Repeat surgical resection effectively managed symptomatic intracranial metastatic myxoma in a patient with poor response to radiation therapy, improving neurological symptoms without imaging recurrence.
Case Report (n=1)
No
Repeat surgical resection can be an effective management strategy for symptomatic intracranial metastatic cardiac myxoma when radiation therapy fails to arrest disease progression.
Background: Myxomas, rare benign mesenchymal lesions, are the most common cardiac tumors. Patients may rarely develop hematogenous metastasis to the brain, which can present as new-onset neurological deficits that correlate with multifocal hemorrhagic lesions on imaging. Limited guidelines presently exist for the treatment of such lesions. This report outlines a unique case involving three craniotomies and failed radiation therapy in the treatment of metastatic cardiac myxoma. Case Description: A 63-year-old woman presented with a right middle cerebral artery embolic stroke secondary to a left atrial myxoma and multifocal hemorrhagic lesions consistent with intracranial metastasis. She had a right frontal craniotomy for tumor resection, followed by stereotactic radiosurgery, though this did not arrest disease progression. She later had a left occipital craniotomy for a symptomatic lesion. More than two years after her initial presentation, she returned with acute-onset symptoms correlating to growth in a left frontal lesion requiring another resection. Following this third craniotomy, imaging has not revealed the progression of metastatic intracranial disease. She is pursuing further treatment through primary cardiac tumor resection. Conclusion: Although rare, hematogenous seeding with subsequent formation of hemorrhagic metastasis is a possible complication of atrial myxoma. While surgical resection, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy have historically been used, no standard of care currently exists. This case demonstrates repeat tumor resection as effective for managing symptomatic intracranial metastatic myxoma in a patient with poor response to radiation therapy and multiple recurrences, with follow-up showing improvement in neurological symptoms and mass effect and absence of recurrence on imaging.
Abdow et al. (Fri,) conducted a case report in Symptomatic multifocal intracranial metastatic cardiac myxoma (n=1). Multiple craniotomies (surgical resection) was evaluated. Repeat surgical resection effectively managed symptomatic intracranial metastatic myxoma in a patient with poor response to radiation therapy, improving neurological symptoms without imaging recurrence.