101 results on '"Barkhoudarian G"'
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2. Chapter 8 - Multidisciplinary Management of Cushing’s Disease: Centers of Excellence Approach
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Kelly, D.F., Sivakumar, W., and Barkhoudarian, G.
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- 2017
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3. Chapter 1 - The Pituitary Gland: Anatomy, Physiology, and its Function as the Master Gland
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Barkhoudarian, G. and Kelly, D.F.
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- 2017
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4. List of Contributors
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Barkhoudarian, G., Biller, B.M.K., Fleseriu, M., Hopkins, S., Jane, J.A., Jr., Katznelson, L., Kelly, D.F., Laws, E.R., Jr., Nieman, L., Prete, A., Richmond, E.J., Rogol, A.D., Salvatori, R., Santos, A., Sivakumar, W., Tritos, N.A., Vance, M.L., and Webb, S.M.
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- 2017
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5. Multidisciplinary management of acromegaly: a consensus
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Nienke R. Biermasz, Mark E. Molitch, Jens Bollerslev, Kevin C J Yuen, Anat Ben-Shlomo, Adam N. Mamelak, Marcello D. Bronstein, Ilan Shimon, Manuel Puig-Domingo, Eliza B Geer, Anna Maria Formenti, Margaret E. Wierman, Pietro Maffei, Mônica R. Gadelha, Pamela U. Freda, Marek Bolanowski, David R. Clemmons, Adriana G. Ioachimescu, Edward R. Laws, Michael Buchfelder, John A.H. Wass, Steven W. J. Lamberts, Brooke Swearingen, Kalmon D. Post, Maria Chiara Zatelli, Felipe F. Casanueva, Vivien Bonert, Anthony P. Heaney, Philippe Chanson, Christian J. Strasburger, Susan L. Samson, Pietro Mortini, Cesar Luiz Boguszewski, Beverly M. K. Biller, Garni Barkhoudarian, Roberto Salvatori, Albert Beckers, Marco Losa, Alberto M. Pereira, Shlomo Melmed, Andrea Giustina, Maria Fleseriu, Mark Gurnell, Mary Lee Vance, Stephan Petersenn, Ken K. Y. Ho, Peter J Trainer, Moisés Mercado, Giustina, A., Barkhoudarian, G., Beckers, A., Ben-Shlomo, A., Biermasz, N., Biller, B., Boguszewski, C., Bolanowski, M., Bollerslev, J., Bonert, V., Bronstein, M. D., Buchfelder, M., Casanueva, F., Chanson, P., Clemmons, D., Fleseriu, M., Formenti, A. M., Freda, P., Gadelha, M., Geer, E., Gurnell, M., Heaney, A. P., Ho, K. K. Y., Ioachimescu, A. G., Lamberts, S., Laws, E., Losa, M., Maffei, P., Mamelak, A., Mercado, M., Molitch, M., Mortini, P., Pereira, A. M., Petersenn, S., Post, K., Puig-Domingo, M., Salvatori, R., Samson, S. L., Shimon, I., Strasburger, C., Swearingen, B., Trainer, P., Vance, M. L., Wass, J., Wierman, M. E., Yuen, K. C. J., Zatelli, M. C., Melmed, S., Gurnell, Mark [0000-0001-5745-6832], Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, and Internal Medicine
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Consensus ,Medical therapy ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Article ,Neurosurgical Procedures ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Endocrinology ,Multidisciplinary approach ,Excellence ,Acromegaly ,Multidisciplinary management ,Humans ,Medicine ,Medical physics ,Pituitary tumor centers of excellence ,media_common ,Patient Care Team ,Modalities ,Radiotherapy ,business.industry ,Consensus conference ,Treatment options ,Expert consensus ,Receptors, Somatotropin ,medicine.disease ,Dopamine Agonists ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Surgery ,Somatostatin ,business - Abstract
The 13th Acromegaly Consensus Conference was held in November 2019 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and comprised acromegaly experts including endocrinologists and neurosurgeons who considered optimal approaches for multidisciplinary acromegaly management. Focused discussions reviewed techniques, results, and side effects of surgery, radiotherapy, and medical therapy, and how advances in technology and novel techniques have changed the way these modalities are used alone or in combination. Effects of treatment on patient outcomes were considered, along with strategies for optimizing and personalizing therapeutic approaches. Expert consensus recommendations emphasize how best to implement available treatment options as part of a multidisciplinary approach at Pituitary Tumor Centers of Excellence.
