| Literature DB >> 35740510 |
Caroline Apra1,2, Amira El Arbi3, Anne-Sophie Montero1,2, Fabrice Parker3,4, Steven Knafo3,4.
Abstract
All solitary fibrous tumors (SFT), now histologically diagnosed by a positive nuclear STAT6 immunostaining, represent less than 2% of soft tissue sarcomas, with spinal SFT constituting a maximum of 2% of them, making these tumors extremely rare. We provide an up-to-date overview of their diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis. We included 10 primary STAT6-positive SFT from our retrospective cohort and 31 from a systematic review. Spinal pain was the most common symptom, in 69% of patients, and the only one in 34%, followed by spinal cord compression in 41%, radicular compression, including pain or deficit, in 36%, and urinary dysfunction specifically in 18%. Preoperative diagnosis was never obtained. Gross total resection was achieved in 71%, in the absence of spinal cord invasion or excessive bleeding. Histologically, they were 35% grade I, 25% grade II, and 40% grade III. Recurrence was observed in 43% after a mean 5.8 years (1 to 25). No significant risk factor was identified, but adjuvant radiotherapy improved the recurrence-free survival after subtotal resection. In conclusion, spinal SFT must be treated by neurosurgeons as part of a multidisciplinary team. Owing to their close relationship with the spinal cord, radiotherapy should be considered when gross total resection cannot be achieved, to lower the risk of recurrence.Entities:
Keywords: STAT6; hemangiopericytoma; intramedullary; medulla; neurosurgery; solitary fibrous tumor; spine
Year: 2022 PMID: 35740510 PMCID: PMC9221085 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14122839
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.575
Description of characteristics and prognosis, for the population presenting a spinal solitary fibrous tumor, as diagnosed with positive STAT6 nuclear staining, for our series (n = 10) and a systematic review of the literature (n = 31).
| Characteristics | Our Series | Literature Review | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Population | ||||
| Sex | M | 6 (60%) | 14 (45%) |
|
| F | 4 (40%) | 17 (55%) |
| |
| Age, mean ± IC95 | 47 ± 8 | 45 ± 3 |
| |
| Clinical and radiological presentations | ||||
| Spinal pain | 5 (50%) | 22 (76%) |
| |
| Radicular compression | 6 (60%) | 8 (28%) |
| |
| Spinal cord compression | 7 (70%) | 9 (31%) |
| |
| Urinary dysfunction | 4(40%) | 3 (10%) |
| |
| Motor dysfunction | 5 (50%) | 9 (29%) |
| |
| Sensory dysfunction | 4 (40%) | 6 (19%) |
| |
| Duration of symptoms (mo) | 10 ± 6 | 20 ± 12 |
| |
| Tumor localization | Cervical | 5 (50%) | 7 (23%) |
|
| Thoracic | 4 (40%) | 17 (54%) |
| |
| Lumbar | 1 (10%) | 7 (23%) |
| |
| Tumor type | I extradural | 0 (0%) | 2 (14%) |
|
| II intradural | 7 (78%) | 8 (57%) |
| |
| III extra- and intradural | 2 (22%) | 4 (29%) |
| |
| Surgical and histological findings | ||||
| Complete resection | 7 (70%) | 22 (71%) |
| |
| Purely extramedullary tumor during surgery | 5 (50%) | 19 (68%) |
| |
| Histological grading | 1 | 1 (11%) | 6 (55%) |
|
| 2 | 5 (56%) | 0 (0%) |
| |
| 3 | 3 (33%) | 5 (45%) |
| |
| Post-operative management and outcome | ||||
| Primary adjuvant treatment | None | 6 (60%) | 14 (77%) |
|
| Radiotherapy | 4 (40%) | 7 (23%) |
| |
| Documented recurrence | 4 (40%) | 11 (32%) |
| |
| Time to first recurrence (mo) | 128 ± 116 | 49 ± 42 |
| |
Figure 1Recurrence-free survival (Kaplan–Meier curve) for all patients with a spinal solitary fibrous tumor and at least 12 months of follow-up, based on our series and literature systematic review (n = 35). Each + accounts for a patient death or end of follow-up. Left: for patients with gross total resection compared to subtotal resection. Right: for patients with adjuvant radiotherapy compared to no radiotherapy. Radiotherapy significantly improved recurrence-free survival in patients with subtotal resection.
Risk factors for recurrence in patients with a minimum 12 months of follow-up (n = 35), p-value for exact Fisher test. WHO: World Health Organization.
| Risk Factor for Recurrence | Recurrence ( | No Recurrence ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intramedullary component | 36% ( | 26% ( | 0.70 |
| Subtotal resection | 53% ( | 20% ( | 0.07 |
| WHO grade 3 | 40% ( | 50% ( | 1 |
| Adjuvant radiotherapy | 13% ( | 40% ( | 0.13 |
Figure 2Graphical summary of the characteristics and clinico-radiological presentation of patients with spinal solitary fibrous tumors, including radiological types of SFT on MRI.
Figure 3Graphical summary of the surgery, diagnosis, adjuvant treatments, and outcome of patients with spinal solitary fibrous tumors.