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Distinguishing grade I meningioma from higher grade meningiomas without biopsy

BACKGROUND: Many meningiomas are identified by imaging and followed, with an assumption that they are WHO Grade I tumors. The purpose of our investigation is to find clinical or imaging predictors of WHO Grade II/III tumors to distinguish them from Grade I meningiomas. METHODS: Patients with a patho...

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Autores principales: Varlotto, John, Flickinger, John, Pavelic, Martin T., Specht, Charles S., Sheehan, Jonas M., Timek, Dana T., Glantz, Michael J., Sogge, Steven, Dimaio, Christopher, Moser, Richard, Yunus, Shakeeb, Fitzgerald, Thomas J., Upadhyay, Urvashi, Rava, Paul, Tangel, Matthew, Yao, Aaron, Kanekar, Sangam
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4742010/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26472106
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author Varlotto, John
Flickinger, John
Pavelic, Martin T.
Specht, Charles S.
Sheehan, Jonas M.
Timek, Dana T.
Glantz, Michael J.
Sogge, Steven
Dimaio, Christopher
Moser, Richard
Yunus, Shakeeb
Fitzgerald, Thomas J.
Upadhyay, Urvashi
Rava, Paul
Tangel, Matthew
Yao, Aaron
Kanekar, Sangam
author_facet Varlotto, John
Flickinger, John
Pavelic, Martin T.
Specht, Charles S.
Sheehan, Jonas M.
Timek, Dana T.
Glantz, Michael J.
Sogge, Steven
Dimaio, Christopher
Moser, Richard
Yunus, Shakeeb
Fitzgerald, Thomas J.
Upadhyay, Urvashi
Rava, Paul
Tangel, Matthew
Yao, Aaron
Kanekar, Sangam
author_sort Varlotto, John
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Many meningiomas are identified by imaging and followed, with an assumption that they are WHO Grade I tumors. The purpose of our investigation is to find clinical or imaging predictors of WHO Grade II/III tumors to distinguish them from Grade I meningiomas. METHODS: Patients with a pathologic diagnosis of meningioma from 2002–2009 were included if they had pre-operative MRI studies and pathology for review. A Neuro-Pathologist reviewed and classified all tumors by WHO 2007. All Brain MRI imaging was reviewed by a Neuro-radiologist. Pathology and Radiology reviews were blinded from each other and clinical course. Recursive partitioning was used to create predictive models for identifying meningioma grades. RESULTS: Factors significantly correlating with a diagnosis of WHO Grade II-III tumors in univariate analysis: prior CVA (p = 0.005), CABG (p = 0.010), paresis (p = 0.008), vascularity index = 4/4: (p = 0.009), convexity vs other (p = 0.014), metabolic syndrome (p = 0.025), non-skull base (p = 0.041) and non-postmenopausal female (p = 0.045). Recursive partitioning analysis identified four categories: 1. prior CVA, 2. vascular index (vi) = 4 (no CVA), 3. premenopausal or male, vi < 4, no CVA. 4. Postmenopausal, vi < 4, no CVA with corresponding rates of 73, 54, 35 and 10% of being Grade II-III meningiomas. CONCLUSIONS: Meningioma patients with prior CVA and those grade 4/4 vascularity are the most likely to have WHO Grade II-III tumors while post-menopausal women without these features are the most likely to have Grade I meningiomas. Further study of the associations of clinical and imaging factors with grade and clinical behavior are needed to better predict behavior of these tumors without biopsy.
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spelling pubmed-47420102016-03-17 Distinguishing grade I meningioma from higher grade meningiomas without biopsy Varlotto, John Flickinger, John Pavelic, Martin T. Specht, Charles S. Sheehan, Jonas M. Timek, Dana T. Glantz, Michael J. Sogge, Steven Dimaio, Christopher Moser, Richard Yunus, Shakeeb Fitzgerald, Thomas J. Upadhyay, Urvashi Rava, Paul Tangel, Matthew Yao, Aaron Kanekar, Sangam Oncotarget Clinical Research Paper BACKGROUND: Many meningiomas are identified by imaging and followed, with an assumption that they are WHO Grade I tumors. The purpose of our investigation is to find clinical or imaging predictors of WHO Grade II/III tumors to distinguish them from Grade I meningiomas. METHODS: Patients with a pathologic diagnosis of meningioma from 2002–2009 were included if they had pre-operative MRI studies and pathology for review. A Neuro-Pathologist reviewed and classified all tumors by WHO 2007. All Brain MRI imaging was reviewed by a Neuro-radiologist. Pathology and Radiology reviews were blinded from each other and clinical course. Recursive partitioning was used to create predictive models for identifying meningioma grades. RESULTS: Factors significantly correlating with a diagnosis of WHO Grade II-III tumors in univariate analysis: prior CVA (p = 0.005), CABG (p = 0.010), paresis (p = 0.008), vascularity index = 4/4: (p = 0.009), convexity vs other (p = 0.014), metabolic syndrome (p = 0.025), non-skull base (p = 0.041) and non-postmenopausal female (p = 0.045). Recursive partitioning analysis identified four categories: 1. prior CVA, 2. vascular index (vi) = 4 (no CVA), 3. premenopausal or male, vi < 4, no CVA. 4. Postmenopausal, vi < 4, no CVA with corresponding rates of 73, 54, 35 and 10% of being Grade II-III meningiomas. CONCLUSIONS: Meningioma patients with prior CVA and those grade 4/4 vascularity are the most likely to have WHO Grade II-III tumors while post-menopausal women without these features are the most likely to have Grade I meningiomas. Further study of the associations of clinical and imaging factors with grade and clinical behavior are needed to better predict behavior of these tumors without biopsy. Impact Journals LLC 2015-10-09 /pmc/articles/PMC4742010/ /pubmed/26472106 Text en Copyright: © 2015 Varlotto et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Clinical Research Paper
Varlotto, John
Flickinger, John
Pavelic, Martin T.
Specht, Charles S.
Sheehan, Jonas M.
Timek, Dana T.
Glantz, Michael J.
Sogge, Steven
Dimaio, Christopher
Moser, Richard
Yunus, Shakeeb
Fitzgerald, Thomas J.
Upadhyay, Urvashi
Rava, Paul
Tangel, Matthew
Yao, Aaron
Kanekar, Sangam
Distinguishing grade I meningioma from higher grade meningiomas without biopsy
title Distinguishing grade I meningioma from higher grade meningiomas without biopsy
title_full Distinguishing grade I meningioma from higher grade meningiomas without biopsy
title_fullStr Distinguishing grade I meningioma from higher grade meningiomas without biopsy
title_full_unstemmed Distinguishing grade I meningioma from higher grade meningiomas without biopsy
title_short Distinguishing grade I meningioma from higher grade meningiomas without biopsy
title_sort distinguishing grade i meningioma from higher grade meningiomas without biopsy
topic Clinical Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4742010/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26472106
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