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- 2020
6. Assessment of Factors Associated with Internal Carotid Injury in Expanded Endoscopic Endonasal Skull Base Surgery
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Christos Georgalas, Davide Locatelli, Garni Barkhoudarian, Ernesto Pasquini, Abdulaziz AlQahtani, Jacques J. Morcos, Nyall R. London, Chester Griffiths, Roy R. Casiano, Daniel F. Kelly, Hussam Elbosraty, Diego Mazzatenta, Georgio Frank, Narayanan Janakiram, Paolo Castelnuovo, Aaron A. Cohen-Gadol, Aldo Cassol Stamm, Ricardo L. Carrau, Piero Nicolai, Daniel M. Prevedello, Alqahtani A., London N.R., Castelnuovo P., Locatelli D., Stamm A., Cohen-Gadol A.A., Elbosraty H., Casiano R., Morcos J., Pasquini E., Frank G., Mazzatenta D., Barkhoudarian G., Griffiths C., Kelly D., Georgalas C., Janakiram N., Nicolai P., Prevedello D.M., and Carrau R.L.
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Male ,Operating Rooms ,medicine.medical_specialty ,MEDLINE ,Carotid Artery, Internal, Dissection ,Neurosurgical Procedure ,Tertiary care ,Skull Base Neoplasms ,Neurosurgical Procedures ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Retrospective Studie ,medicine.artery ,Humans ,Medicine ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,Pathological ,Retrospective Studies ,Original Investigation ,Skull Base ,Base of skull ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Risk Factor ,Endoscopy ,Middle Aged ,Surgery ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Operating Room ,Facility Design and Construction ,Skull base surgery ,Female ,Clinical Competence ,Internal carotid artery ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Carotid Artery, Internal ,Human - Abstract
Importance Injury to the internal carotid artery (ICA) during endoscopic endonasal skull base surgery does not typically occur as an isolated circumstance but often is the result of multiple factors. Objective To assess the factors associated with ICA injury in an effort to reduce its occurrence. Design, Setting, and Participants This quality improvement study used a multicenter root cause analysis of ICA injuries sustained during endoscopic endonasal skull base surgery performed at 11 tertiary care centers across 4 continents (North America, South America, Europe, and Asia) from January 1, 1993, to December 31, 2018. A fishbone model was built to facilitate the root cause analysis. Patients who underwent an expanded endoscopic endonasal approach that carried a substantial potential risk of an ICA injury were included in the analysis. A questionnaire was completed by surgeons at the centers to assess relevant human, patient, process, technique, instrument, and environmental factors associated with the injury. Main Outcomes and Measures Root cause analysis of demographic, human, patient, process, technique, instrument, and environmental factors as well as mortality and morbidity data. Results Twenty-eight cases of ICA injury occurred during 7160 expanded endoscopic endonasal approach procedures (incidence of 0.4%). The mean age of the patients was 49 years, with a female to male predominance ratio of 1.8:1 (18 women to 10 men). Anatomical (23 [82%]), pathological (15 [54%]), and surgical resection (26 [93%]) factors were most frequently reported. The surgeon’s mental or physical well-being was reported as inadequate in 4 cases (14%). Suboptimal imaging was reported in 6 cases (21%). The surgeon’s experience level was not associated with ICA injury. The ICA injury was associated with use of powered or sharp instruments in 20 cases (71%), and use of new instruments or technology in 7 cases (25%). Two patients (7%) died in the operating room, and 3 (11%) were alive with neurological deficits. Overall, patient-related factors were the most frequently reported risk factors (in 27 of 28 cases [96%]). Factors associated with ICA injury catalyzed a list of preventive recommendations. Conclusions and Relevance This study found that human factors were associated with intraoperative ICA injuries; however, they were usually accompanied by other deficiencies. These findings suggest that identifying risk factors is crucial for preventing such injuries. Preoperative planning and minimizing the potential for ICA injury also appear to be essential.
