Cargando…

Surgical and Functional Outcome after Resection of 64 Petroclival Meningiomas

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Meningiomas are common brain tumors, which are generally treated by surgery or radiation. When these tumors are situated in difficult to reach locations within the skull, such as petroclival meningiomas, surgery may elicit impairments of cranial nerve function postoperatively. These...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Wagner, Arthur, Alraun, Marie, Kahlig, Victoria, Dorier, Anne-Sophie, Aftahy, Amir Kaywan, Bernhardt, Denise, Combs, Stephanie E., Gempt, Jens, Shiban, Ehab, Meyer, Bernhard, Negwer, Chiara
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9496694/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36139677
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14184517
_version_ 1784794331762130944
author Wagner, Arthur
Alraun, Marie
Kahlig, Victoria
Dorier, Anne-Sophie
Aftahy, Amir Kaywan
Bernhardt, Denise
Combs, Stephanie E.
Gempt, Jens
Shiban, Ehab
Meyer, Bernhard
Negwer, Chiara
author_facet Wagner, Arthur
Alraun, Marie
Kahlig, Victoria
Dorier, Anne-Sophie
Aftahy, Amir Kaywan
Bernhardt, Denise
Combs, Stephanie E.
Gempt, Jens
Shiban, Ehab
Meyer, Bernhard
Negwer, Chiara
author_sort Wagner, Arthur
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Meningiomas are common brain tumors, which are generally treated by surgery or radiation. When these tumors are situated in difficult to reach locations within the skull, such as petroclival meningiomas, surgery may elicit impairments of cranial nerve function postoperatively. These may have a substantial impact on the postoperative quality of life of patients. Modern surgical strategies accept incomplete tumor removal in favor of preservation of cranial nerve function. With our study, we investigated the occurrence of these impairments and their recovery over time in a series of surgically treated petroclival meningiomas, applying different surgical approaches and postoperative radiation therapy in some patients. We were able to find favorable recovery rates of most postoperative impairments with a high rate of complete tumor removal. Preoperatively, we identified tumors unsuitable for complete removal due to their infiltration of the cavernous sinus or brain stem affection on magnetic resonance imaging. ABSTRACT: Objective: The management of petroclival meningiomas (PCMs) remains notoriously difficult due to their close association with neurovascular structures and their complex anatomy, hence the surgical paradigm change from radical to functional resection in the past. With this study, we aimed to analyze surgical and functional outcomes of a modern consecutive series of patients with PCMs. Methods: We reviewed patient charts and imaging data of 64 consecutive patients from 2006 to 2018 with a PCM resected at our institution and compared surgical and functional outcomes between subgroups stratified by surgical approach. Results: Females comprised 67.2% of patients (n = 43), with a mean age of 55 years (median 56; range 21–84). Follow-up data were available for 68.8% and reached a mean of 42.3 months (range 1–129) with a median of 28.5 months. The mean tumor diameter was 37.3 mm (standard deviation (SD) 15.4; median 37.0). Infiltration of the cavernous sinus was observed in 34 cases (53.1%), and the lesions affected the brain stem in 28 cases (43.8%). Preoperative cranial nerve palsy was observed in 73.4% of cases; trigeminal neuropathy (42.2%), hearing loss (32.8%), and impairment of vision (18.8%) were the most common. A retrosigmoid approach was employed in 47 cases (78.1%), pterional in 10 (15.6%), combined petrosal in 2 (3.1%), and transnasal and subtemporal in 1 (1.6%). Fifteen cases (23.4%) were resected in a two-staged fashion. Gross total resection (GTR) was attempted in 30 (46.9%) cases without cavernous sinus infiltration and was achieved in 21 (70.0%) of these cases. Surgical complications occurred in 13 cases (20.3%), most commonly meningitis (n = 4; 6.3%). Postoperatively, 56 patients (87.5%) developed new cranial nerve palsy, of which 36 (63.6%) had improved or resolved on last follow up. Achieving GTR was not significantly associated with higher rates of surgical complications (chi-square; p = 0.288) or postoperative cranial nerve palsy (chi-square; p = 0.842). Of all cases, 20 (31.3%) underwent postoperative radiation. Tumor progression was observed in 10 patients (15.9%) after a mean 102 months (median 124). Conclusions: Surgical resection remains the mainstay of treatment for PCMs, with perioperative cranial neuropathies exhibiting favorable recovery rates. Most essentially, the preselection of patients with hallmarks of brain stem affection and cavernous sinus infiltration should dictate whether to strive for a functionally oriented strategy in favor of radical resection.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9496694
