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Neuro Oncol 2003 5(1):14-18; DOI:10.1215/15228517-5-1-14
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Duke University Press

Molecular Genetics

Biologic characterization of a secondary glioblastoma with extracranial progression and systemic metastasis

Shigeo Ueda1, Toshihiro Mineta, Kenji Suzuyama, Makoto Furuta, Tetsuya Shiraishi and Kazuo Tabuchi

Department of Neurosurgery, Saga Medical School, Saga 849-8501, Japan

1 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Shigeo Ueda, M.D., Department of Neurosurgery, Saga Medical School, 5-1-1 Nabeshima, Saga 849-8501, Japan.

Abstract

Glioblastomas rarely metastasize outside the CNS. We biologically characterized a case of secondary glioblastoma associated with extracranial progression and distant metastasis. A 42-year-old male patient was subjected to craniotomy for a left temporal tumor (astrocytoma grade II) and subsequently underwent another 3 craniotomies due to tumor recurrences. At the third craniotomy, extracranial progression was noted, and the tumor was classified as a glioblastoma. In order to pinpoint the genes expressed differentially in the intracranial primary tumor and the metastatic tumors, we used cDNA microarray. The patterns of gene expression in these 2 samples were highly similar, suggesting that the mechanism of metastasis was direct infiltration of tumor cells into extracranial blood vessels. Insulin-like growth factor binding protein-2 was overexpressed in both primary and metastatic tumors. Immunohistochemical studies of DNA-dependent protein kinase, which participates in the repair of DNA, was strongly positive in the samples obtained at the first and second operations, but the positive rates were markedly reduced in the specimens obtained at the third and fourth operations. These results suggest that insulin-like growth factor binding protein-2 and deficiency of DNA-dependent protein kinase proteins promoted tumor progression in the present case.







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Copyright 2003 by Society for Neuro-Oncology