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- 2020
7. Pre-radiation Nivolumab plus ipilimumab in patients with newly diagnosed high-grade gliomas.
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Kesari S, Wojcinski A, Pabla S, Seager RJ, Gill JM, Carrillo JA, Wagle N, Park DJ, Nguyen M, Truong J, Takasumi Y, Chaiken L, Chang SC, Barkhoudarian G, Kelly DF, and Juarez TM
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Adult, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols adverse effects, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols administration & dosage, Chemoradiotherapy methods, Neoplasm Grading, Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors therapeutic use, Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors adverse effects, Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors administration & dosage, Ipilimumab therapeutic use, Ipilimumab administration & dosage, Ipilimumab adverse effects, Nivolumab therapeutic use, Nivolumab administration & dosage, Nivolumab adverse effects, Glioma pathology, Glioma drug therapy, Brain Neoplasms drug therapy, Brain Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
The limited success of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) in the adjuvant setting for glioblastoma highlights the need to explore administering ICIs prior to immunosuppressive radiation. To address the feasibility and safety of this approach, we conducted a phase I study in patients with newly diagnosed Grade 3 and Grade 4 gliomas. Patients received nivolumab 300 mg every 2 weeks and ipilimumab 1 mg/kg every 6 weeks until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. Fifteen patients were treated, with four patients on dexamethasone at treatment initiation and five tumors having MGMT promoter methylated. Treatment began a median of 38 days post-surgery. The most common treatment-related adverse events (AEs) were rash, pruritus, fatigue, nausea, and anorexia. Grade 3 AEs were lipase increased ( n = 2), anorexia ( n = 1), pruritus ( n = 1), and rash ( n = 3), and one Grade 4 cerebral edema occurred. Median progression-free survival (mPFS) was 1.3 months and median overall survival (mOS) was 19.3 months (95% CI, 12.9-NA). Three patients deferred conventional radiochemotherapy for over seven months while ten eventually received it. Progressing tumors tended to exhibit higher LAG-3 levels at baseline compared to shrinking tumors. Analysis of paired pre-treatment and post-progression tissue ( n = 5) showed trends of up-regulated TGF-β, ERBB2, ERBB3, and ERBB4 signaling pathways, downregulated PPAR signaling, decreased B cell proportions, and increased monocytes proportions in tumors post-treatment. We show nivolumab plus ipilimumab can be safely administered prior to standard radiotherapy for newly diagnosed gliomas and is operationally feasible. Clinicaltrials.gov NCT03425292 registered February 7, 2018.
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- 2024
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8. Endonasal surgery high-risk carotid injury timeout checklist: implementation, institutional protocol and experience.
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Barkhoudarian G, Pahlevani M, Ratnam S, Mallari RJ, Griffiths C, and Kelly DF
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- Humans, Male, Female, Checklist, Middle Aged, Pituitary Neoplasms surgery, Aged, Adult, Postoperative Complications etiology, Postoperative Complications prevention & control, Intraoperative Complications prevention & control, Intraoperative Complications etiology, Carotid Artery Injuries surgery, Carotid Artery Injuries etiology
- Abstract
Objective: Carotid artery injury is a rare, but major complication of endonasal operations. The morbidity and mortality of such a complication can be mitigated by preparedness and a clear plan set in place to address the hemorrhage expeditiously. This study examines the implementation of such a carotid injury timeout checklist and demonstrates its effectiveness in a patient with possible arterial injury., Methods: A carotid injury timeout checklist was implemented for high risk endonasal procedures. The case selection was left to the surgeon, with guidelines including prior surgery, prior radiation, invasive tumors, and certain pathologies such as meningioma or chordoma. Factors affecting implementation were analyzed including tumor characteristics and patient history., Results: Over a 12-month period, 103 endonasal operations were performed since the carotid artery injury timeout checklist was implemented, with 21 (20.4%) having a carotid artery injury timeout performed. Tumor characteristics that were associated with performing this timeout included Knosp grade (for pituitary adenomas, p = 0.002), carotid artery encasement (p < 0.001), extended approach (p < 0.001), tumor size (p = 0.05) and diagnosis (p < 0.001). Re-operation and prior radiation were not factors for this cohort. The single carotid artery branch (hypertrophic vidian artery) injury that was sustained was easily and successfully managed, aided by preparation established via this protocol. The additional time necessary for this timeout to be performed was negligible with respect to the overall surgery length., Conclusion: A carotid artery injury timeout can and should be successfully implemented for extended endonasal operations for pituitary and parasellar tumors with high risk factors including, but not limited to, carotid injury encasement, large tumor size and non-adenomatous diagnoses. A comprehensive plan for both intraoperative and perioperative management of the carotid injury is necessary to minimize the risk of morbidity and to deliver care expeditiously., Competing Interests: Declarations Competing interests The authors declare no competing interests., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Austria, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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9. Predictors of Durable Remission After Successful Surgery for Cushing Disease: Results From the Multicenter RAPID Registry.