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-94966942022-09-23 Surgical and Functional Outcome after Resection of 64 Petroclival Meningiomas Wagner, Arthur Alraun, Marie Kahlig, Victoria Dorier, Anne-Sophie Aftahy, Amir Kaywan Bernhardt, Denise Combs, Stephanie E. Gempt, Jens Shiban, Ehab Meyer, Bernhard Negwer, Chiara Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Meningiomas are common brain tumors, which are generally treated by surgery or radiation. When these tumors are situated in difficult to reach locations within the skull, such as petroclival meningiomas, surgery may elicit impairments of cranial nerve function postoperatively. These may have a substantial impact on the postoperative quality of life of patients. Modern surgical strategies accept incomplete tumor removal in favor of preservation of cranial nerve function. With our study, we investigated the occurrence of these impairments and their recovery over time in a series of surgically treated petroclival meningiomas, applying different surgical approaches and postoperative radiation therapy in some patients. We were able to find favorable recovery rates of most postoperative impairments with a high rate of complete tumor removal. Preoperatively, we identified tumors unsuitable for complete removal due to their infiltration of the cavernous sinus or brain stem affection on magnetic resonance imaging. ABSTRACT: Objective: The management of petroclival meningiomas (PCMs) remains notoriously difficult due to their close association with neurovascular structures and their complex anatomy, hence the surgical paradigm change from radical to functional resection in the past. With this study, we aimed to analyze surgical and functional outcomes of a modern consecutive series of patients with PCMs. Methods: We reviewed patient charts and imaging data of 64 consecutive patients from 2006 to 2018 with a PCM resected at our institution and compared surgical and functional outcomes between subgroups stratified by surgical approach. Results: Females comprised 67.2% of patients (n = 43), with a mean age of 55 years (median 56; range 21–84). Follow-up data were available for 68.8% and reached a mean of 42.3 months (range 1–129) with a median of 28.5 months. The mean tumor diameter was 37.3 mm (standard deviation (SD) 15.4; median 37.0). Infiltration of the cavernous sinus was observed in 34 cases (53.1%), and the lesions affected the brain stem in 28 cases (43.8%). Preoperative cranial nerve palsy was observed in 73.4% of cases; trigeminal neuropathy (42.2%), hearing loss (32.8%), and impairment of vision (18.8%) were the most common. A retrosigmoid approach was employed in 47 cases (78.1%), pterional in 10 (15.6%), combined petrosal in 2 (3.1%), and transnasal and subtemporal in 1 (1.6%). Fifteen cases (23.4%) were resected in a two-staged fashion. Gross total resection (GTR) was attempted in 30 (46.9%) cases without cavernous sinus infiltration and was achieved in 21 (70.0%) of these cases. Surgical complications occurred in 13 cases (20.3%), most commonly meningitis (n = 4; 6.3%). Postoperatively, 56 patients (87.5%) developed new cranial nerve palsy, of which 36 (63.6%) had improved or resolved on last follow up. Achieving GTR was not significantly associated with higher rates of surgical complications (chi-square; p = 0.288) or postoperative cranial nerve palsy (chi-square; p = 0.842). Of all cases, 20 (31.3%) underwent postoperative radiation. Tumor progression was observed in 10 patients (15.9%) after a mean 102 months (median 124). Conclusions: Surgical resection remains the mainstay of treatment for PCMs, with perioperative cranial neuropathies exhibiting favorable recovery rates. Most essentially, the preselection of patients with hallmarks of brain stem affection and cavernous sinus infiltration should dictate whether to strive for a functionally oriented strategy in favor of radical resection. MDPI 2022-09-17 /pmc/articles/PMC9496694/ /pubmed/36139677 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14184517 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Wagner, Arthur
Alraun, Marie
Kahlig, Victoria
Dorier, Anne-Sophie
Aftahy, Amir Kaywan
Bernhardt, Denise
Combs, Stephanie E.
Gempt, Jens
Shiban, Ehab
Meyer, Bernhard
Negwer, Chiara
Surgical and Functional Outcome after Resection of 64 Petroclival Meningiomas
title Surgical and Functional Outcome after Resection of 64 Petroclival Meningiomas
title_full Surgical and Functional Outcome after Resection of 64 Petroclival Meningiomas
title_fullStr Surgical and Functional Outcome after Resection of 64 Petroclival Meningiomas
title_full_unstemmed Surgical and Functional Outcome after Resection of 64 Petroclival Meningiomas
title_short Surgical and Functional Outcome after Resection of 64 Petroclival Meningiomas
title_sort surgical and functional outcome after resection of 64 petroclival meningiomas
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9496694/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36139677
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14184517
work_keys_str_mv AT wagnerarthur surgicalandfunctionaloutcomeafterresectionof64petroclivalmeningiomas
AT alraunmarie surgicalandfunctionaloutcomeafterresectionof64petroclivalmeningiomas
AT kahligvictoria surgicalandfunctionaloutcomeafterresectionof64petroclivalmeningiomas
AT dorierannesophie surgicalandfunctionaloutcomeafterresectionof64petroclivalmeningiomas
AT aftahyamirkaywan surgicalandfunctionaloutcomeafterresectionof64petroclivalmeningiomas
AT bernhardtdenise surgicalandfunctionaloutcomeafterresectionof64petroclivalmeningiomas
AT combsstephaniee surgicalandfunctionaloutcomeafterresectionof64petroclivalmeningiomas
AT gemptjens surgicalandfunctionaloutcomeafterresectionof64petroclivalmeningiomas
AT shibanehab surgicalandfunctionaloutcomeafterresectionof64petroclivalmeningiomas
AT meyerbernhard surgicalandfunctionaloutcomeafterresectionof64petroclivalmeningiomas
AT negwerchiara surgicalandfunctionaloutcomeafterresectionof64petroclivalmeningiomas