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Extra-Axial Mass in the Foramen Magnum Causing Cervical Compressive Myelopathy as a Complication of Rosai-Dorfman Disease

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312 Copyright © 2017 Korean Neurological Association

Extra-Axial Mass in the Foramen Magnum Causing Cervical Compressive Myelopathy as a Complication of Rosai-Dorfman Disease

Dear Editor,

Sinus histiocytosis with massive lymphadenopathy, or Rosai-Dorfman disease (RDD), is a rare histiocytic proliferative disorder characterized clinically by massive adenopathy and systemic symptoms. The extranodal manifestations that occur in 43% of all RDD patients most frequently affect the skin, respiratory tract, paranasal sinuses, orbits, and bone.1 CNS involvement is extremely rare (in <5% of cases), and usually consists of an extra-axial dura- based lesion; the most common locations are the convexity and the base of the skull.1

We present a case of RDD with extranodal involvement at the foramen magnum extending toward the cervical spinal canal and resulting in compressive cervical myelopathy.

To the best of our knowledge, only three cases of RDD displaying spinal cord compression secondary to craniocervical junction involvement have been reported since the disease was first described in 1969.2-4

Our patient was a 28-year-old man who had been diagnosed with RDD in childhood. In September 2012, he was seen in the neurology department due to a 1-week history of loss of strength in his right arm. The neurological examination showed mild tetraparesis (4+/5 in the left limbs, with more severe right arm involvement: 3/5 proximally and 1–2/5 distally), symmetrical 2/4 deep tendon reflexes, and tactile hypoesthesia and hypoalgesia in the right C5–C8 territories.

Brain MRI revealed extensive nasal and sinus involvement (Fig. 1A). A cervical MRI scan revealed an extra-axial lesion in the posterior region of the craniocervical junction and ex- tending from the foramen magnum to the base of the odontoid process. This mass was caus- ing severe foramen magnum stenosis and compressive cervical myelopathy (Fig. 1B and C).

After assessment by the neurosurgery department, he underwent suboccipital craniectomy and complete tumor resection. Cytology study of the excised tissue revealed that the spinal cord parenchyma was infiltrated by histiocytes exhibiting emperipolesis (lymphophagocyto- sis). Immunohistochemical staining was positive for the markers CD68 and S-100 and nega- tive for CD1a (Fig. 1D-I). The postoperative results were favorable, with the neurological symptoms resolving completely. After 4 years of follow-up, our patient is still being treated with oral corticosteroids and has presented no additional extranodal lesions in the foramen magnum.

CNS involvement is rare in RDD, and it usually presents in the form of a well-defined, soli- tary, extraparenchymal supratentorial dura-based lesion resembling a meningioma in neuro- imaging scans.3 Lesions located in the posterior fossa and extending to the cervical spinal ca- nal, as in our case, are rare.

Accompanying focal neurological signs depend mainly on the location of the primary le- sion; these signs may be subacute, chronic, or recurrent. In all three previously reported cases Sira Carrasco-García de Leóna

José Manuel Flores Barragána Fernanda Relea Calatayudb Osvaldo Balcazar Rojasc

aDepartments of Neurology,

b Anatomical Pathology and cNeurosurgery, Teaching General Hospital of Ciudad Real, Ciudad Real, Spain

pISSN 1738-6586 / eISSN 2005-5013 / J Clin Neurol 2017;13(3):312-314 / https://doi.org/10.3988/jcn.2017.13.3.312

Received March 17, 2017 Revised April 10, 2017 Accepted April 12, 2017 Correspondence

Sira Carrasco-García de León, PhD Department of Neurology, Teaching General Hospital of Ciudad Real, Obispo Rafael Torija S/N, Ciudad Real 13005, Spain

Tel +34 926 278000 Fax +34 926 278501

E-mail [email protected]

cc This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Com- mercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

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Carrasco-García de León S et al.

JCN

www.thejcn.com 313 of RDD with craniocervical junction involvement, the most

frequent neurological symptoms were motor deficits (in two of the three patients) and cervical pain.2-4 The patients de- scribed by Ambekar et al.3 and Sandoval-Sus et al.4 presented prolonged insidious symptoms that had developed for more than 1 year before they were assessed by a neurosurgery de- partment.3,4 In contrast, the severity of our case (tetraparesis and right-sided sensory alterations developing within 1 week) resulted in an early diagnosis of spinal cord compression; our patient was treated surgically less than 1 month after the diag-

nosis.

Treatment approaches for RDD remain controversial. Sur- gical resection is regarded as the best treatment option for pa- tients with combined RDD and CNS involvement.4 Our pa- tient underwent cervical spinal cord decompression with suboccipital craniectomy due to the extreme risk associated with the location of the lesion.

In conclusion, although RDD is rare and spinal cord com- pression is an unusual form of extranodal involvement, this disorder should be included in the differential diagnosis of A

D

G

B

E

H

C

F

I

Fig. 1. MRI images. A: Brain T2-weighted sagittal sequence showing paranasal sinus obliteration and heterogeneous signal hyperintensities. B:

Noncontrast cervical T1-weighted sagittal sequence showing an extra-axial lesion located at the craniocervical junction and extending from the foramen magnum to C2. C: Postcontrast cervical T1-weighted sagittal sequence displaying intense homogeneous contrast uptake. A microscopic examination of the lesion was performed. D: The histiocytes in the infiltrate are large, with abundant, lightly eosinophilic or clear cytoplasm and ve- sicular nuclei. Hematoxylin and eosin; bar represents 200 μm. E: A histiocytic cell (arrow) engulfing small lymphocytes (emperipolesis). Hematoxylin and eosin; bar represents 200 μm. F: Peripheral nests of meningothelial hyperplasia (arrows). Rosai-Dorfman histiocytic infiltrate in the right lateral border. Hematoxylin and eosin; bar represents 600 μm. G: Abnormal histiocytes showed strong positivity for S-100 protein. H: The histiocytic nature of the cells is highlighted by the immunohistochemical marker CD68. I: The cells were immunohistochemically negative for CD1a.

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Rosai-Dorfman Disease with Extranodal Involvement at the Craniocervical Junction

JCN

314 J Clin Neurol 2017;13(3):312-314 spinal cord masses.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors have no financial conflicts of interest.

REFERENCES

1. Chen H, Zhou H, Song Z. Intracranial multifocal Rosai-Dorfman dis- ease. Neurol Neuroimmunol Neuroinflamm 2016;3:e293.

2. Tubbs RS, Kelly DR, Mroczek-Musulman EC, Hammers YA, Berkow

RL, Oakes WJ, et al. Spinal cord compression as a result of Rosai-Dorf- man disease of the upper cervical spine in a child. Childs Nerv Syst 2005;

21:951-954.

3. Ambekar S, Somanna S, Bhat DI, Ranjan M. Isolated cranio-spinal in- volvement of Rosai-Dorfman disease: case report. Br J Neurosurg 2011;

25:297-299.

4. Sandoval-Sus JD, Sandoval-Leon AC, Chapman JR, Velazquez-Vega J, Borja MJ, Rosenberg S, et al. Rosai-Dorfman disease of the central nervous system: report of 6 cases and review of the literature. Medicine (Baltimore) 2014;93:165-175.

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