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CNS Invasion in Meningioma—How the Intraoperative Assessment Can Improve the Prognostic Evaluation of Tumor Recurrence

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Brain invasion has been integrated into the new WHO classification of meningiomas to improve the prognostic assessment regarding tumor recurrence. However, its role has been questioned. One of the reasons is that for complete histopathological assessment, tissue sampling of the compl...

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Autores principales: Behling, Felix, Fodi, Christina, Gepfner-Tuma, Irina, Machetanz, Kathrin, Renovanz, Mirjam, Skardelly, Marco, Bornemann, Antje, Honegger, Jürgen, Tabatabai, Ghazaleh, Tatagiba, Marcos, Schittenhelm, Jens
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7761660/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33287241
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers12123620
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author Behling, Felix
Fodi, Christina
Gepfner-Tuma, Irina
Machetanz, Kathrin
Renovanz, Mirjam
Skardelly, Marco
Bornemann, Antje
Honegger, Jürgen
Tabatabai, Ghazaleh
Tatagiba, Marcos
Schittenhelm, Jens
author_facet Behling, Felix
Fodi, Christina
Gepfner-Tuma, Irina
Machetanz, Kathrin
Renovanz, Mirjam
Skardelly, Marco
Bornemann, Antje
Honegger, Jürgen
Tabatabai, Ghazaleh
Tatagiba, Marcos
Schittenhelm, Jens
author_sort Behling, Felix
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Brain invasion has been integrated into the new WHO classification of meningiomas to improve the prognostic assessment regarding tumor recurrence. However, its role has been questioned. One of the reasons is that for complete histopathological assessment, tissue sampling of the complete brain–tumor interface is necessary, but not always surgically and technically feasible. Therefore, the additional intraoperative assessment of CNS invasion may be of value for a more precise assessment of this tumor characteristic. We therefore studied the prognostic impact of the histopathological and intraoperative assessment of CNS invasion regarding radiographic tumor recurrence and found that both factors by themselves do not reach a prognostic significance. However, if both factors are combined, CNS invasion is an independent negative prognostic factor. Our findings show the prognostic potential of a thorough assessment and underline the need for a standardization and documentation of meningioma tissue sampling for the optimal recurrence risk assessment. ABSTRACT: The detection of the infiltrative growth of meningiomas into CNS tissue has been integrated into the WHO classification as a stand-alone marker for atypical meningioma. However, its prognostic impact has been questioned. Infiltrative growth can also be detected intraoperatively. The prognostic impact of the intraoperative detection of the central nervous system tissue invasion of meningiomas was analyzed and compared to the histopathological assessment. The clinical data of 1517 cases with follow-up data regarding radiographic recurrence was collected. Histopathology and operative reports were reviewed and invasive growth was seen during resection in 23.7% (n = 345) while histopathology detected it in 4.8% (n = 73). The histopathological and intraoperative assessments were compatible in 63%. The prognostic impact of histopathological and intraoperative assessment was significant in the univariate but not in the multivariate analysis. Both methods of assessment combined reached statistical significance in the multivariate analysis (p = 0.0409). A score including all independent prognostic factors divided the cohort into three prognostic subgroups with a risk of recurrence of 33.8, 64.7 and 88.5%, respectively. The intraoperative detection of the infiltrative growth of primary meningiomas into the central nervous system tissue can complement the histopathological assessment of CNS invasion. The combined assessment is an independent prognostic factor regarding tumor recurrence and allows a risk-adapted tumor stratification.
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spelling pubmed-77616602020-12-26 CNS Invasion in Meningioma—How the Intraoperative Assessment Can Improve the Prognostic Evaluation of Tumor Recurrence Behling, Felix Fodi, Christina Gepfner-Tuma, Irina Machetanz, Kathrin Renovanz, Mirjam Skardelly, Marco Bornemann, Antje Honegger, Jürgen Tabatabai, Ghazaleh Tatagiba, Marcos Schittenhelm, Jens Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Brain invasion has been integrated into the new WHO classification of meningiomas to improve the prognostic assessment regarding tumor recurrence. However, its role has been questioned. One of the reasons is that for complete histopathological assessment, tissue sampling of the complete brain–tumor interface is necessary, but not always surgically and technically feasible. Therefore, the additional intraoperative assessment of CNS invasion may be of value for a more precise assessment of this tumor characteristic. We therefore studied the prognostic impact of the histopathological and intraoperative assessment of CNS invasion regarding radiographic tumor recurrence and found that both factors by themselves do not reach a prognostic significance. However, if both factors are combined, CNS invasion is an independent negative prognostic factor. Our findings show the prognostic potential of a thorough assessment and underline the need for a standardization and documentation of meningioma tissue sampling for the optimal recurrence risk assessment. ABSTRACT: The detection of the infiltrative growth of meningiomas into CNS tissue has been integrated into the WHO classification as a stand-alone marker for atypical meningioma. However, its prognostic impact has been questioned. Infiltrative growth can also be detected intraoperatively. The prognostic impact of the intraoperative detection of the central nervous system tissue invasion of meningiomas was analyzed and compared to the histopathological assessment. The clinical data of 1517 cases with follow-up data regarding radiographic recurrence was collected. Histopathology and operative reports were reviewed and invasive growth was seen during resection in 23.7% (n = 345) while histopathology detected it in 4.8% (n = 73). The histopathological and intraoperative assessments were compatible in 63%. The prognostic impact of histopathological and intraoperative assessment was significant in the univariate but not in the multivariate analysis. Both methods of assessment combined reached statistical significance in the multivariate analysis (p = 0.0409). A score including all independent prognostic factors divided the cohort into three prognostic subgroups with a risk of recurrence of 33.8, 64.7 and 88.5%, respectively. The intraoperative detection of the infiltrative growth of primary meningiomas into the central nervous system tissue can complement the histopathological assessment of CNS invasion. The combined assessment is an independent prognostic factor regarding tumor recurrence and allows a risk-adapted tumor stratification. MDPI 2020-12-03 /pmc/articles/PMC7761660/ /pubmed/33287241 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers12123620 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Behling, Felix
Fodi, Christina
Gepfner-Tuma, Irina
Machetanz, Kathrin
Renovanz, Mirjam
Skardelly, Marco
Bornemann, Antje
Honegger, Jürgen
Tabatabai, Ghazaleh
Tatagiba, Marcos
Schittenhelm, Jens
CNS Invasion in Meningioma—How the Intraoperative Assessment Can Improve the Prognostic Evaluation of Tumor Recurrence
title CNS Invasion in Meningioma—How the Intraoperative Assessment Can Improve the Prognostic Evaluation of Tumor Recurrence
title_full CNS Invasion in Meningioma—How the Intraoperative Assessment Can Improve the Prognostic Evaluation of Tumor Recurrence
title_fullStr CNS Invasion in Meningioma—How the Intraoperative Assessment Can Improve the Prognostic Evaluation of Tumor Recurrence
title_full_unstemmed CNS Invasion in Meningioma—How the Intraoperative Assessment Can Improve the Prognostic Evaluation of Tumor Recurrence
title_short CNS Invasion in Meningioma—How the Intraoperative Assessment Can Improve the Prognostic Evaluation of Tumor Recurrence
title_sort cns invasion in meningioma—how the intraoperative assessment can improve the prognostic evaluation of tumor recurrence
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7761660/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33287241
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers12123620
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