Predictors of salvage therapy for parasagittal meningiomas treated with primary surgery, radiosurgery, or surgery plus adjuvant radiotherapy.

Journal of clinical neuroscience : official journal of the Neurosurgical Society of Australasia 2024 Vol.124() p. 102-108

Joy Trybula S, Nandoliya KR, Youngblood MW, Karras CL, Fernandez LG, Oyon DE, Texakalidis P, Khan OH, Lesniak MS, Tate MC, Rosenow JM, Hill VB, Hijaz TA, Russell EJ, Sachdev S, Kalapurakal JA, Horbinski CM, Magill ST, Chandler JP

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Abstract

[OBJECTIVE] Parasagittal meningiomas (PM) are treated with primary microsurgery, radiosurgery (SRS), or surgery with adjuvant radiation. We investigated predictors of tumor progression requiring salvage surgery or radiation treatment. We sought to determine whether primary treatment modality, or radiologic, histologic, and clinical variables were associated with tumor progression requiring salvage treatment.

[METHODS] Retrospective study of 109 consecutive patients with PMs treated with primary surgery, radiation (RT), or surgery plus adjuvant RT (2000-2017) and minimum 5 years follow-up. Patient, radiologic, histologic, and treatment data were analyzed using standard statistical methods.

[RESULTS] Median follow up was 8.5 years. Primary treatment for PM was surgery in 76 patients, radiation in 16 patients, and surgery plus adjuvant radiation in 17 patients. Forty percent of parasagittal meningiomas in our cohort required some form of salvage treatment. On univariate analysis, brain invasion (OR: 6.93, p < 0.01), WHO grade 2/3 (OR: 4.54, p < 0.01), peritumoral edema (OR: 2.81, p = 0.01), sagittal sinus invasion (OR: 6.36, p < 0.01), sagittal sinus occlusion (OR: 4.86, p < 0.01), and non-spherical shape (OR: 3.89, p < 0.01) were significantly associated with receiving salvage treatment. On multivariate analysis, superior sagittal sinus invasion (OR: 8.22, p = 0.01) and WHO grade 2&3 (OR: 7.58, p < 0.01) were independently associated with receiving salvage treatment. There was no difference in time to salvage therapy (p = 0.11) or time to progression (p = 0.43) between patients receiving primary surgery alone, RT alone, or surgery plus adjuvant RT. Patients who had initial surgery were more likely to have peritumoral edema on preoperative imaging (p = 0.01). Median tumor volume was 19.0 cm in patients receiving primary surgery, 5.3 cm for RT, and 24.4 cm for surgery plus adjuvant RT (p < 0.01).

[CONCLUSION] Superior sagittal sinus invasion and WHO grade 2/3 are independently associated with PM progression requiring salvage therapy regardless of extent of resection or primary treatment modality. Parasagittal meningiomas have a high rate of recurrence with 80.0% of patients with WHO grade 2/3 tumors with sinus invasion requiring salvage treatment whereas only 13.6% of the WHO grade 1 tumors without sinus invasion required salvage treatment. This information is useful when counseling patients about disease management and setting expectations.

추출된 의학 개체 (NER)

유형영어 표현한국어 / 풀이UMLS CUI출처등장
시술 microsurgery 미세수술 dict 1
해부 brain scispacy 1
합병증 peritumoral edema scispacy 1
약물 [OBJECTIVE] Parasagittal meningiomas scispacy 1
질환 meningiomas C0025286
Meningioma
scispacy 1
질환 SRS C0796160
INTELLECTUAL DEVELOPMENTAL DISORDER, X-LINKED, SYNDROMIC, SNYDER-ROBINSON TYPE
scispacy 1
질환 tumor C0027651
Neoplasms
scispacy 1
질환 edema C0013604
Edema
scispacy 1
질환 sinus occlusion scispacy 1
질환 tumors C0027651
Neoplasms
scispacy 1
기타 patients scispacy 1
기타 PMs scispacy 1
기타 Patient scispacy 1

MeSH Terms

Humans; Salvage Therapy; Meningioma; Male; Female; Radiosurgery; Middle Aged; Retrospective Studies; Meningeal Neoplasms; Aged; Adult; Radiotherapy, Adjuvant; Aged, 80 and over; Neurosurgical Procedures; Follow-Up Studies; Disease Progression

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