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Choroid plexus tumor (CPT)
3 types of CPTs
Choroid plexus papilloma (CPP) (WHO grade I)
Atypical CPP (aCPP) (grade II)
Choroid plexus carcinoma (CPCa) (grade III)
Classic: Child with enhancing lobulated (cauliflower-like) mass in atrium of lateral ventricle
CPPs occur in proportion to amount of choroid plexus
50% in lateral ventricle (usually atrium)
40% in 4th ventricle &/or foramina of Luschka
5% in 3rd ventricle (roof)
Hydrocephalus (overproduction, obstructive)
aCPP
CPCa
Physiologic choroid plexus enlargement
Choroid plexus xanthogranuloma
Meningioma
Intraventricular metastasis
Medulloblastoma
Ependymoma
Most common brain tumor in children < 1 year old
13.1% of all brain tumors in 1st year of life
7.9% of fetal brain tumors diagnosed by ultrasound
Benign, slowly growing
± cerebrospinal fluid spread (does not distinguish CPP from CPCa)
Malignant progression rare
Consider CPP if intraventricular mass in child < 2 years old
Imaging cannot reliably distinguish CPP from aCPP, CPCa
Choroid plexus tumor (CPT)
3 recognized subtypes of CPTs
Choroid plexus papilloma (CPP)
Atypical choroid plexus papilloma (aCPP)
Choroid plexus carcinoma (CPCa)
Benign (WHO grade I) papillary neoplasm derived from choroid plexus epithelium
Best diagnostic clue
Child with strongly enhancing lobulated (cauliflower-like) intraventricular mass
Location
CPPs occur in proportion to amount of normally present choroid plexus
50% → atrium of lateral ventricle, left > right
40% → 4th ventricle (posterior medullary velum) and foramina of Luschka
5% → 3rd ventricle (roof)
5% → multiple sites (synchronous lesions at diagnosis)
Rare: Cerebellopontine angle, suprasellar, intraparenchymal
Size
Varies from tiny to huge
Morphology
Cauliflower-like mass
Radiography
Increased cranial-to-facial ratio
Sutural diastasis due to hydrocephalus
NECT
Intraventricular lobular mass
75% iso- or hyperattenuating
Ca++ in 25%
Hydrocephalus
Overproduction of CSF → obstruction
Can be as much as 800-1,500 mL/day
CECT
Intense, homogeneous enhancement
Heterogeneous enhancement suggests choroid plexus carcinoma
No or minimal parenchymal invasion
Rarely, vascular pedicle twists leading to CPP infarction and dense Ca++ (“brain stone”)
CTA: Choroidal artery enlargement for lateral ventricular (trigonal) CPPs
T1WI
Well-delineated iso- to hypointense lobular mass
T2WI
Iso- to hyperintense mass
± internal linear and branching vascular flow voids
Large CPP may bury itself within brain parenchyma
Extensive invasion suggests CPCa
Hydrocephalus common
FLAIR
Bright periventricular signal
Periventricular interstitial edema due to ventricular obstruction common
Asymmetric ipsilateral T2 hyperintensity may suggest invasion and CPCa
T2* GRE
± foci of diminished signal if Ca++ &/or blood products are present
T1WI C+
Robust homogeneous enhancement
Occasional cysts and small foci of necrosis
Look for CSF dissemination
MRA
Flow-related signal within mass
Enlarged choroidal artery (trigonal mass)
MRS
NAA absent, mild ↑ choline, lactate if necrotic
Myoinositol (mI) elevation in CPP may help to distinguish from CPCa
Grayscale ultrasound
Hyperechoic mass with frond-like projections
Mass echogenicity similar to normal choroid plexus
Hydrocephalus
Pulsed Doppler
Vascular pedicle and internal sampling of mass
Bidirectional flow through diastole
Arterial tracing shows low impedance
Color Doppler
Hypervascular mass with bidirectional flow
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