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Findlay MC, Tenhoeve S, Alt J, Rennert RC, Couldwell WT, Evans J, Collopy S, Kim W, Delery W, Pacione D, Kim A, Silverstein JM, Chicoine MR, Gardner P, Rotman L, Yuen KCJ, Barkhoudarian G, Fernandez-Miranda J, Benjamin C, Kshettry VR, Zada G, Van Gompel J, Catalino MP, Little AS, and Karsy M
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Adult, Treatment Outcome, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local epidemiology, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local prevention & control, Remission Induction, Adenoma surgery, Pituitary ACTH Hypersecretion surgery, Registries
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Background and Objective: Cushing disease (CD) affects mortality and quality of life along with limited long-term remission, underscoring the need to better identify recurrence risk. The identification of surgical or imaging predictors for CD remission after transsphenoidal surgery has yielded some inconsistent results and has been limited by single-center, single-surgeon, or meta-analyses studies. We sought to evaluate the multicenter Registry of Adenomas of the Pituitary and Related Disorders (RAPID) database of academic US pituitary centers to assess whether robust nonhormonal recurrence predictors could be elucidated., Methods: Patients with treated CD from 2011 to 2023 were included. The perioperative and long-term characteristics of CD patients with and without recurrence were assessed using univariable and multivariable analyses., Results: Of 383 patients with CD from 26 surgeons achieving postoperative remission, 288 (75.2%) maintained remission at last follow-up while 95 (24.8%) showed recurrence (median time to recurrence 9.99 ± 1.34 years). Patients with recurrence required longer postoperative hospital stays (5 ± 3 vs 4 ± 2 days, P = .002), had larger average tumor volumes (1.76 ± 2.53 cm 3 vs 0.49 ± 1.17 cm 3 , P = .0001), and more often previously failed prior treatment (31.1% vs 14.9%, P = .001) mostly being prior surgery. Multivariable hazard prediction models for tumor recurrence found younger age (odds ratio [OR] = 0.95, P = .002) and Knosp grade of 0 (OR = 0.09, reference Knosp grade 4, P = .03) to be protective against recurrence. Comparison of Knosp grade 0 to 2 vs 3 to 4 showed that lower grades had reduced risk of recurrence (OR = 0.27, P = .04). Other factors such as length of stay, surgeon experience, prior tumor treatment, and Knosp grades 1, 2, or 3 failed to reach levels of statistical significance in multivariable analysis., Conclusion: This multicenter study centers suggests that the strongest predictors of recurrence include tumor size/invasion and age. This insight can help with patient counseling and prognostication. Long-term follow-up is necessary for patients, and early treatment of small tumors may improve outcomes., (Copyright © Congress of Neurological Surgeons 2024. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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10. American Association of Neurological Surgeons/Congress of the Neurological Surgeons Section on Tumors Guidelines: Assessing Their Impact on Brain Tumor Clinical Practice.
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Robertson FC, Nahed BV, Barkhoudarian G, Veeravagu A, Berg D, Kalkanis S, Olson JJ, and Germano IM
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Clinical guidelines direct healthcare professionals toward evidence-based practices. Evaluating guideline impact can elucidate information penetration, relevance, effectiveness, and alignment with evolving medical knowledge and technological advancements. As the American Association of Neurological Surgeons/Congress of Neurological Surgeons Section on Tumors marks its 40th anniversary in 2024, this article reflects on the tumor guidelines established by the Section over the past decade and explores their impact on other publications, patents, and information dissemination. Six tumor guideline categories were reviewed: low-grade glioma, newly diagnosed glioblastoma, progressive glioblastoma, metastatic brain tumors, vestibular schwannoma, and pituitary adenomas. Citation data were collected from Google Scholar and PubMed. Further online statistics, such as social media reach, and features in policy, news, and patents were sourced from Altmetric. Online engagement was assessed through website and CNS+ mobile application visits. Data were normalized to time since publication. Metastatic Tumor guidelines (2019) had the highest PubMed citation rate at 26.1 per year and webpage visits (29 100 page views 1/1/2019-9/30/2023). Notably, this guideline had two endorsement publications by partner societies, the Society of Neuro-Oncology and American Society of Clinical Oncology, concerning antiepileptic prophylaxis and steroid use, and the greatest reach on X (19.7 mentions/y). Citation rates on Google Scholar were led by Vestibular Schwannoma (2018). Non-Functioning Pituitary Adenoma led Mendeley reads. News, patent, or policy publications were led by low-grade glioma at 1.5/year. Our study shows that the American Association of Neurological Surgeons/Congress of Neurological Surgeons Section on Tumors guidelines go beyond citations in peer-reviewed publications to include patents, online engagement, and information dissemination to the public., (Copyright © Congress of Neurological Surgeons 2024. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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11. Comparative Analysis of Endoscope Obscuration With Utilization of an Endonasal Access Guide for Endonasal Skull Base Surgery.
