of these operations (83.0%) resulted in improvement/no change and 8 (17.0%) in aggravation of symptoms. Conclusion: Von Hippel-Lindau disease patients bearing spinal cord hemangioblastomas mostly had a CNS hemangioblastoma at another site. These tumors can be removed in the majority of VHL patients without aggravation. In these patients, when the timing of treatment for spinal cord hemangioblastoma is determined, the probability of occurrence and treatment of other lesions should be considered. © 2009 International Spinal Cord Society All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Kanno, H., Yamamoto, I., Nishikawa, R., Matsutani, M., Wakabayashi, T., Yoshida, J., … Shuin, T. (2009). Spinal cord hemangioblastomas in von Hippel-Lindau disease. Spinal Cord, 47(6), 447–452. https://doi.org/10.1038/sc.2008.151
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