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Brain tumors that result from transformation
and abnormal growth of brain cells are called primary brain tumors because they
originate in the brain. Usually they are named after the part of the brain or
the type of brain cell from which they arise.
Secondary brain tumors or metastatic tumor occur
when cancer cells from other parts of the body, such as the lung, breast, skin,
kidney, colon spread to the brain. These tumor cells reach the brain via the
blood-stream. Secondary tumors in the brain are far more common than primary
brain tumors. About 25% of tumors elsewhere in the body metastasize to the
brain.
The WHO classification of tumors of the central
nervous systems is the standard for the definition of CNS neoplasms in the clinical
oncology and cancer research fields and aims at establishing a nomenclature that
is used and accepted worldwide, and at incorporating the latest advances in the
field. The fourth edition was published in 2007.
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