Radiologic-Histopathologic Correlation of Adult Spinal Tumors: A Retrospective Study
Asiltürk M, Abdallah A, Sofuoglu EÖ
Asian journal of neurosurgery · 2020-04
Abstract
Aim Preoperatively performed magnetic resonance images (MRIs) are essential before treating spinal tumors surgically. This study aims to investigate the compatibility of MRI preliminary diagnosis and proven histopathologic diagnosis of consecutively operated 96 spinal tumors. Material and methods Medical records were retrospectively reviewed for all spinal tumors operated at our institute during a period of 6 years. One hundred and ten spinal tumors were detected. Fourteen tumors were excluded because they were not met our study criteria. Results Ninety-six cases of spinal tumors were detected in 46 female and 50 male patients. The mean age was 49.3 ± 22.7 years. The most common symptom was radicular pain (88.6%). Histopathologic diagnoses were metastasis ( n = 26), meningioma ( n = 16), schwannoma ( n = 15), ependymoma ( n = 9), astrocytoma ( n = 6), chronic nonspecific granulomatous infection ( n = 4), lymphoma ( n = 3), lipoma ( n = 3), epidural tuberculosis abscess (Pott's disease) ( n = 3), and other pathologies in 11 cases. Cervical spine was the less spinal region affected with metastases ( P P Conclusions Metastases rarely occurred in cervical spine, whereas meningiomas were most likely to occur in thoracic spine. MRIs can help diagnose metastases and spinal benign lesions, whereas they failed to distinguish astrocytomas and lymphomas. Further prospective studies with large size are needed to support our results.