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White-matter abnormalities in unirradiated patients cured of primary central nervous system lymphoma

  • DIAGNOSTIC NEURORADIOLOGY
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Abstract

On MRI, primary brain tumors are commonly seen as contrast-enhancing masses surrounded by areas of abnormal signal on T2-weighted images. Following successful treatment tumors may no longer show contrast enhancement. The residual abnormalities are assumed to be represent “edema” and infiltrating tumor cells. We report nine patients with primary lymphoma of the central nervous system who had complete responses to intravenous methotrexate, but did not receive intrathecal chemotherapy or cranial irradiation. After complete resolution of contrast-enhancing lesions, persistent abnormalities on T2-weighted images in the region of prior tumor were initially assumed to reflect residual viable tumor. As they remained unchanged for years, however, this may not hold true in the cases in which primary central nervous system lymphoma responds to chemotherapy alone.

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Received: 14 August 1998 Accepted: 11 August 1999

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Kim, L., Hochberg, F. & Shaeffer, P. White-matter abnormalities in unirradiated patients cured of primary central nervous system lymphoma. Neuroradiology 42, 406–412 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1007/s002340000301

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s002340000301

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