The Central Anatomical Question: Treatment of Lymphoma Within Border-Zone Anatomical Sites Adjacent to the Central Nervous System
Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Anatomical Sites of Interest
2.1. The Dura
2.2. The Cavernous Sinus
2.3. The Choroid Plexus and Circumventricular Organs
2.4. The Pituitary
2.5. The Cranial Nerves
3. Conclusions and Future Directions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
CSF | Cerebral Spinal Fluid |
CNS | Central Nervous System |
CT | Computed Tomography |
CVO | Circumventricular Organ |
PCNSL | Primary Central Nervous System Lymphoma |
MRI | Magnetic Resonance Imaging |
SCNSL | Secondary Central Nervous System Lymphoma |
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Anatomical Features | Common Symptoms | Treatment Considerations * | |
---|---|---|---|
Dura | Adjacent to leptomeningeal layer. Has a role in CSF drainage into lymphatic system with direct access to systemic blood circulation, skull bone marrow, and cervical lymphatic system. | Headaches, seizures, cranial nerve deficits, visual disturbances, motor or sensory deficits. | CNS-directed therapy not required for isolated dural involvement, with close monitoring using CSF and imaging, assessing for meningeal or brain parenchyma invasion. |
Cavernous Sinus | Adjacent to brain parenchyma while containing venous drainage from CNS, internal carotid artery, and multiple cranial nerves. | Headaches, cranial neuropathies (commonly ophthalmoplegia, facial numbness, Horner’s syndrome) exophthalmos, chemosis, vision changes, strokes. | Whenever possible, the inclusion of CNS-directed therapy to systemic therapy. This reflects the difficulty in precisely demarcating blood–brain barrier boundaries and the risk of microscopic extension beyond visible disease. |
CVOs | Adjacent to brain parenchyma and CSF reservoirs with connections to systemic blood circulation. | Commonly asymptomatic but may present with symptoms consistent with increased intracranial pressure such as headache, blurred vision, or nausea. | |
Pituitary Gland | Extension of/adjacent to brain parenchyma with systemically accessible fenestrated capillary vascular supply. | Symptoms secondary to hormonal dysregulation, diabetes insipidus, headaches, or visual changes. | |
Cranial Nerves | Peripheral portion near the CNS with direct route into the brain parenchyma through the fascicle portion of the nerve. | Specific motor or sensory cranial nerve deficits which can include ptosis, diplopia, facial weakness, facial numbness, dysarthria, dysphagia, vertigo, or hearing loss. | CNS-directed therapy when affected portions of the nerve are directly adjacent to or within the dural boundary. Systemic therapy can be considered with only distal nerve involvement. |
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Marsters, C.; Phua, C.; MacDonald, M.; Boldt, G.; Climans, S. The Central Anatomical Question: Treatment of Lymphoma Within Border-Zone Anatomical Sites Adjacent to the Central Nervous System. Cancers 2025, 17, 3392. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers17203392
Marsters C, Phua C, MacDonald M, Boldt G, Climans S. The Central Anatomical Question: Treatment of Lymphoma Within Border-Zone Anatomical Sites Adjacent to the Central Nervous System. Cancers. 2025; 17(20):3392. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers17203392
Chicago/Turabian StyleMarsters, Candace, Chai Phua, Maria MacDonald, Gabriel Boldt, and Seth Climans. 2025. "The Central Anatomical Question: Treatment of Lymphoma Within Border-Zone Anatomical Sites Adjacent to the Central Nervous System" Cancers 17, no. 20: 3392. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers17203392
APA StyleMarsters, C., Phua, C., MacDonald, M., Boldt, G., & Climans, S. (2025). The Central Anatomical Question: Treatment of Lymphoma Within Border-Zone Anatomical Sites Adjacent to the Central Nervous System. Cancers, 17(20), 3392. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers17203392