Surgical resection of pediatric craniocervical junction Rosai-Dorfman histiocytosis-a case report and literature review

Childs Nerv Syst. 2024 Nov;40(11):3837-3841. doi: 10.1007/s00381-024-06538-x. Epub 2024 Jul 16.

Abstract

Rosai-Dorfman disease (RDD) with craniocervical junction involvement is a rare clinical entity. We present herein a case of a pediatric patient with craniocervical junction RDD which was surgically treated. A 10-year-old female with a history of B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) in remission and RDD presented with frontal migraine headaches. She previously had a right posterior chest wall lesion which was biopsy-proven RDD. She was found on imaging to have a dural-based right craniocervical junction lesion. Given her history of B-ALL, after a multidisciplinary discussion, the decision was made to proceed with resection with possible initiation of cobimetinib or clofarabine. The patient underwent a suboccipital craniotomy, C1 laminectomy, and resection of the dural-based lesion. Gross total resection was achieved, and histopathology confirmed the diagnosis of RDD. She was discharged home on postoperative day 4. No recurrence was seen on follow-up imaging at 3 months. We conducted a systematic literature review examining all cases of pediatric intracranial RDD and all cases of craniocervical junction RDD. This represents, to the best of our knowledge, only the second case of pediatric craniocervical junction RDD. Although RDD is often self-limiting, medical treatment is often considered for intracranial disease, but tissue confirmation is necessary. Surgical resection provides histopathologic diagnosis and can sometimes serve as definitive treatment for a particular lesion.

Keywords: Craniocervical junction; Histiocytic proliferative disorder; Neurosurgery; Pediatric; Rosai-Dorfman disease; Sinus histiocytosis.

Publication types

  • Case Reports
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Child
  • Female
  • Histiocytosis, Sinus* / diagnostic imaging
  • Histiocytosis, Sinus* / pathology
  • Histiocytosis, Sinus* / surgery
  • Humans