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Barkhoudarian G, Zhou D, Avery MB, Khan U, Mallari RJ, Emerson J, Griffiths C, and Kelly DF
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Background and Objectives: In endoscopic endonasal approaches (EEAs) for skull base pathologies, endoscope view obscuration remains a persistent, time-consuming, and distracting issue for surgeons and may result in increased operative time. The endonasal access guide (EAG) has been demonstrated as a possible adjunct to minimize these events. However, to date, there have been no comparative studies performed and the potential time savings by using EAGs have yet to be quantified. This cohort study aimed to determine the operative efficiency benefits of the EAG in EEA operations., Methods: Analysis of EEA operative videos from an EAG cohort (n = 20) and a control cohort (n = 20) was performed, assessing 12-minute segments in the first, middle, and last third of each operation. The first segment in each cohort was selected before EAG placement, serving as an internal control. Every endoscope lens soiling instance was counted (measured as cleaning actions per minute), timed (obscuration time %), and identified as a withdrawal, irrigation, or other cleaning action. Perioperative variables including skull base repair and postoperative cerebrospinal fluid leakage were assessed., Results: Within the EAG cohort, obscuration time was reduced in the middle and last third compared with the first third (3.73% [CI: 2.39-5.07] vs 12.97% [CI: 10.24-15.70], P < .001; 4.19% [CI: 2.83-5.55] vs 12.97% [CI: 10.24-15.70], P < .001) and cleaning actions were also significantly reduced by EAG (0.69/min [CI: 0.39-0.99] vs 1.67/min [CI: 1.34-2.00], P = .001; 0.66/min [CI: 0.35-0.97] vs 1.67/min [CI: 1.34-2.00], P < .001). Between the control and EAG cohorts, there was no significant difference between obscuration time and cleaning actions in the first third (9.33% vs 12.97%, P = .086; 1.34/min vs 1.67/min, P = .151) or in the middle third (6.24% vs 3.73%, P = .140; 0.80/min vs 0.69/min, P = .335), but there was a significant difference in the last third (9.25% [CI: 6.95-11.55] vs 4.19% [CI: 2.83-5.55], P < .001; 0.95/min [CI: 0.73-1.17] vs 0.66/min [CI: 0.35-0.97], P = .018)., Conclusion: EAG significantly reduces lens obscurations and cleaning events, particularly during the intradural portion of operations. This technology may offer a greater time-saving impact with patients undergoing long EEA operations., (Copyright © Congress of Neurological Surgeons 2024. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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12. Immunogenomics and spatial proteomic mapping highlight distinct neuro-immune architectures in melanoma vs. non-melanoma-derived brain metastasis.
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Mendoza-Valderrey A, Dettmann E, Hanes D, Kessler DM, Danilova L, Rau K, Quan Y, Stern S, Barkhoudarian G, Bifulco C, Margolin K, Kolker S, and Ascierto ML
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Background: Brain metastases (BrMs) are a devastating complication of solid tumours. A better understanding of BrMs biology is needed to address their challenging clinical management., Methods: Immunogenomic and digital spatial analyses were applied to interrogate the peripheral blood and tumour specimens derived from 53 unique patients with BrMs originating from different solid tumours., Results: At craniotomy time, patients with melanoma-derived brain metastasis (MBM) displayed in the periphery lower neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) compared to non-melanoma-derived brain metastasis (non-MBM). Regardless of the primary tumour source, higher NLR was associated with reduced overall survival (OS). Tumour MicroEnviroment genomic evaluations revealed higher expression of genes identifying NK, CD8 and B cells in MBM vs. non-MBM. Moreover, MBM patients with longer OS displayed increased CD8+ cell infiltration. Spatial proteomic analysis further highlighted enriched infiltration of CD8+ cells, antigen-presenting cells, T-cell agonists and B cells in MBM. Conversely, increased expression of genes and proteins associated with neurodevelopment, cell-cell adhesion and neutrophil infiltration were observed in non-MBM., Conclusions: These findings reveal an increased immunogenicity of MBM vs non-MBM and highlight the presence of a unique neuro-immune interplays in MBM vs non-MBM, suggesting that a balance between neuro-immune architectures might be associated with diverging clinical outcome of patients with BrMs., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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13. A phase I dose-escalation study of pulsatile afatinib in patients with recurrent or progressive brain cancer.
