Title: GROSS TUMORS OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM (VI
1GROSS TUMORS OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM (VI VII)
Diffuse tumors Multiple tumors
- Cheng-Mei Shaw, MD
- Ellsworth C. Alvord, Jr. MD
- Neuropathology Laboratory
- University of Washington Medical
- School, Seattle, WA
2- Classification by Anatomical Location
- Supratentorial
- 1. Cerebrum and its coverings
- a. extra-axial (meningeal)
- b. intra-axial (cerebral)
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- 2. Sellar, parasellar hypothalamic
- Tentorial (pineal region)
- III. Subtentorial
- IV. Spinal cord spine
- Nerves, cranial peripheral
- VI. Diffuse tumors
- VII. Multiple tumors
3- Although multicentric primary tumors are known
to occur, neoplastic transformation usually takes
place in a solitary focus, perhaps in a single
cell. - There are two major patterns of neoplastic
growth - Tumor mass expands as tumor cells proliferate
with very little or no migration of cells to
adjacent host tissue. This type of tumor is seen
in encapsulated tumors, such as metastatic
carcinoma, meningioma and schwannoma. It is
circumscribed, compresses the adjacent normal
tissue, usually remains localized. When it
disseminates, it does so through vascular or
lymphatic system to remote sites. - Tumor cells proliferate and migrate though the
host tissue, as is seen in most gliomas and
sarcomas. The interface between the tumor tissue
and normal tissue is usually not clear and a
total extirpation is difficult if not impossible.
4 A patient may be cured when a tumor of the first
type can be excised completely before metastatic
seeding takes place. The tumor may recur if a
small number of tumor cells is left behind. These
patients usually die because of extensive
metastases or when a vital organ is invaded or
compressed by the tumor. In contrast, surgical
excision of the second type of tumor is almost
always incomplete. The volume of tumor can be
reduced by excision, radiation and chemotherapy
temporarily, but the patient usually succumbs to
extensive infiltration of tumor cells involving a
large territory of the target organ. Gliomas,
which usually start at a small focus, grow into
the adjacent tissue in more or less radiating
fashion. When the patients die, the end result at
autopsy is diffuse glioma involving a large
amount of the CNS.
5 Difuse glioma, gliomatosis, gliomatosis cerebri,
diffuse astrocytoma, etc are only a few of the
terms used to describe an expanded infiltrating
glioma, the condition one frequently sees at
autopsy, the end result of the natural course of
an infiltrating glioma. There are other
examples of a glioma involving an extremely large
area of the CNS, apparently from the outset,
difficult to accept the idea that it began from a
single focus. One alternative is to consider
widespread simultaneous neoplastic
transformation of many cells or a fusion of
multicentric neoplasms. From a mathematical model
involving only two factors, net rates of
proliferation and diffusion, such gliomas may
simply be the result of diffusion beginning so
early that a local mass cannot develop. Indeed,
the model requires an incubation period without
diffusion to produce a mass of 1 cu mm first.
6 Gliomatosis cerebri is a diffuse glioma
involving a large territory of the CNS without
forming a localizable mass and without disruption
of gross anatomical architecture. The definition
is arbitrary and subjective, without stating how
much is too much. The is no definite criterion,
and in some cases there may be a localized mass
in addition to the diffuse neoplasm.
7 We will tentatively define gliomatosis cerebri
as a glioma which involves more than two lobes of
the cerebrum and/or more than two sub-structures
of the CNS. Gliomas involving two lobes of either
one or two hemispheres, cerebral gliomas
extending into deep nuclei or gliomas in the base
of the brain extending into the brainstem are too
common at autopsy and will be excluded. When
three lobes or three sub-structures or more are
involved, then a diagnosis of gliomatosis cerebri
may be considered.
8 Solving the quantitative problem tentatively, we
still face a qualitative problem. The cases,
which could be categorized as gliomatosis cerebri
based on above-mentioned quantitative criteria,
seem to be qualitatively quite heterogeneous.
We have seen several anatomically different
growth patterns of gliomas which have been
equally diagnosed under the term, gliomatosis
cerebri. 1. Central type more or less
unique, predominantly involving thalami extending
outward to other deep cerebral nuclei, upper
brainstem and medial temporal lobe(s) 2.
Longitudinal type mainly arising in the
brainstem, extending both directions into the
diencephalon rostally and brainstem distally and
even spinal cord caudally 3. Basal type rare
form involving the optic nerves, chiasm, tracts,
hypothalamus and brainstem 4. Diffuse white
matter type involves large areas of cerebral
white matter, brainstem and cerebellum 5.
