Glioblastoma metastases

Reported in < 2% of GBM cases.

True incidence may be underestimated due to:

Short survival times

Lack of systemic imaging or autopsy

Assumption of CNS confinement

  • Local invasion: adjacent brain structures, corpus callosum (“butterfly glioma”).
  • Multifocal glioblastoma: multiple enhancing lesions without clear CSF dissemination.
  • Leptomeningeal dissemination: involves basal cisterns, sulci, and ventricular lining.
  • Ependymal spread: along the ventricular surfaces.
  • Leptomeningeal spread: most common form; CSF seeding along the spinal canal.
  • Intramedullary metastasis: very rare; may mimic a primary spinal cord tumor.
  • Epidural/extradural metastasis: extremely rare; usually via direct extension or venous plexus (Batson’s plexus).
  • Lymph nodes
  • Lungs and pleura
  • Bones (especially vertebrae and pelvis)
  • Liver
  • Skin and soft tissues
  • CSF seeding – most frequent; explains spinal and leptomeningeal spread.
  • Hematogenous spread – rare; possible in cases with dural or venous sinus invasion.
  • Surgical tract dissemination – spread via surgical wounds or shunt systems.
  • Direct invasion – local extension to dura, skull base, or adjacent tissues.
  • Asymptomatic – incidental detection on MRI surveillance.
  • Spinal symptomatic – back pain, radiculopathy, cauda equina syndrome.
  • Leptomeningeal – headache, nausea, cranial neuropathies, drop metastases.
  • Systemic – lymphadenopathy, bone pain, pulmonary symptoms.

Glioblastoma metastases are rare but clinically significant. They can be classified by:

  • Anatomical location (intracranial, spinal, systemic)
  • Dissemination route (CSF, blood, direct, surgical)
  • Molecular subtype
  • Clinical pattern

A systematic approach to classification helps improve recognition, diagnosis, and multidisciplinary management.

Lungs

Lymph nodes

Liver

Bones

Less frequent: spleen, skin, adrenal glands


It occur most often in the lungs and pleura (60% of patients) but also in the regional lymph nodes (51%), bones (31%), and liver (22%) 1) 2).

To date, the cause of the GBM metastatic spread still remains under discussion. It probably develops at the time of intracranial progression following a surgical procedure. According to other hypothesis, the metastases are a consequence of spontaneous tumour transdural extension or haematogenous dissemination 3).

A 45-year-old man presented with history of diplopia and gait disturbance. Magnetic resonance imaging showed a left cerebellar space-occupying lesion. The histopathology was consistent with glioblastoma. The patient underwent adjuvant chemoradiation. A year later, he presented with seizures, worsening headache, neck stiffness, and low back pain. Imaging showed metastasis to the S1/S2 region of the spinal canal. A 29-year-old man presented with episodic headaches associated with nausea, vomiting, neck stiffness, and imbalance while walking. Computed tomography of the brain showed a hypodense lesion involving the left midbrain, pons, and left middle cerebellar peduncle, causing fourth ventricular pressure with obstructive hydrocephalus. A navigation-guided biopsy of the brainstem lesion confirmed the diagnosis of glioblastoma World Health Organization grade IV, isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (R132 H) and H3K27M negative. Isocitrate dehydrogenase gene sequencing was suggested. The patient was referred for chemoradiation. During treatment, he worsened neurologically and developed axial neck and back pain. Neuraxis screening showed disseminated leptomeningeal spread, which was confirmed on dural biopsy 4).


A young patient with multiple visceral and osseous metastases occurred after 4 years after first diagnosis of GBM. The strangeness as well as the rarity of this event does not allow to identify an effective treatment for GBM metastases, making the management of this ominous tumor an even greater challenge 5).


1)
Slowik F, Balogh I (1980) Extracranial spreading of glioblastoma multiforme. Zentralbl Neurochir 41:57–68.
2)
Pasquier B, Pasquier D, N'Golet A, et al. (1980) Extraneural metastases of astrocytomas and glioblastomas: Clinicopathological study of two cases and review of literature. Cancer 45:112–125.
3)
Grah JJ, Katalinic D, Stern-Padovan R, Paladino J, Santek F, Juretic A, Zarkovic K, Plestina S, Supe M. Leptomeningeal and intramedullary metastases of glioblastoma multiforme in a patient reoperated during adjuvant radiochemotherapy. World J Surg Oncol. 2013 Mar 5;11:55. doi:10.1186/1477-7819-11-55. PubMed PMID: 23496844; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3599050.
4)
Pande A, Rajaraman N, Sadiya N, Patil S, Pandian S, Adhithyan R, Rajendran B, Jalali R, Ghosh S. Spinal Drop Metastasis of Glioblastoma-Two Case Reports, Clinicopathologic Features, Current Modalities of Evaluation, and Treatment with a Review of the Literature. World Neurosurg. 2021 Feb;146:261-269. doi: 10.1016/j.wneu.2020.10.023. Epub 2020 Nov 5. PMID: 33161132.
5)
Simonetti G, Silvani A, Fariselli L, Hottinger AF, Pesce GA, Prada F, Gaviani P. Extra central nervous system metastases from glioblastoma: a new possible trigger event? Neurol Sci. 2017 Jun 24. doi: 10.1007/s10072-017-3036-0. [Epub ahead of print] PubMed PMID: 28647829.
  • glioblastoma_metastases.txt
  • Last modified: 2025/05/29 16:06
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