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Juarez TM, Gill JM, Heng A, Carrillo JA, Wagle N, Nomura N, Nguyen M, Truong J, Dobrawa L, Sivakumar W, Barkhoudarian G, Kelly DF, and Kesari S
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Background: Afatinib (BIBW2992; Gilotrif®) is a selective and irreversible inhibitor of the epidermal growth factor receptor (ErbB; EGFR) family. It inhibits EGFR, HER2, and HER4 phosphorylation, resulting in tumor growth inhibition and regression. This phase I dose-escalation trial of pulsatile afatinib examined the safety, drug penetration into the central nervous system, preliminary antitumor activity, and recommended phase II dose in patients with progressive or recurrent brain cancers., Methods: Afatinib was taken orally once every 4 days or once every 7 days depending on dose cohort, until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity., Results: A total of 24 patients received the investigational agent and were evaluable for safety analyses, and 21 patients were evaluable for efficacy. Dosing was administered at 80 mg every 4 days, 120 mg every 4 days, 180 mg every 4 days, or 280 mg every 7 days. A recommended phase II dose of pulsatile afatinib was established at 280 mg every 7 days as there were no dose-limiting toxicities in any of the dosing cohorts and all toxicities were deemed manageable. The most common drug-related toxicities were diarrhea, rash, nausea, vomiting, fatigue, stomatitis, pruritus, and limb edema. Out of the 21 patients evaluable for efficacy, 2 patients (9.5%) exhibited partial response based on Response Assessment in Neuro-Oncology criteria and disease stabilization was seen in 3 patients (14.3%)., Conclusions: Afatinib taken orally was safe and well-tolerated up to 280 mg every 7 days in brain cancer patients., Competing Interests: SK reports research funding to institutions from AADi, Aivita Biomedical, Inc., Bavarian Nordic, Bayer, Biocept, Blue Earth Diagnostics, Caris MPI, CNS Pharmaceuticals, EpicentRx, Incyte, Lilly, Oblato, Orbus Therapeutics, and Stemedica Cell Technologies; reports stock or other ownership interests in xCures; reports receiving honoraria from Jubilant Biosys and Pyramid Biosciences; and is a consultant/advisory board member for Curtana Pharmaceuticals, Nascent Biotech, Biocept, iCAD, and xCures. JAC reports research funding to institution from Nascent Biotech and Novocure. NW reports research funding to institution from Bavarian Nordic, Bayer, Biocept, Boehringer Ingelheim, Caris MPI, CNS Pharmaceuticals, EpicentRx, Incyte, Novocure, Oblato, Pyramid Biosciences, Stemedica Cell Technologies, xCures, and Xoft. GB is a consultant for Vascular Technologies, Inc. and Cerevasc Inc.; reports payment for expert testimony; is the Data Monitoring Committee Chair for Cerevasc Inc.; and is an executive committee member of the Congress of Neurological Surgeons (CNS) and American Association of Neurological Surgeons (AANS) Tumor Section. DFK reports royalties or licenses from Mizuho, Inc. All other authors declare no competing interests., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press, the Society for Neuro-Oncology and the European Association of Neuro-Oncology.)
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- 2024
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14. A Prospective, Multicenter, Observational Study of Surgical vs Nonsurgical Management for Pituitary Apoplexy.
