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Retropharyngeal chordoma extending to the spinal cord, mimicking a neurogenic tumor: a case report and literature review

Authors :
Sun Joo Lee
Sung Hwa Paeng
Mi Seon Kang
Soo Jin Jung
Shin Ae Yoon
Ha Young Park
Hye Kyoung Yoon
Young Il Yang
Hwa Jin Cho
Source :
Journal of International Medical Research, Vol 49 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
SAGE Publishing, 2021.

Abstract

Chordomas are rare, locally aggressive bone malignancies with poor prognoses. However, those with minimal or no bone involvement are more easily resectable because of their well-delineated margins and thus have better prognoses. Such extraosseous chordomas of the spine are localized both intradurally and extradurally. Only a few case reports have focused on extraosseous, extradural spinal chordomas. Radiologically, this type of chordoma has a dumbbell shape; however, dumbbell-shaped spinal tumors are traditionally thought to be neurogenic tumors (i.e., schwannomas or neurofibromas). We herein report a unique case involving a woman with a dumbbell-shaped extraosseous chordoma protruding predominantly into the retropharyngeal space. A 44-year-old woman presented for evaluation of a left submandibular mass. A T2-hyperintense, gadolinium-enhancing mass was found in her cervical spinal canal, protruding through the C2/3 neural foramen into the retropharyngeal space with minimal vertebral involvement. The initial diagnosis was a neurogenic tumor, most likely a schwannoma. After subtotal removal, the pathologic diagnosis was a chordoma. Because chordomas and schwannomas have significantly different prognoses, caution is warranted when a dumbbell-shaped tumor is identified in the spine with minimal or no vertebral deterioration on radiology. This report also provides the first thorough review of extraosseous dumbbell-shaped intraspinal–extraspinal chordomas.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine (General)
R5-920

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14732300 and 03000605
Volume :
49
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal of International Medical Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.1ba62b680234fec87c5b7b796756711
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/0300060521999566