| Literature DB >> 27048208 |
Ikram Meskal1, Karin Gehring2,3, Geert-Jan M Rutten4, Margriet M Sitskoorn1.
Abstract
This systematic review evaluates relevant findings and methodologic aspects of studies on cognitive functioning in meningioma patients prior to and/or following surgery with or without adjuvant radiotherapy. PubMed and Web of Science electronic databases were searched until December 2015. From 1012 initially identified articles, 11 met the inclusion criteria for this review. Multiple methodological limitations were identified which include the lack of pre-treatment assessments, variations in the number and types of neuropsychological tests used, the normative data used to identify patients with cognitive deficits, and the variety of definitions for cognitive impairment. Study results suggest that most of meningioma patients are faced with cognitive deficits in several cognitive domains prior to surgery. Following surgery, most of these patients seem to improve in cognitive functioning. However, they still have impairments in a wide range of cognitive functions compared to healthy controls. Suggestions are given for future research. Adequate diagnosis and treatment of cognitive deficits may ultimately lead to improved outcome and quality of life in meningioma patients.Entities:
Keywords: Attention; Cognition; Executive functions; Memory; Meningioma; Neuropsychological; Neurosurgery; Radiotherapy
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27048208 PMCID: PMC4882357 DOI: 10.1007/s11060-016-2115-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurooncol ISSN: 0167-594X Impact factor: 4.130
Studies on cognitive functioning in meningioma patients
| Study | Patient group | Control group | Treatment | NP tests/domains | Timing of assessment(s) | Definition of CI | Statistics | Relevant results prior to treatment | Relevant results following treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tucha [ | 54 ST frontal MGM Grade1 = NR | 54 matched HC | Surgical removal | VerM, VisM, Att, EF, VC | 2–3 days before surgery, 4–9 months after surgery | None | Non parametric tests, Ipsative scores2, Spearman rank corr | Sign lower mean raw scores, longer reaction times, or higher error rates on measures of WM, Att, and EF | Sign lower mean raw scores, longer reaction times, or higher error rates on Att and EF. Sign improvements on measures of (immediate recall) VisM and Att |
| Tucha [ | 33 ST MGM | 20 HC | Surgical removal | Same as in [ | Before surgery, 3–6 months after surgery | None | (Non) parametric tests | Sign lower mean raw scores, longer reaction times, or higher error rates on measures of WM, (short-term) VisM, Att, and EF | Sign improvements on measures of (short-term) VisM and Att. Comparable post-op cogn status to cogn functioning of elderly HC, except for WM |
| Meskal [ | 68 ST and IT MGM Grade I | Norms based on healthy American population [ | Surgical removal | Mem, PsyMo, RT, Att, CogFlex, ProcSp, EF (computer tests) | 1 day before surgery, 3 months after surgery | Standard scores ≥1.5–2 SD below norm | T-tests, Mc Nemar’s tests, Pearson product-moment corr | Sign lower standard scores on all cogn domains. 47/68 pts (69 %) low or very low on 1 or more cogn domains | Sign improved mean standard scores for all cogn domains, except PsyMo and RT. Sign lower mean standard scores for all cogn domains. 27/62 pts (47 %) low or very low on 1 or more cogn domains |
| Yoshii [ | 34 MGM | Normative healthy population values from manual (reference: could not be retrieved) | Surgical removal | 3MS test | Before surgery and/or within 1 month after surgery | Subnormal cogn function = 3 MS score <85 | NR | Subnormal cogn function. | Normalization only in right-sided group, not in left-sided group |
| Koizumi [ | 10 ST MGM Grade I: (n = 9), grade II: (n = 1) | Normative healthy population values (reference: NR) | Surgical removal | MMSE | Within 4 weeks before surgery, 3 months after surgery | MMSE score ≤23 | NR for MMSE data, T-tests for IZM-SPECT data | Mean MMSE scores = 19.9 (SD = 11.4), ranging from 2 to 30 | Sign improvement of cogn function, mean MMSE score = 26.5 (SD = 3.8) |
