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Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH)
LCH now best understood as neoplastic disease
Activating somatic BRAF mutations, LCH cell clonality
NECT
Sharply marginated lytic skull defect
Beveled edges
Mastoid: Geographic destruction, soft tissue mass
MR
Absent posterior pituitary “bright spot” on T1WI
Thick enhancing infundibulum
Enhancing masses in choroid plexus, leptomeninges, basal ganglia
Sometimes cerebellar white matter disease
Lytic calvarial lesions
Surgical (burr hole, shunt, surgical defect)
Epidermoid
Dermoid
Pituitary infundibular/hypothalamic thickening, enhancement
Germinoma; metastasis; pituicytoma; neurosarcoid
Can be confined only to skull (often asymptomatic) but can involve other tissues also (skin, lymph glands, lungs, CNS); if > 1 organ involved, may have symptoms
Calvaria is most frequent bony site involved by LCH
Thick enhancing pituitary stalk is most common CNS manifestation of LCH
If initially “normal” MR in patient with diabetes insipidus, repeat in 2-3 months
Consider LCH for ataxic patient with choroid plexus masses, cerebellar white matter demyelination
Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH)
Several entities (eosinophilic granuloma, Hand-Schuller-Christian disease, Letterer-Siwe disease, and “histiocytosis X” now under single designation of LCH
LCH now best understood as neoplastic disease
Activating somatic BRAF mutations, LCH cell clonality
Inflammatory myeloid neoplasia
Divided into 3 groups (based on number of lesions, systems involved)
Unifocal (localized) form
70% of cases
Limited to single or a few bones, may involve lung
Multifocal unisystem
20% of cases
Chronic, recurring
Multiple bones, reticuloendothelial system, pituitary/hypothalamus
Multifocal, multisystem
10% of cases
Fulminant (often fatal)
Best diagnostic clue
Calvaria: Sharply marginated lytic skull defect with beveled margins
Skull base (mastoid most common): Geographic destruction ± soft tissue mass
Brain: Thick enhancing infundibulum, absent posterior pituitary bright spot on T1WI
Location
Calvaria
Most common bony site
Frontal, parietal bones > temporal, occipital
Also mastoid portion of temporal bone, mandible, orbit, facial bones
Brain: Pituitary gland/infundibulum, hypothalamus
Rare: Choroid plexus, leptomeninges, basal ganglia, cerebellar white matter (WM), and brain parenchyma
Size
Skull and facial bones: May grow, coalesce
Pituitary infundibulum: Small lesions due to early endocrine dysfunction (central DI)
Morphology
Variable patterns of bony lysis (“geographic” skull)
Soft tissue masses vary from discrete ↔ infiltrative
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