Diffuse gray matter type predominantly involving
cerebral cortex, often breaks into and spread
along subarachnoid spaces, commonly with
oligodendroglioma
9 In the files of Neuropathology Laboratory,
University of Washington from 1960 to 2000 there
are more than 50 autopsied cases which were
diagnosed as gliomatosis cerebri, depends on
just how many of these terms are accepted. The
introduction of CT-MRI makes the diagnosis of
gliomatosis cerebri easier since the extent of
the tumor can be visualized and assessed long
before the patient comes to autopsy. Some
examples, which may belong to this group, are
already presented in Gross tumor (2) and (5A)
under separate titles. Additional and preferred
examples of gliomatosis, using the criteria
established earlier, will be presented in the
following.
10Diffuse tumors
- Parenchymatous
- 1. Gliomatosis, diffuse glioma,
- 2. Lymphomatosis
- 3. Melanomatosis
- 4. Carcinomatous
- Leptomeningeal ventricular
- Leptomeningeal gliomatosis
- Leptomeningeal PNET
- Leptomeningeal carcinomatosis and lymphomatosis
11NP6151 16 year-old female
- Rt temporal lobe grade II astrocytoma for 4 - 5
yrs - Temporal lobectomy, 8/75 XRT, improved
- Relapse 1.5 - 2 yrs before death, chemotherapy
- Seizures, choking, could not talk, could not move
head 2/78, died 3/78 - Autopsy gliomatosis cerebri involving 2/3 of the
cerebrum, including deep cerebral nuclei, whole
brainstem and cerebellum, central type
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16NP5809 13 year-old female
- 3 weeks history of altered behavior
- Precipitous deterioration with acute respiratory
arrest - Autopsy delayed. autolysed brain showed
gliomatosis cerebri, central type
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18NP7531 53 year-old male
- History of dementia for unknown duration
- CT 8 mos before death showed a mass in the left
basal ganglia - Autopsy gliomatosis cerebri involving bilateral
thalamus, striatum, amygdaloid nucleus,
hippocampus, midbrain, pons and medulla,
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20CONTROL
21NP5438 36 year-old male
- Presented following 6 mos of psychomotor seizures
with sensory aura - Abnormal EEG, EMI ? Rt fronto-temporal lesion
- EMI angiogram 3 mos later showed a mass in the
basal ganglia, died one year later - Autopsy Gliomatosis cerebri, central type,
involving thalamus, temporal lobe, frontal lobe
and midbrain tegmentum
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25NP14910 30 years-old male
- Onset of seizures in 1986
- CT in 3/87 Rt cerebral mass, thought to be
traumatic lesion papilledema 12/87 CT lesion
enlarged Bx low grade glioma (NP13438) - XRT, worse 7/88, Lt hemiparesis Rt leg
weakness, more resection 2/89 low grade glioma
(NP14607), died 9 days after surgery - Autopsy gliomatosis cerebri, predominantly
oligodendroglioma, involving 3/4 of Rt cerebral
hemisphere, left frontal, basal ganglia,
midbrain, pons and medulla
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43NP19379 8 years old male
- Long Hx of Lt facial droop, unknown etiology
- Severe headache Rt hemiparesis, 1991
- CT low density, MRI T2 enhanced lesion in left
thalamus resected 7/91, Dx GM (NP17385) XRT
chemotherapy - Diplopia lethargy 9/92, CT tumor extended to
midbrain, VP shunt - Unresponsive 9/92, died 1/93, 19 mos after Dx
- Autopsy GM in thalamus, hypothalamus, midbrain,
pons, Lt internal capsule, caudate , anterior
corpus callosum, colliculi, anterior vermis
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50NP3873 49 years old male
- Presented with papilledema bitemporal
hemianopsia 4 mos prior to death - Craniotomy, optic glioma found grossly, no Bx
- XRT, p.o. pneumonia
- Quadriparesis 2 mos PTD, myelogram laminectomy
large cervical spinal cord, no Bx progressive
pulmonary complications, died - Autopsy gliomatosis cerebri, involving optic
nerves, chiasm, tracts, cerebral peduncle,
medulla cervical spinal cord
51Optic chiasm
Optic chiasm
Optic chiasm
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68NP12779 8.5 years old female
- Neurofibromatosis
- Rt optic glioma Dx by BX 7 yrs earlier, XRT
- Lt thalamic brainstem lesions found 4 yrs later
- Lt intraventricular meningioma removed 2 yrs
before death, Dx of brainstem glioma 1 year
before death - Hospitalized for seizures aspiration, developed
