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Journal of neurosurgery · Mar 2011
Schwannomatosis, sporadic schwannomatosis, and familial schwannomatosis: a surgical series with long-term follow-up. Clinical article.
- Augusto Gonzalvo, Adam Fowler, Raymond John Cook, Nicholas Scott Little, Helen Wheeler, Kerrie L McDonald, and Michael Thomas Biggs.
- Department of Neurosurgery, Royal North Shore Hospital, St. Leonards, New South Wales, Australia. augusto.gonzalvo@gmail.com
- J. Neurosurg. 2011 Mar 1; 114 (3): 756-62.
ObjectThe aim of this study was to provide disease-specific information about schwannomatosis in its different forms and to present 2 particular cases of malignant schwannomas in the context of familial schwannomatosis (FS).MethodsThe authors analyzed patients with pathologically defined schwannomas and identified those with varied forms of schwannomatosis. Each case was retrospectively analyzed for patient sex and age, number of operations and tumors excised, symptoms, location and size of tumors, extent of resection, nerve function pre- and postoperatively, complications, other nonsurgically treated tumors, malignancy, results of brain MR imaging, and follow-up data.ResultsOne hundred fifty-eight patients underwent the excision of 216 schwannomas. One hundred forty-two patients presented with solitary schwannomas, 2 had neurofibromatosis Type 2 (NF2), and 14 presented with schwannomatosis. The average follow-up was 52 months. Six individuals had sporadic schwannomatosis, whereas 8 had the familial form of the disease. These 14 patients had an average age of 28.3 years at the time of disease onset (median 27.5 years) and 35.4 years at the time of the first operation (median 37 years) Thirteen of the 14 patients with schwannomatosis experienced pain as the first symptom. Eight (57%) of the 14 patients presented with at least 1 tumor in the spinal canal or attached to the spinal nerve roots. Malignant schwannomas developed in 2 patients from the same family during the follow-up.ConclusionsPatients suffering from schwannomatosis tend to be younger than those presenting with solitary schwannomas. Therefore, individuals presenting at a young age with multiple schwannomas but not meeting the criteria for NF2 should prompt the physician to suspect schwannomatosis. Patients with schwannomatosis who report pain should be exhaustively examined. The spine is affected in the majority of patients, and MR imaging of the spine should be part of the routine evaluation. Rapid enlargement of schwannomas in the context of FS should raise suspicion of malignant transformation.
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