Doctors reported on a single case of a 28-year-old man who had a brain tumor discovered after he experienced dizziness. The tumor was located in the frontotemporal area of his brain. Imaging scans showed the mass contained significant fat signal and was pressing on nearby brain structures. The man underwent surgery to completely remove the tumor.
After surgery, laboratory analysis of the tumor tissue confirmed it was a specific type of brain tumor called a World Health Organization Grade II ependymoma. What made this case unusual was that the tumor also contained areas of fatty tissue, a rare change called lipomatous metaplasia. Special staining tests highlighted features of both the typical tumor cells and the fatty tissue.
This report combines this single case with a review of previously published similar cases in medical literature. The authors note this fatty change within this type of brain tumor is extremely rare. The goal of the report is to help other doctors and pathologists recognize this rare variant if they encounter it.
Readers should understand this is a description of one very rare case. It does not provide information on how common this is, what causes it, or long-term outcomes for patients. The main takeaway is that doctors sometimes encounter unusual variations in tumors, and careful analysis is needed for accurate diagnosis.