Lt MCA occlusion, Rt hemiparesis - Autopsy gliomatosis cerebri, pilocytic
astrocytoma involving optic nerves, chiasm,
tracts, thalamus, Lt internal capsule, globus
pallidus, brainstem, cerebellar white matter,
hippocampi, upper cervical cord, subarachnoid
gliomatosis ischemic infarct in left
fronto-parieto-temporal lobes
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79NP 6779 50 years old female
- Rt carotid body tumor removed 4.5 yrs PTD
- Status epilepticus 6 mos after surgery
- Lt hemiparesis, progresive, shortly after MVA
- Total occlusion of Rt ICA found at arteriogram
- PNG unsuccessful, coma 1 hour later
- Rt frontal oligo resected 2.5 yrs ago (NP5697)
- PO XRT, progressively deteriorated died
- Autopsy I) Gliomatosis cerebral, central
cerebrum, oligo astro. 2) Multiple sclerosis
(demyelinating and necrotizing patchy white
matter lesions)
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93LFB-PAS-H
LFB-PAS-H
LFB-Homes
LFB-Homes
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96NP8057 45 years old female
- Headache for 7-8 mos, developed papilledema
- Dx pseudotumor, no localizing signs
- Repeated LP, then VP shunt
- Lethargy ataxia 1 mo PTD, Rt fronto-parietal
mass found by arteriogram, Basal ganglia lesion
by EMI - Craniotomy, grade II astro, died 3 days later
- Autopsy Gliomatosis cerebri, right cerebrum,
basal ganglia, brainstem
97Right
98Right
99Right
100Right
101Right
102Right
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105NP9142 12 years old male
- Osteosarcoma, Rt maxilla resected 5 years ago
- PO chemotherapy for 2 years, then developed
visual difficulty - CT left thalamic tumor. Bx non-diagnostic
- XRT. CT Lt fronto-parietal mass, Bx
non-diagnostic - CT 4 mos PTD large Rt cerebellar mass, tumors
continued to enlarge - Autopsy Gliomatosis cerebri, thalamus,
brainstem, cerebellum, left temporal lobe and
subarachnoid gliomatosis
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116NP9417 46 years old female
- Bx of Rt fronto-parietal low grade glioma
(NP8442) after 1 mo of sensory seizures of Lt
face - CTs 7 mos 14 mos po showed no change
- Generalized seizure followed by coma 15 mos po
CT showed large mass VP shunt but died - Autopsy diffuse astrocytoma (gliomatosis
cerebri) with focal glioblastoma
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128NP13430 30 years old male
- 2/86 2 mos history of tremor incoordinationCT
showed plaques in posterior fossa, Dx MS - 9/86 headaches, dizziness, nausea,
incoordination for several weeks, no effects with
steroids - 11/86 headaches, ataxia, diplopia, gaze
paralysis, CT aqueductal obliteration,
displacement of 4th ventricle to Left - 12/86 Bx of vermis, grade II astrocytoma
(NP12369) VP shunt - XRT, died at home in 12/87, 2 yrs after onset
- Autopsy Gliomatosis cerebri predominantly of the
whole brainstem extending into the cerebellum,
diencephalon, ventral fronto-temporal lobes,
striate nuclei, olfactory carrefour, corpus
callosum and walls of lateral and 4th ventricles
histology varied from area to area, astrocytoma
grade I - III oligodendroglioma
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136HE
137Leptomeningeal gliomatosis
As gliomas grow to extend to the surface of the
CNS parenchyma, and/or when contiguity between
the tumor and the subarachnoid spaces is created
by surgical intervention, the tumor cells
frequently spread out into the subarachnoid
spaces and disseminate along the CSF circulation.
Focal leptomeningeal extension of glioma cells is
a common autopsy finding in patients previously
treated by surgical intervention . However,
extensive subarachnoid dissemination of glioma
cells causing obstructive hydrocephalus as the
major clinical presentation is relatively
uncommon.
138 When the primary site of a tumor is near the CNS
surface, subarachnoid dissemination may occur
early. The primary site may be so small and
inconspicuous as to be missed by diagnostic
studies or even at autopsy. Without a primary
site, leptomeningeal gliomatosis originates in
subarachnoid glial heterotopia. Extensive
leptomeningeal gliomatosis appears to be
increasing, especially in terminal glioblastoma,
perhaps because of more thorough autopsy studies
due to rising interests in treatments of
glioblastoma, or to life-prolongation of patients
because of newer treatments or multiple surgical
interventions.
