Impact of CT and MRI in the diagnostic workup of malignant triton tumour—a monocentric analysis and review of the literature

Author:

Drews Marcel A1ORCID,Milosevic Aleksandar1,Hamacher Rainer2,Grüneisen Johannes S1,Haubold Johannes1,Opitz Marcel K1,Bauer Sebastian2ORCID,Umutlu Lale1,Forsting Michael1,Schaarschmidt Benedikt M1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology and Neuroradiology, University Hospital Essen , 45147 Essen, Germany

2. West German Cancer Centre, Department of Medical Oncology, University Hospital Essen , 45147 Essen, Germany

Abstract

Abstract Objectives Malignant triton tumours (MTTs) are rare but aggressive subtypes of malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumours (MPNSTs) with a high recurrence rate and 5-year survival of 14%. Systematic imaging data on MTTs are scarce and mainly based on single case reports. Therefore, we aimed to identify typical CT and MRI features to improve early diagnosis rates of this uncommon entity. Methods A systematic review on literature published until December 2022 on imaging characteristics of MTTs was performed. Based on that, we conducted a retrospective, monocentric analysis of patients with histopathologically proven MTTs from our department. Explorative data analysis was performed. Results Initially, 29 studies on 34 patients (31.42 ± 22.6 years, 12 female) were evaluated: Literature described primary MTTs as huge, lobulated tumours (108 ± 99.3 mm) with central necrosis (56% [19/34]), low T1w (81% [17/21]), high T2w signal (90% [19/21]) and inhomogeneous enhancement on MRI (54% [7/13]). Analysis of 16 patients (48.9 ± 13.8 years; 9 female) from our institution revealed comparable results: primary MTTs showed large, lobulated masses (118 mm ± 64.9) with necrotic areas (92% [11/12]). MRI revealed low T1w (100% [7/7]), high T2w signal (100% [7/7]) and inhomogeneous enhancement (86% [6/7]). Local recurrences and soft-tissue metastases mimicked these features, while nonsoft-tissue metastases appeared unspecific. Conclusions MTTs show characteristic features on CT and MRI. However, these do not allow a reliable differentiation between MTTs and other MPNSTs based on imaging alone. Therefore, additional histopathological analysis is required. Advances in knowledge This largest published systematic analysis on MTT imaging revealed typical but unspecific imaging features that do not allow a reliable, imaging-based differentiation between MTTs and other MPNSTs. Hence, additional histopathological analysis remains essential.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,General Medicine

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