Abstract

Rationale:Solitary fibrous tumors of central nervous system are rare spindle-cell mesenchymal tumors. Although most are benign in nature, malignant transformation and extracranial metastasis have been reported. Up to now, only one case of CSF dissemination was described. Here we described an extremely rare case of intracranial Solitary fibrous tumors arising from the pineal region with a delayed ectopic metastasis.Patient concerns:A 35-year-old female presented with double vision, memory disturbance and unsteady gait was referred to our center. MRI showed an irregular mass in the pineal region.Diagnoses:The patient was diagnosed as pineal tumor, with unknown pathology.Interventions:Gross total resection was achieved and the pathologic studies confirmed a solitary fibrous tumor. Thirty-nine months later local recurrence occurred and gamma-knife radiotherapy was offered. Seven months later, MRI found a metastasis in the left temporal lobe. Surgical resection was conducted and pathological analysis revealed changes in cell morphology, counts and Ki-67 level, confirmed the diagnosis of solitary fibrous tumor/hemangiopericytoma (WHO Grade III). The patient received post-operational radiotherapy.Outcomes:The patient was followed up for 7 months with no signs of recurrence.Lessons:Here, we report an extremely rare case of primary solitary fibrous tumor of pineal region with delayed intracranial ectopic metastasis, together with literature review of metastatic solitary fibrous tumors. Strict surveillance is strongly recommended, considering the malignant potential of this seemingly benign disease entity. Complete resection of the tumor is the treatment of first choice and radiotherapy might be an effective adjuvant therapy for high grade SFT/HPCs.

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