139 Leptomeningeal gliomatosis consisting of low
grade glioma is otherwise rare, tending to occur
in young patients with oligodendroglioma. When
oligodendroglioma cells extend into the
subarachnoid spaces, their nuclei tend to become
spindle-shaped but GFAP usually remains negative.
These tumors have been frequently diagnosed as
astrocytoma in the past but still frequently bear
that diagnosis even today.
It appears that tumor cells devoid of
extensive cellular processes, such as
oligodendroglioma, PNET and lymphoma, can spread
through the subarachnoid spaces readily.
140NP 8246 22 years old female
- Lt temporal glioblastoma resected 3 yrs before
death (NP6999) - XRT with Neutron Photon and VP shunt
- Rebiopsy (NP8132)
- Autopsy Residual glioblastoma, left superior
temporal lobe, disseminated glioblastomatosis in
subarachnoid and perivascular spaces and walls of
ventricles
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145Reticulin
LFB-PAS-H
Reticulin
HE
146HE
Reticulin
HE
GFAP
147GFAP
GFAP
148NP 3969 19 years old female
- Age 12 SA hemorrhage, etiology unproved
- Age 13 headache, decreased L vision, arteriogram
showed a mass in L optic nerve, extra-axial mass
under L optic nerve tract extending into middle
fossa interpeduncular fossa, Dx astrocytoma
III - Post-operative XRT
- Age 17 seizures, fatigue, lightheadness, ataxia,
amenorrhea - Age 19 died outside
- Autopsy1) leptomeningeal oligodendrogliomatosis,
2)multiple cystic infarcts, left thalamus
globus pallidus, 3) diffuse cerebellar
degeneration, 4)hippocampal sclerosis
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158NP 5696 22 years old female
- No detailed history, except that she had carried
a Dx of right temporal high grade astrocytoma
which had been resected 1 yr 10 mos prior to
death - Autopsy 1) glioblastoma, right cerebral peduncle
and basis pontis, 2) leptomeningeal
glioblastomatosis, 3) cystic infarct, right
lateral geniculate nucleus
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166NP 5605 81 years old male
- Rapid onset of dementia (less than a month)
- Left sphenoid wing tumor resected glioblastoma
but unusual histology showing multiple tumor
nodules separated by fibrous tissue septa, tumor
cells frequently polygonal (NP5605-1) - P.O. XRT, improved but steroid-dependent
- Died of rupture of diverticulum of colon 2 mos
after surgery - Autopsy Monstrocellular glioblastoma, surface of
cerebral parenchyma extending into subarachnoid
spaces where tumor forms multiple nodules
separated by fibrous tissue septa
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171NP18272 19 months old female
- A twin born at 26 wks gestation, presented with
ataxia, nausea, vomiting following a fall 3 mos
prior to death - Choroid plexus carcinoma in Rt lateral ventricle
found resected (NP17941) - P.O chemotherapy complicated by emesis, fever
neutropenia - Hydrocephalus treated with shunt 10 days before
death, CT showed probable carcinomatous
meningitis, CSF positive for tumor cells - Autopsy 1) residual recurrent choroid plexus
carcinoma, Rt parieto-occipital surgical defect,
2) extensive leptomeningeal tumor dissemination,
3) obstructive hydrocephalus
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179NP16306 65 years old male
- Presented with progressive confusion, multiple
peripheral neuropathies and L facial paralysis - Imaging showed hydrocephalus, CSF positive for
malignant cells - Died 4 months after onset, no primary tumor found
- Autopsy Carcinomatous meningitis, Hydrocephalus
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188 Lymphoma frequently infiltrates a large
territory of the CNS parenchyma without forming
nodular masses and without disrupting gross
anatomy of the CNS, even rather inconspicuous at
autopsy. CT/MRI are most helpful for making a
diagnosis of cerebral lymphomatosis. Lymphoma
also has a tendency to spread along the
ventricular walls and subarachnoid spaces as well
as infiltrating the septum pellucidum and fornix.
In this respect, lymphoma behaves like PNET,
especially like medulloblastoma and treated
malignant gliomas.