| Van Niewenhuizen [ | 21 untreated MGM, wait-and-scan approach Grade I | 21 normative matched (age, gender, education) HC from MAAS [ | None | VerM, WM, Att, EF, PsyMo, InfPro | Once | Z-scores ≥1.5 SD below norm | Mann-Whitney U-tests, Kendall’s Tau | Sign lower mean Z-scores on WM and PsyMo, sign better mean Z-scores on VerM | NAp |
| Steinvorth [ | 40 ST MGM Grade = NR | Normative healthy population values from manuals | FSRT | VerM, VisM, Att, IQ | 1 day before FSRT, within 24 hrs after first fraction, at end of FSRT, 6 weeks, 6 and 12 months after FSRT | None | (Non) parametric tests | Sign lower mean pct scores on Att/InfPro | After first fraction: transient decline in Mem and improvements in Att. During further follow-up: no deteriorations, but further improvements in Mem and Att |
| Van Niewenhuizen [ | 36 ST MGM Grade I | 18 normative matched (age, gender, education) HC from MAAS [ | Surgical removal with (RTx+) /without (RTx-) adjuvant RTx | Mem, Att, EF, Perc | ≥1 year after surgery | None | Chi-square tests, T-tests | NAp | No sign differences in mean standard scores on all cogn domains between RTx- and RTx+. |
| Krupp [ | 91 ST MGM Grade I M age = 56 (SD = 10) | Normative healthy population values from manuals | Surgical removal | Tests of Att, IQ | 10–18.5 months after surgery | None | T-tests, Chi-square tests, ANOVA, Spearman rank corr, Regression analyses | NAp | Negative corr between age and Att in pts > 55 yrs, as well as with IQ factors verbal knowledge, technical ability, and word fluency |
| Dijkstra [ | 89 ST MGM Grade I M age = 58.6 (SD = 12.1) | 89 normative matched (age, gender, education) HC from MAAS [ | Surgical removal with (n = 22)/ without adjuvant RTx (n = 67) | VerM, WM, Att, EF, PsyMo, InfPro | ≥1 year after surgery | Z-scores | T-tests, Multiple regression analyses | NAp | Sign lower mean Z-scores on all domains, except for Att |
| Waagemans [ | 89 ST MGM | 89 normative matched (age, gender, education) HC from MAAS [ | Surgical removal with (n = 22)/without adjuvant RTx (n = 67) | Same as in [ | ≥1 year after surgery | Z-scores | T-tests, Multiple regression analyses | NAp | Same population as in [ |
ANOVA analyses of variance, Att attention, CI cognitive impairment, CogFlex cognitive flexibility, Cogn cognitive, Corr correlation, EF executive function, FSRT fractioned stereotactic radiotherapy, GL glioma, HC healthy controls, IZM-SPECT ¹²³I-iomazenil (IMZ) single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) imaging, IT infratentorial, M mean, MAAS Maastricht Aging Study [26], Mem memory, MGM meningioma, MMSE mini-mental state examination, NAp not applicable, NR not reported, Pct percentile, Perc perception, Post-op post-operative, ProcSp processing speed, PsyMo psychomotor speed, Pt(s) patient(s), RT reaction time, RTx radiotherapy, SD standard deviation, Sign significant, ST supratentorial, VC visuoconstructive abilities, VerM verbal memory, VisM visual memory, Vol tumor volume, WM working memory, 3MStest modified mini-mental state exam
1Grade based on the World Health Organization (WHO) classification
2These results were not reported in the review. Ipsative scores = substraction post-operative testscores from pre-operative test scores
Tumor location and other relevant factors related to cognitive performance prior to and/or following treatment
| Relevant factors | Relevant findings | Study |
|---|---|---|
| Tumor location | No sign differences in cognitive status between lateralization groups prior to and following surgery | Tucha [ |
| Sign differences in changes over time between lateralization groups, mainly on attentional functions. Left-sided (n = 22) MGM improved sign on flexibility and shifting. Right-sided (n = 21) MGM improved sign on variety of attentional functions | ||
| Sign effect of frontal MGM on pre-operative and post-operative cognitive status. Prior to surgery; falx cerebri (n = 14) performed sign better on figural fluency than frontobasal (n = 19) and convexity (n = 17) MGM. Following surgery; frontobasal (n = 19) and falx cerebri (n = 14) MGM performed sign better on divided attention and figural memory than convexity (n = 17) MGM | ||
