Parenchymal Metastases


KEY FACTS

Terminology

  • Secondary brain tumors (metastases) arise from

    • Tumors outside CNS spreading to CNS (usually via hematogenous dissemination)

    • Primary CNS neoplasms spreading from 1 site to another (usually geographic extension, e.g., along WM tracts)

Imaging

  • General features

    • Round enhancing lesion(s) at gray-white interface (arterial border zones)

    • Most metastases are circumscribed/discrete > > infiltrating, spherical > > linear

    • 50% are solitary; 20% have 2 metastases

    • 30% of patients have 3 or more

  • MR signal intensity varies with

    • Cellularity, nuclear:cytoplasmic ratio

    • Presence/absence of hemorrhage

  • Usually no restriction on DWI

    • Exception: Densely cellular metastases may restrict

Top Differential Diagnoses

  • Abscess (solitary or multiple)

  • Glioblastoma multiforme

  • Cerebral infarction (multiple embolic)

  • Demyelinating disease (e.g., tumefactive MS)

Pathology

  • Metastases represent at least 50% of all brain tumors

  • In 10% of cases, brain is only site

Clinical Issues

  • Progressive increase in size and numbers is typical

  • Median survival with whole-brain XRT = 3-6 months

  • Stereotactic radiosurgery alone > whole-brain XRT

  • Survival advantage, if 1-4 metastases, avoids deleterious effects of whole-brain XRT on quality of life, cognition

  • Resection of solitary metastasis may improve survival

Axial graphic shows parenchymal metastases
with surrounding edema
. The gray-white matter junction is the most common location. Most metastases are round, not diffusely infiltrating.

Close-up view of an axial section through an autopsied brain shows a classic metastasis
in the classic location, the gray-white matter junction. Note the round shape, central necrosis, and relative lack of edema. Diffuse leptomeningeal metastatic spread
is also present.

Axial T2WI MR in a 52-year-old man with a seizure, history of melanoma, shows multiple lesions
at the gray-white matter interfaces. Moderate edema surrounds the lesions. One of the lesions has a hypointense nodule
, suggesting that at least 1 is a hemorrhagic metastasis.

T1 C+ FS MR (same case) shows that the lesions enhance
. Note small metastasis
in the right ventricle choroid plexus that was not appreciated on T2WI. The extensive occipital edema is also from a metastasis (not seen on this image).

TERMINOLOGY

Abbreviations

  • Parenchymal metastases (mets)

Synonyms

  • Secondary brain tumors

  • Body-to-brain metastases

  • Brain-to-brain metastases

Definitions

  • Secondary brain tumors (metastases) arise from

    • Tumors outside CNS that spread to CNS (usually via hematogenous dissemination)

    • Primary CNS neoplasms that spread from one site to another (usually geographic spread, e.g., along white matter [WM] tracts)

IMAGING

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