Granular cell astrocytoma (GCA) is an aggressive variant of astrocytoma characterised by predominantly round-to-polygonal cells with abundant eosinophilic granular cytoplasm. This tumor usually lack the morphological signatures of conventional astrocytoma… Click to show full abstract
Granular cell astrocytoma (GCA) is an aggressive variant of astrocytoma characterised by predominantly round-to-polygonal cells with abundant eosinophilic granular cytoplasm. This tumor usually lack the morphological signatures of conventional astrocytoma and are devoid of typical features which define a malignant neoplasm, leading to potential misdiagnosis. We report GCA in a 50-year-old man presenting with severe headache along with vertiginous sensation and sensory seizures of left upper limb for past two months. Imaging showed multiple intra-axial, hyperintense space-occupying-lesions in bilateral anterior temporal lobe, left parietal lobe, left thalamus and cerebellum, raising possibility of lymphoma/metastases. Histopathological examination revealed sheets of large polygonal cells with distinct cellular outline, ample amount of eosinophilic PAS-positive granular cytoplasm, eccentrically placed irregular, round-to-ovoid nuclei with occasional prominent nucleoli. On immunohistochemistry, tumour cells were diffusely immunopositive for Olig2, S100, EMA, lysozyme and CD68 while they were immunonegative for GFAP, LCA, pan-CK, TTF-1, TFE-3, PAX-8, SOX10, MAP2, MBP, NF, H3K27M, H3K27me3, p53, IDH1(R132H), CD1a, langerin and BRAFV600E. Numerous scattered macrophages were highlighted by CD163. MIB 1-labelling-index was approximately 5-6%. Overall features were congruous with final diagnosis of GCA. GCAs exhibit genetic alterations similar to glioblastoma and are seen to behave in a belligerent manner irrespective of their morphological grade. Thereby, they warrant early diagnosis for conducive patient management.
               
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