Meningioma is the most common intracranial neoplasm, yet there is no effective therapy for recurrent/refractory meningiomas after surgery and radiation. Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) is an enzyme upregulated on endothelial cells of multiple neoplasms and is being investigated as a theranostic target. Until now, PSMA has not been studied in meningiomas. We aimed to verify PSMA endothelial expression in meningiomas, detect tumor grade variability, and investigate the relationship of PSMA signal with tumor recurrence. We analyzed 96 archival meningiomas including 58 de novo and 38 recurrent specimens. All specimens were stained routinely and immunostained for CD31 and PSMA. Slides were scanned and analyzed producing raw data for images of PSMA, CD31, PSMA/CD31, and PSMA/vasculature. PSMA expression was seen within 98.9% of meningioma samples. In the total cohort, higher-grade tumors had increased expression of raw PSMA and PSMA/CD31, and PSMA/vasculature ratios compared to grade 1 tumors. PSMA expression and PSMA/vasculature ratios (p = 0.0015) were higher in recurrent versus de novo tumors among paired samples. ROC curves demonstrated PSMA/CD31, PSMA/vasculature, and raw CD31 as indicators of tumor recurrence. Thus, PSMA is expressed within endothelial cells of meningiomas, is increased with tumor grade and recurrence, and persists with prior irradiation.
BACKGROUND
Tumoral calcinosis is an uncommon disease resulting from dystrophic calcium phosphate crystal deposition, with only 7% of cases involving the spine, and it may diagnostically mimic neoplasms.
OBSERVATIONS
In this case, a 54-year-old woman with history of systemic scleroderma presented with 10 months of progressive left lumbosacral pain. Imaging revealed an expansile, 4 × 7-cm, well-circumscribed mass in the lumbosacral spine with L5–S1 neuroforaminal compression. Because intractable pain and computed tomography (CT)-guided needle biopsy did not entirely rule out malignancy, operative management was pursued. The patient underwent L4–S2 laminectomies, left L5–S1 facetectomy, L5 and S1 pediculectomies, and en bloc resection, performed under stereotactic CT-guided intraoperative navigation. Subsequently, instrumented fusion was performed with L4 and L5 pedicle screws and S2 alar-iliac screws. Pathological examination was consistent with tumoral calcinosis, with multiple nodules of amorphous basophilic granular calcified material lined by histiocytes. There was no evidence of recurrence or neurological deficits at 5-month follow-up.
LESSONS
Because spinal tumoral calcinosis may mimic neoplasms on imaging or gross intraoperative appearance, awareness of this clinical entity is essential for any spine surgeon. A review of all case reports of lumbosacral tumoral calcinosis (n = 14 from 1952 to 2016) was additionally performed. The case featured in this report presents the first known case of navigation-assisted resection of lumbosacral tumoral calcinosis.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.