Diffuse or multifocal invasion of the leptomeninges by malignant glioma (meningeal gliomatosis) is believed to be rare. From 1971 through 1977, 11 of 52 patients with intracranial malignant gliomas examined at autopsy were found to have meningeal gliomatosis, and 1 additional patient was diagnosed clinically without autopsy (12 cases total). Eight of the 12 patients were diagnosed antemortem with positive cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) cytology, while the other 4 patients were diagnosed at autopsy only. All 11 autopsied patients had multifocal or diffuse meningeal tumor distant from the primary site; 8 patients had spinal subarachnoid seeding with tumor encroachment of cauda equina and spinal nerve roots, and 9 patients had tumor invasion into the lateral ventricles. Three patients had symptomatic spinal cord compression at the thoracic or lumbar level, and 10 patients had hydrocephalus. These 12 patients with meningeal gliomatosis were compared with the other 41 autopsied malignant glioma patients without the complication (controls); the patients with meningeal gliomatosis were significantly younger (mean age, 40 versus 57 years; p less than 0.005). Patients with meningeal gliomatosis lived somewhat longer (median, 49 weeks) compared to controls (35 weeks), but the difference was not statistically significant. With the advance of chemotherapy, patients with malignant glioma are living longer and the incidence of meningeal gliomatosis may rise. The diagnosis of meningeal gliomatosis can be suspected, especially if hydrocephalus is present, and can often be confirmed by CSF cytology.
Thirty‐five patients with malignant brain tumors (23 with primary brain tumors and 12 with brain metastases) progressing after cranial irradiation chemotherapy received cisplatin, 60 to 120 mg/m2, into the internal carotid artery by a transfemoral approach. Courses of therapy were repeated every 4 weeks. Therapeutic evaluation was performed monthly using the CT scan of the brain and clinical neurologic examination. Thirty patients were evaluable for response. Of 20 evaluable patients with primary malignant brain tumors, 6 responded to therapy and 5 had stable disease. The median time to tumor progression for responding patients was 33 weeks, for stable patients 16 weeks, and 13 weeks for all patients. Five of 10 evaluable patients with brain metastases responded to intracarotid cisplatin, and 2 patients had stable disease. The estimated median time to progression for responding patients was 30+ weeks and 12+ weeks for patients with stable disease. Side effects included seizures in 5 courses, mental agitation and motor restlessness in 1, and transient hemiparesis in 7. One patient may have had a drug‐related death, and one patient appeared to develop encephalopathy after treatment. Five patients had clinical deterioration in vision; in two patients it was bilateral. Intracarotid cisplatin has definite activity in patients with malignant primary brain tumors and in patients with brain metastases. The recommended starting dose for intracarotid cisplatin is 60 to 75 mg/m2. At this dose level side effects are uncommon, but includes the risk of neurologic and retinal toxicity.
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