Metastasis of adenocarcinoma of the lung to optic nerve sheath meningioma
A. C. Arnold, R. S. Hepler, M. A. Badr, R. B. Lufkin, Y. Anzai, P. N. Konrad and H. V. Vinters
University of California-Los Angeles Optic Neuropathy Center, Jules Stein Eye Institute.
A 71-year-old woman developed chronic progressive visual loss in the right
eye and computed tomographic scan showed enlargement of the intraorbital
optic nerve consistent with optic nerve sheath meningioma. Over 12 years,
the contralateral optic nerve was not clinically affected, and serial
neuroradiologic imaging showed no evidence of intracranial tumor extension.
Death occurred from metastatic adenocarcinoma of the lung 14 years after
initial visual loss. Examination of the postmortem specimen of optic nerve
and chiasm revealed extradural extension of meningioma with spread to the
region of the optic chiasm and hypothalamus. A large focus of metastatic
adenocarcinoma was present within the intraorbital portion of the
meningioma. Carcinoma metastatic to intracranial meningioma is rare; to our
knowledge, this is the first reported case in an optic nerve sheath
meningioma. Neuroimaging may be inadequate to predict the value of tumor
excision in preventing intracranial spread of optic nerve sheath
meningioma.