CASE 13596 Published on 25.04.2016

A rare cause of acute paraplegia: granulocytic sarcoma

Section

Neuroradiology

Case Type

Clinical Cases

Authors

Benjouad I, Benzaid H, Taam I, Laamrani FZ, Jroundi L

Chu Ibn Sina;
Rue Mfadel Cherkaoui
Souissi 10000 Rabat, Morocco;
Email:ibenjouad@gmail.com
Patient

20 years, male

Categories
Area of Interest Neuroradiology spine ; Imaging Technique MR
Clinical History
A 20-year-old man, without antecedent, especially myeloid leukaemia, presented with dorsal spinal pain, asthenia in the legs, urinary and anal incontinence. Clinical examination found a flaccid paraplegia. The blood analysis showed a bicytopenia and leukocytosis consisting of 30% blasts. The bone marrow aspiration showed the presence of myeloid precursors.
Imaging Findings
Emergency spinal MRI was performed, showing posterior epidural process extending from D4 to D10, isointense (similar signal intensity to muscle) on T1-weighted and T2-weighted images, compressing the spinal cord and associated to diffuse low signal intensity of the vertebral bone marrow (tumoral infiltration).
The patient was admitted to the operating room for a possible decompression. The surgery was limited to a D6 laminectomy with a biopsy of the posterior epidural process, the intraoperative appearance was very infiltrative, not releasable to the dura. The histological examination confirmed the diagnosis of myeloid leukaemia.
MRI performed after surgery on T1 and T2-weighted images showed a regression of compression process with stigmata of laminectomy D6.
Discussion
Granulocytic sarcoma, also known as chloroma or extramedullary myeloblastoma, is a rare solid tumour composed of primitive precursors of the granulocytic series of WBC that include myeloblasts, promyelocytes, and myelocytes [1].This tumour was called chloroma by King in 1853 because of a greenish appearance, which is caused by the presence of myeloperoxidase granules in the malignant myeloid cells.
All organs can be affected, but most commonly the bones, lymph nodes and skin. The central nervous system is rare with an incidence of 3.25% [2]. Spinal location is exceptional with a predilection for the dorsal segment [3].
Clinically, the epidural localization can manifest as a spinal syndrome, root or sensorimotor deficits, with rapidly progressive evolution towards a spinal cord compression syndrome. This is a condition that affects the paediatric population and young adults, often male [4].
In about 1/4 of cases granulocytic sarcoma occurs outside the context of haematological pathology, however, myeloid sarcoma may precede acute myelogenous leukaemia with an average of six months. [5]
The mechanism for this location is epidural infiltration of the adventitia epidural vessels by malignant cells. This observation is also particular in its presentation, it supports the pathophysiological hypothesis that the spread to the nervous system would occur through blood.
On MRI, the tumour appears as an infiltrative epidural mass, isointense signal on T1 weighted images and intermediate signal on T2 weighted images, homogeneous or heterogeneous, enhanced after gadolinium injection. The presence of signal abnormality of the bone marrow of the vertebrae may suggest the diagnosis [1]. The epidural lesion is often spread over 2-3 levels. In our patient the lesion affected seven levels of D4 to D10.
The histological appearance of this tumour is very variable. Immunohistochemistry is used to support the diagnosis: the anti-lysozyme is positive in 79% of cases and anti-myeloperoxidase (MPO) in 93% of cases [6, 7].
Treatment of granulocytic sarcoma is identical to that of acute myelogenous leukaemia (chemotherapy). Surgery is indicated in emergency in case of spinal cord compression. [8]
The epidural spinal location of leukaemia is very rare.
Our patient received high-dose chemotherapy (based on anthracycline, cytosine and arabinoside) with a transfusion support.
The outcome was favourable with complete haematologic and cytogenetic remission and partial neurological recovery.
Our case report illustrates the rarity of the epidural localization of granulocytic sarcoma as the main revealing symptom of acute myeloid leukaemia, and it shows the importance of an early diagnosis with appropriate treatment.
Differential Diagnosis List
Granulocytic sarcoma of the spine
Lymphoma
Leptomeningeal metastasis
Plasmocytoma
Inflammatory lesion
Final Diagnosis
Granulocytic sarcoma of the spine
Case information
URL: https://eurorad.org/case/13596
DOI: 10.1594/EURORAD/CASE.13596
ISSN: 1563-4086
License