| Sign differences between localization groups for various cognitive domains. Convexity (n = 17) MGM: only improvement on flexibility and shifting (attentional/executive functions), frontobasal (n = 19) MGM: improvement on a broader range of attentional/executive functions after surgery. Pts with falx cerebri (n = 14) MGM improved on various cognitive domains | ||
| No sign differences in cognitive status between lateralization groups prior to and following surgery | Meskal [ | |
| No sign associations between tumor lateralization and cognitive improvement over time | ||
| No sign differences in pre-operative or post-operative cognitive functioning based on tumor localization, except for complex attention: sign better performance for infratentorial (n = 7) as opposed to supratentorial (n = 61) tumors | ||
| No sign associations between tumor localization (skull base, convexity, and convexity/falx) and cognitive improvement over time | ||
| Cognitive function normalized in right-sided (n = 17) MGM following surgery. Left-sided (n = 17) MGM did not normalize or improve | Yoshii [ | |
| No statistical tests were conducted in this study: no clear conclusions can be drawn | ||
| No reports on specific localization or lateralization effects on cognitive functioning | Koizumi [ | |
| Based on data in a table; 3 pts with very low scores (<10) on MMSE before surgery, suffered from convexity (n = 4) MGM. These pts improved substantially after surgery, but still had the lowest scores on MMSE (≤ 23), compared with other localization groups | ||
| No clear associations of memory functions with localization before FSRT (no data reported) | Steinvorth [ | |
| No clear lateralization effects before and after FSRT | ||
| Pts with left-sided (n = 37) MGM performed sign worse on verbal memory compared to right-sided (n = 25) MGM | Dijkstra [ | |
| Lower cognitive performance in skull-base (n = 24) MGM on verbal memory, information processing, and psychomotor speed compared to convexity (n = 28) MGM. Not clear as to whether theses analyses were done in smaller subgroups of the study sample | ||
| Epilepsy | Sign negative correlation between epilepsy burden and executive functioning, primarily due to AEDs use, not to epileptic seizures | Dijkstra [ |
| Sign impaired cognitive functioning also in pts who did not use AEDs (n = 66) compared with HC | ||
| Comparable HRQoL in pts to that in HC | Waagemans [ | |
| HRQoL worse in pts with cognitive deficits and pts who use AEDs, irrespective of seizure control | ||
| Mood | No sign correlation between anxiety and cognitive domains, negative correlation between depression and 6/7 cognitive domains prior to surgery (n = 60 out of 68) | Meskal [ |
| Negative correlation between anxiety and attention, negative correlation between depression, memory and attention following surgery (n = 52 out of 62) | ||
| Sign improvement toward a positive mood from baseline (no data reported) up to 6 weeks after follow-up of FSRT | Steinvorth [ | |
| No correlations were investigated | ||
| Quality of life | RTx+ pts lower HRQoL than RTx- pts | Van Nieuwenhuizen [ |
| No sign differences in HRQoL between RTx- pts and HC. After correction for duration of disease, no sign differences in HRQoL between both MGM groups | ||
| No comparisons were made for HRQoL between RTx+ pts and HC | ||
| No sign differences between pts and HC on 7/8 HRQoL scales | Waagemans [ | |
| Impaired executive functioning had a direct negative relationship with other cognitive domains (information processing, verbal memory, psychomotor speed, and attention), and an indirect negative relationship with HRQoL | ||
| Other factors | IZM-SPECT images showed recovered binding potential of IZM following surgery | Koizumi [ |
AEDs anti-epileptic drugs, FSRT fractioned stereotactic radiotherapy, HC healthy controls, HRQoL health-related quality of life, IZM-SPECT ¹³³I-iomazenil (IMZ) single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) imaging. MGM meningioma, MMSE mini-mental state examination, Pts patients, RTx radiotherapy. Sign significant