section name header

Information

 Skull and Spine Disorders

Prevalence: 1÷40,000 live births

Pathogenesis:

  1. growth of residual primitive pluripotential cells derived from the primitive streak + knot (Hensen node) of very early embryonic development
  2. attempt at twinning
    • increased prevalence of twins in family

Histo:

  1. Mature teratoma (55–75%) with elements from glia, bowel, pancreas, bronchial mucosa, skin appendages, striated + smooth muscle, bowel loops, bone components (metacarpal bones + digits), well-formed teeth, choroid plexus structures ( production of CSF)
    • MATURE TERATOMA = benign tumor composed of tissues foreign to anatomic site in which they arise, usually contains tissue from at least 2 germ cell layers
  2. Immature teratoma (11–28%): admixed with primitive neuroepithelial / renal tissue
    • IMMATURE TERATOMA = benign teratoma with embryonic elements
  3. Malignant germ cell tumor
    1. mixed malignant teratoma (7–17%): elements of endodermal sinus tumor (= yolk sac tumor) + either form of teratoma
    2. pure endodermal sinus tumor (rare)
    3. seminoma (dysgerminoma), embryonal carcinoma, choriocarcinoma (extremely rare)

Metastases to: lung, bone, lymph nodes (inguinal, retroperitoneal), liver, brain

Age: 50–70% during first few days of life; 80% by 6 months of age; <10% >2 years of age; rare in adulthood (only 100 cases reported); M÷F = 1÷4

Classification (Altman):

Associated with: other congenital anomalies (in 18%):

  1. Musculoskeletal (5–16%): spinal dysraphism, sacral agenesis, hip dislocation, clubbed feet
  2. Renal anomalies: hydronephrosis, renal cystic dysplasia, Potter syndrome, urethral atresia, urinary ascites
  3. GI tract: imperforate anus, rectal atresia / stenosis, gastroschisis
  4. Hydrocolpos, undescended testes
  5. Fetal hydrops high-output cardiac failure
  6. Placentomegaly fetal hydrops
  7. Curvilinear sacrococcygeal defect (rare autosomal dominant inheritance with equal sex incidence, low malignant potential, absence of calcifications) + anorectal stenosis / atresia, vesicoureteral reflux

Average size: 8 (range, 1–30) cm in diameter

Plain film:

BE:

IVP:

Myelography:

Angio:

US / CT:

OB-US:

Age: as early as 14 weeks GA

Cx (in 18%): preterm labor, preeclampsia, HELLP syndrome, premature delivery, dystocia, intratumoral hemorrhage, tumor avulsion fetal exsanguination

Rx: US-guided drainage of cystic component, fetal surgery + Cesarean section for solid tumor

MR (preferred modality for initial Dx + surveillance):

Prognosis: likely benign: predominantly fatty / cystic tumor

likely malignant: hemorrhagic / necrotic tumor, sacral destruction, patient >2 months of age

Mortality: 5% for infant; 50% for fetus (worse <30 weeks GA)

Cx:

  1. Dystocia in 6–13%
  2. Massive intratumoral hemorrhage
  3. Fetal death in utero / stillbirth

Rx:

  1. Complete tumor resection + coccygectomy + reconstruction of pelvic floor: up to 37% recurrence rate, esp. without coccygectomy
  2. Multiagent chemotherapy (in malignancy) with long-term survival rate of 50%

DDx:

  1. Myelomeningocele (superior to sacrococcygeal region, not septated, axial bone changes)
  2. Rectal duplication, anterior meningocele (purely cystic)
  3. Hemangioma, lymphangioma, lipomeningocele, lipoma, epidermal cyst, chordoma, sarcoma, ependymoma, neuroblastoma