| Literature DB >> 31225516 |
Angelo Pichierri1, Marcus Bradley2, Venkat Iyer1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite the most recent surgical aids and tools, surgical removal of infiltrating brain tumors remains a challenge. Unclear margins, edematous areas, and infiltrative behavior are the main causes for failing gross total removals. Also, excessive resection of peri-tumoral tissue often carries risks of damaging the nearby functioning cortical and subcortical structures with an unacceptable decrease in patient's quality of life and postoperative functional status, and the risk of making patients not eligible to adjuvant treatments. Awake surgery and intraoperative magnetic resonance imaging (ioMRI) are among the most effective aids in preventing damage to functional brain while maximizing the extent of resection.Entities:
Keywords: 5-ALA, 5-Aminolevulinic acid; Awake surgery; EOR, Extent of resection; FLAIR, Fluid-attenuated inversion recovery; GBM, Glioblastoma multiforme; GTR, Gross total resection; Glioma; HGG, High-grade glioma; LGG, Low-grade glioma; MAC, Monitored anesthesia care; Neuro-oncology; OS, Overall survival; PFS, Progression-free survival; PR, Partial resection; PS, Performance Status; Survival; Volumetric analysis; WHO, World Health Organization; ioMRI; ioMRI, Intraoperative magnetic resonance imaging
Year: 2019 PMID: 31225516 PMCID: PMC6584609 DOI: 10.1016/j.wnsx.2019.100022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World Neurosurg X ISSN: 2590-1397
Patient Demographics, Volumetric Data, EOR, and Operating Times
| Demographics | Histology (No. Patients, %) | Average V (SD) | Average ioV(SD) | Patients with Residual at ioMRI | Average rV and % of Further Resection | Final EOR (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ioMRI in GA | 26 patients: 15 M, 11 F | Grade 2 glioma (11/26, 42%) | 45.3 mL (34 mL) | 14.9 mL (20.5 mL) | 73% | 9.8 mL (15 mL) | GTR 46%, |
| Grade 3 glioma (7/26, 27%) | 40.3 mL (32 mL) | 3 mL (3 mL) | 71% | 0.8 mL (1 ml) | GTR 57% | ||
| Grade 4 glioma (8/26, 31%) | 26 mL (26 mL) | 1.7 mL (3 mL) | 38% | 1.2 mL (2 mL) | GTR 63% | ||
| ioMRI awake surgery | 20 patients: 14 M, 6 F | Grade 2 glioma (11/20, 55%) | 55.8 mL (51 mL) | 9.6 mL (14 mL) | 91% | 5.3 mL (5 mL) | GTR 55% |
| Grade 3 glioma (3/20, 15%) | 63.2 mL (34 mL) | 7.5 mL (6.5 mL) | 100% | 2.4 mL (4 mL) | GTR 66% | ||
| Grade 4 glioma (6/20, 30%) | 47 mL (38 mL) | 10 mL (8 mL) | 100% | 2.3 mL (7 mL) | GTR 66% | ||
| Control | 46 patients: 29 M, 17 F | Grade 2 glioma (22/46, 48%) | 61 mL (48 mL) | 16 mL (20 mL) | GTR 41% | ||
| Grade 3 glioma (10/46, 22%) | 38 mL (23 mL) | 6.6 mL (10 mL) | GTR 30% | ||||
| Grade 4 glioma (14/46, 30%) | 48.6 mL (29 mL) | 2.7 mL (4.5 mL) | GTR 36% |
SDs are in parentheses.
Further resection represents how much tumor could be removed after the ioMRI and is calculated with the formula: rV/ioV.
EOR, extent of resection; V, initial volume; SD, standard deviation; ioV, average residual tumor at the ioMRI; ioMRI, intraoperative magnetic resonance imaging; rV, average residual tumor visible at the postoperative MRI; GA, general anesthesia; M, male; F, female; GTR, gross total resection (>98% resection); STR, subtotal resection (>90% resection); PR, partial resection (<90%).