189NP12782 61 years old female
- History of CNS lymphoma for about 3 yrs, treated
with systemic intraventricular Methotrexate via
Omayas reservoir - Thoracic laminectomy resection of epidural
lymphoma 2.5 yrs before death - MRI diffuse cerebral white matter enhancement,
? lymphoma, PML, MTX leucoencephalopathy, BX
non-diagnostic 6 mos PTD - Autopsy 1) Diffuse lymphomatosis, cerebral white
matter, cortex, basal ganglia, cerebellum
brainstem, - (perivascular) 2) MTX leucoencephalopathy
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195NP13259 10 years old female
- Presented with fever, rash, lymphadenopathy
splenomegaly - Multiple BX and bone marrow exam revealed
atypical immunoproliferative malignancy vs B-cell
lymphoma - Died of respiratory failure secondary to
pulmonary lymphoma - Autopsy Leptomeningeal lymphomatosis, diffuse
perivascular lymphoma infiltration in cerebral
white matter, cortex, thalamus, midbrain
cerebellum
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201NP7392 73 years old male
- 10 days of left leg dragging frequent falls
- Bells palsy 1 year earlier, mental deterioration
and ptosis for 1 year - Dx TIA, anti-platelet therapy
- CT increased density, Rt thalamus, third
ventricle shifted to L improved with steroids - Steroids tapered down, mental deterioration,
progressive SOB, died of sepsis - Autopsy 1) disseminated lymphomatosis,
multifocal, cerebral cortex, white matter, basal
ganglia and subarachnoid spaces, 2) old cystic
infarct, left caudate nucleus internal capsule
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206NP15362 70 years old male
- 1 month history of memory speech difficulty, Rt
upper extremity weakness - CT low density lesion, corpus callosum
- MRI lesions in periventricular regions pons
- Dx lymphoma, improved with steroids, then
deteriorated, died 4 mos after onset - Autopsy lymphoma, corpus callosum, ventricular
walls, pons
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212NP19885 34 years old male
- Headaches, nausea vomiting, HIV(), no clinical
AIDS - CT (), Toxo(-), PPD(), LP(-), EBV()
- Rx with anti-tbc for 1 month
- Improved with steroids, then deteriorated
- Autopsy lymphomatosis, thick corpus callosum,
fornices, pituitary stalk, subarachnoid spaces
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220NP 9932 59 years old male
- 8/83, meningitis-like syndromes, then ataxia
dysarthria - 11/83, abnormal CT brain abscess, Rx with
antibiotics - 1/84, brainstem signs with bilateral internuclear
ophthalmoplegia, Rt 7th nerve palsy, ataxia - Brain Bx non-diagnostic
- 3/84, CT periventricular lesions, lymphoma XRT
2000 rad, died 9 mos after onset - Pt was a chicken farmer, a son had leukemia at
age 17 - Autopsy periventricular lymphomatosis
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229HE
LFB-PAS-H
230Multiple Tumors
- 1. Same tumors
- primary tumor gliomas, lymphoma, meningioma,
schwannoma, neurofibroma - Metastatic carcinoma, sarcoma, lymphoma
- 2. Different tumors
- Different sites neurofibromatosis, multiple
primary tumors, primary metastatic tumors - Same sites different primary tumors, metastatic
to primary tumors
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237NP14268 64 years old male
- 1 week Rt arm weakness speech difficulty
- CT L thalamic lesion, infarct vs abscess
rapidly spread to brainstem no improvement with
steroid, 5/88 - - Bx ? Abscess, no improvement with antibiotics
- Rebiopsy 2 weeks later GM
- Died 3 mos later outside
- Autopsy Bicentric glioblastoma involving left
basal ganglia and pons
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251Neurofibromas involving nerves in the Rt side of
the neck, 30x5x10 cm, carotid artery, jugular
vein some intact nerves in the center
Rt brachial plexus plexiform neurofibroma
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254NP15476 59 years old female
- Presented with 2 months of mental decline
- Multiple enhancing lesions, left frontal, right
temporal, basal ganglia and pineal gland - Biopsy lymphoma, treated with Methotrexate x 3,
no XRT, - Died 4 months after diagnosis
- Autopsy Multifocal b-cell lymphoma
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259Multiple Tumors
- 1. Same tumors
- primary tumor gliomas, lymphoma, meningioma,
schwannoma, neurofibroma - Metastatic carcinoma, sarcoma, lymphoma
- 2. Different tumors
- Different sites neurofibromatosis, multiple
primary tumors, primary metastatic tumors - Same sites different primary tumors, metastatic
to primary tumors
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272Multiple Tumors
- 1. Same tumors
- primary tumor gliomas, lymphoma, meningioma,
schwannoma, neurofibroma - Metastatic carcinoma, sarcoma, lymphoma
- 2. Different tumors
- Different sites neurofibromatosis, multiple
primary tumors, primary metastatic tumors - Same sites different primary tumors, metastatic
to primary tumors
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280Meningioma
Renal cell ca