| Literature DB >> 30175000 |
Armando Ruiz1, Roberto J Diaz2, Simon Buttrick3, Michael Ivan3, Mehul Desai4, Ricardo J Komotar5, Rostislav Medvid6.
Abstract
Laser thermal ablation is a novel minimally invasive neurosurgical technique that has proven to be beneficial in the treatment of a select group of neurosurgical conditions such as primary brain neoplasms, brain metastases, radiation necrosis, and epileptogenic lesions such as cortical dysplasia and mesial temporal sclerosis. The applicability of laser thermal ablation and its utility in the treatment of extra-axial (EA) brain neoplasms, mainly meningioma, is another novel use of this technique. Our article discusses the use and benefits of this technique in this particular clinical scenario. We describe our experience in a group of symptomatic patients from our institution with EA masses, mainly recurrent meningiomas, that failed previous more conventional treatment therapies such as surgery and radiotherapy. Our paper emphasizes patient selection, indications for the procedure, and post-treatment imaging characteristics of the ablated lesions.Entities:
Keywords: extra-axial brain masses; fibrous tumor of the dura; intra-axial masses; laser interstitial thermal therapy; meningioma
Year: 2018 PMID: 30175000 PMCID: PMC6116886 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.2894
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Patients characteristics and outcomes
F: frontal; L: left; P: parietal; R: right; SFT: solitary fibrous tumor; LITT: laser interstitial thermal therapy; WHO: World Health Organization; N/A: not applicable.
| case | sex | age | tumor | grade | location | length of imaging follow up in months | post-LITT residual tumor | local tumor control | disease progression | time to progress | pre-LITT symptoms | post LITT symptoms at one month | |
| 1 | F | 65 | Meningioma | WHO I | R F parafalcine | 9 | yes | yes | no | N/A | none | none | |
| 2 | M | 67 | Meningioma | WHO I | L F parasagittal | 7 | yes | yes | no | N/A | headache | none | |
| 3 | M | 67 | Meningioma | WHO III | R FP parasagittal | 10 | yes | no | yes | 3 months | none | none | |
| 4 | F | 82 | Meningioma | WHO I | L F parasagittal | 10 | yes | yes | no | N/A | none | none | |
| 5 | M | 45 | SFT | N/A | L F convexity | 23 | yes | no | yes | 10 months | seizures | none |
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) characteristics of ablated extra-axial (EA) laser interstitial thermal therapy (LITT) lesions
Iso: isointense; homo: homogeneous enhancement; hetero: heterogeneous enhancement; periph: peripheral enhancement; FLAIR: fluid-attenuated inversion recovery
+C=Contrast. ↑ minimally increased ↓ hypointense ± heterogeneously hyperintense *edema = vasogenic
| case | T1 | T1 | T1 +C | T1+C | T2 | T2 | FLAIR | FLAIR | edema | edema | perilesional high T1 |
| pre | 24 h | pre | 24 h | pre | 24 h | pre | 24 h | pre | 24 h | ||
| 1 | iso | no change | homo | periph | ± | no change | ± | no change | no change | no change | no |
| 2 | iso | ↑ | homo | periph | ± | ↓ | iso | ↓ | none | ↑ | yes |
| 3 | ↓ | ↑ | homo | periph | iso | ↓ | iso | ↓ | mild | no change | no |
| 4 | iso | ↑ | homo | periph | ± | ↓ | ↑ | ↓ | mild | no change | yes |
| 5 | ↓ | ↑ | homo | periph | ↑ | no change | iso | no change | mild | no change | no |
Figure 1Normal evolution of extra-axial (EA) laser interstitial thermal therapy (LITT) ablated mass WHO I meningioma; (case one)
Images obtained the day before LITT, one day, one month and six months following LITT. The pre-treatment image demonstrates an enhancing parafalcine mass (yellow arrow). In the ablated extra-axial masses, the central core is composed of a non-enhancing central zone of coagulation necrosis (vanishing enhancement sign), (blue arrow), bounded by a thin peripherally enhancing rim (white arrow). The mass remains stable in size with low T2 signal immediately after ablation (black arrow), followed by progressive decrease thereafter (one month and six months).
WHO: World Health Organization.
Figure 2Evolution of extra-axial (EA) laser interstitial thermal therapy (LITT) treated masses
Residual mass was noted in all ablated extra-axial lesions presenting with peripheral enhancing margins (arrows). All World Health Organization I meningiomas (WHO I), demonstrated satisfactory local tumor control after ablation marked by an overall decrease in lesion size (white arrow patient 1). Patients with high-grade lesions (white arrow patient 5), demonstrated rapid growth consistent with disease progression of residual tumor usually starting at the periphery of the mass.