Abstract
Glioma metastasis outside the central nervous system is a quite rare phenomenon. The disease in a young woman manifested itself as back pain and loss of vision in the left eye. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed a tumor of the optic nerve; positron emission tomography showed multiple secondary bone changes. At the same time, MRI detected no signs of neoplasm in the midline brain structures (the brain stem and subcortical nuclei) and spinal cord. Two biopsies (superior iliac spine trephine biopsy and optic nerve tumor biopsy) were performed. There were similar histological tumors; the optic nerve tumor was found to have K27M mutation in the H3F3A gene, whereas the metastatic tumor lacked this mutation (possibly due to the quality and quantity of DNA isolated from the tumor cells). The interesting features of this case are the simultaneous detection of primary and metastatic tumors before receiving any treatment and the absence of the K27M mutation in the H3F3A gene in the metastasis.
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