Meningiomas are the most common low-grade brain tumors in adults. They form from the membranes that line the skull and cover the brain, and are often curable with surgery. Glioblastomas, the most common high-grade brain tumors in adults, are probably the most resistant of all cancers to treatment. This is because the tumor has "fingers" that spread very quickly and penetrate the folds of the brain, making it very hard to remove with surgery and radiation therapy. Oligodendrogliomas may be confused occasionally with malignant astrocytomas because their cellular makeup looks similar under the microscope, but patients with these tumors generally have a better prognosis and are more responsive to therapy.
Spinal Tumors
Different types of cancer may form in the bones, tissues, fluid, or nerves of the spine. Less than 10 percent of spine tumors originate in the spine. Most spine tumors have spread, or metastasized, to the spine from cancers that began in other locations, such as the lung, breast, colon, prostate, kidney, or thyroid gland. Sarcomas, which are cancers of the bone, muscle, or connective tissue, can also spread to the spine. The majority of primary and metastatic spine tumors are epidural tumors. These tumors begin in the bones of the spine and compress the spinal dura, which are the membranes that surround the spinal fluid, spinal cord, and nerve roots. Spinal tumors can also occur inside the spinal cord itself (intradural, intramedullary tumors) or inside the dura but outside the spinal cord (intradural, extramedullary tumors).
For more information about these tumors, visit the Spine Tumor information overview.