Volumetric Details and Outcomes of Patients with Incomplete Resections
| Grade | Group | Number of Patients | IR (Patients) (<98%) | Residual Volume | Recurrences | Deaths |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| >15 mL: | ||||||
| Grade 2 | 1. ioMRI, GA | 11 | 54% (6/11) | 18% (2/11) | IR: 2/6 (33%) | IR: 0/4 (0%) |
| 2. ioMRI, awake | 11 | 45% (5/11) | 9% (1/11) | IR: 3/5 (60%) | IR: 0/5 (0%) | |
| 3. Control | 22 | 59% (13/22) | 18% (4/22) | IR: 7/13 (53.8%) | IR: 2/13 (15%) | |
| >5 mL | ||||||
| Grade 3 | 1. ioMRI, GA | 7 | 43% (3/7) | 0% (0/7) | IR: 0/3 (0%) | IR: 0/3 (0%) |
| 2. ioMRI, awake | 3 | 33% (1/3) | 33% (1/3) | IR: 0/1 (0%) | IR: 0/1 | |
| 3. Control | 10 | 73% (7/10) | 50% (5/10) | IR: 3/7 (43%) | IR: 3/7 (43%) | |
| >5 mL | ||||||
| Grade 4 | 1. ioMRI, GA | 8 | 12% (1/8) | IR: 3/3 (100%) | IR: 3/3 (100%) | |
| 2. ioMRI, awake | 6 | 17% (1/6) | IR: 2/2 (100%) | IR: 2/2 (100%) | ||
| 3. Control | 14 | 64% (9/14) | 14% (2/14) | IR: 9/9 (100%) | IR: 9/9 (100%) |
P < 0.05 are indicated in bold.
IR, incomplete resection; ioMRI, intraoperative magnetic resonance imaging; GA, general anesthesia; GTR, gross total resection.
Details of Perioperative and Operative Times
| Group 1 (SD) | Group 2 (SD) | Group 3 (SD) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| OT | 8 hours, 30 minutes (2 hours) (–2 hours compared with the beginning of the series in 2014) | 10 hours, 30 minutes (1 hour, 28 minutes) (–2.5 hours compared with the beginning of the series in 2014) | 6 hours, 45 minutes (2 hours, 29 minutes) |
| Prep | 1 hours, 15 minutes (21 minutes) | 2 hours (15 minutes) | 1 hour (20 minutes) |
| Skin to skin | 6 hours, 15 minutes (2 hours 30 minutes) | 7 hours, 50 minutes (1 hour 22 minutes) | 4 hours, 45 minutes (2 hours, 17 minutes) |
| ioMRI | 1 hour, 10 minutes (18 minutes) | 1 hour, 20 minutes (25 minutes) | |
| Net op | 5 hours, 5 minutes | 6 hours, 30 minutes | 4 hours, 45 minutes |
| Post | 1 hour (12 minutes) | 40 minutes (13 minutes) | 1 hour (12 minutes) |
All values represent averages; SDs are in parentheses.
SD, standard deviation; OT, overall time of in-theater stay; Prep, preoperative time (preparation, anesthetic time, positioning and prep and drape; Skin to skin, from the skin incision to the dressing of the wound; ioMRI (intraoperative magnetic resonance imaging) time, from the temporary closure to when operation was restarted; net op, skin to skin – ioMRI time; Post, from the undraping to when patient left the operating room.
Transient (at Discharge) and Persistent (at 3-Month Follow-Up) Morbidity
| Demographics | Morbidity at Discharge | Persistent Morbidity | |
|---|---|---|---|
| ioMRI in GA | 26 patients: 15 M, 11 F | Memory and cognition disturbances 8% (2 patients) | Memory and cognition disturbances 4% (1 patient) |
| ioMRI awake surgery | 20 patients: 14 M, 6 F | Memory and cognition disturbances 10% (2 patients) | Memory and cognition disturbances 5% (1 patient) |
| Control | 46 patients: 29 M, 1 7F | Memory and cognition disturbances 13% (6 patients) | Memory and cognition disturbances 10.8% (5 patients) |
ioMRI, intraoperative magnetic resonance imaging; GA, general anesthesia; M, male; F, female; SD, standard deviation.
Figure 1Progression-free survival KM curve for the three groups: Groups 1 (ioMRI / GA) is light blue, Group 2 (ioMRI / awake) is green, Group 3 (control) is red.
Figure 2Overall survival KM curve for the three groups: Groups 1 (ioMRI / GA) is light blue, Group 2 (ioMRI / awake) is green, Group 3 (control) is red.
Figure 3Example of how the language mapping can change the sites of corticotomy for otherwise similarly located tumors. These images were taken from the BrainLab iPlan workstation, hence the left side corresponds to the left hemisphere. The integration of MRI and DTI gives us a pre-operative idea on how to plan the route of access, but the brain mapping (red and green areas on the cortical surface) enables us to avoid eloquent areas (language in these cases): note the large individual variability. The arrows show the access used in each case.