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Mamelak AN, Little AS, Gardner PA, Almeida JP, Recinos P, Soni P, Kshettry VR, Jane JA Jr, Barkhoudarian G, Kelly DF, Dodd R, Mukherjee D, Gersey ZC, Fukuhara N, Nishioka H, Kim EH, Litré CF, Sina E, Mazer MW, Cui Y, and Bonert V
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- Humans, Treatment Outcome, Prospective Studies, Adenoma pathology, Pituitary Apoplexy etiology, Pituitary Apoplexy surgery, Pituitary Neoplasms surgery, Pituitary Neoplasms complications
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Context: Pituitary apoplexy (PA) has been traditionally considered a neurosurgical emergency, yet retrospective single-institution studies suggest similar outcomes among patients managed medically., Objective: We established a multicenter, international prospective registry to compare presentation and outcomes in PA patients treated with surgery or medical management alone., Methods: A centralized database captured demographics, comorbidities, clinical presentation, visual findings, hormonal status, and imaging features at admission. Treatment was determined independently by each site. Key outcomes included visual, oculomotor, and hormonal recovery, complications, and hospital length of stay. Outcomes were also compared based on time from symptom onset to surgery, and from admission or transfer to the treating center. Statistical testing compared treatment groups based on 2-sided hypotheses and P less than .05., Results: A total of 100 consecutive PA patients from 12 hospitals were enrolled, and 97 (67 surgical and 30 medical) were evaluable. Demographics, clinical features, presenting symptoms, hormonal deficits, and imaging findings were similar between groups. Severe temporal visual field deficit was more common in surgical patients. At 3 and 6 months, hormonal, visual, and oculomotor outcomes were similar. Stratifying based on severity of visual fields demonstrated no difference in any outcome at 3 months. Timing of surgery did not affect outcomes., Conclusion: We found that medical and surgical management of PA yield similar 3-month outcomes. Although patients undergoing surgery had more severe visual field deficits, we could not clearly demonstrate that surgery led to better outcomes. Even without surgery, apoplectic tumor volumes regress substantially within 2 to 3 months, indicating that surgery is not always needed to reduce mass effect., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2024
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15. Pilot Study of High-Dose Pemetrexed in Patients with Progressive Chordoma.
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Kesari S, Wagle N, Carrillo JA, Sharma A, Nguyen M, Truong J, Gill JM, Nersesian R, Nomura N, Rahbarlayegh E, Barkhoudarian G, Sivakumar W, Kelly DF, Krauss H, Bustos MA, Hoon DSB, Anker L, Singh AS, Sankhala KK, and Juarez TM
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- Adult, Humans, Pemetrexed adverse effects, Pilot Projects, Glutamates adverse effects, Guanine therapeutic use, Neoplasm Staging, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Treatment Outcome, Chordoma pathology, Lung Neoplasms drug therapy
- Abstract
Purpose: Chordomas are ultrarare tumors of the axial spine and skull-base without approved systemic therapy. Most chordomas have negative expression of thymidylate synthase (TS), suggesting a potential for responding to the antifolate agent pemetrexed, which inhibits TS and other enzymes involved in nucleotide biosynthesis. We evaluated the therapeutic activity and safety of high-dose pemetrexed in progressive chordoma., Patients and Methods: Adult patients with previously treated, progressive chordoma participated in an open-label, single-institution, single-arm, pilot clinical trial of intravenous pemetrexed 900 mg/m2 every 3 weeks and supportive medications of folic acid, vitamin B12, and dexamethasone. The primary endpoint was objective response rate according to RECIST v1.1. Secondary endpoints included adverse events, progression-free survival (PFS), tumor molecular profiles, and alterations in tissue and blood-based biomarkers., Results: Fifteen patients were enrolled and the median number of doses administered was 15 (range, 4-31). One patient discontinued treatment due to psychosocial issues after four cycles and one contracted COVID-19 after 13 cycles. Of the 14 response-evaluable patients, 2 (14%) achieved a partial response and 10 (71%) demonstrated stable disease. Median PFS was 10.5 months (95% confidence interval: 9 months-undetermined) and 6-month PFS was 67%. Adverse events were expected and relatively mild, with one grade 3 creatinine increased, and one each of grade 3 and 4 lymphopenia. No grade 5 adverse events, unexpected toxicities, or dose-limiting toxicities were observed. Several patients reported clinical improvement in disease-related symptoms., Conclusions: High-dose pemetrexed appears tolerable and shows objective antitumor activity in patients with chordoma. Phase II studies of high-dose pemetrexed are warranted., (©2023 American Association for Cancer Research.)
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- 2024
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16. Enhanced recovery after brain tumor surgery: pilot protocol implementation in a large healthcare system.
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Sivakumar W, Guan J, Langevin JP, Barkhoudarian G, Kelly DF, and Martin N
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- Humans, Pilot Projects, Elective Surgical Procedures, Delivery of Health Care, Length of Stay, Postoperative Complications, Enhanced Recovery After Surgery, Brain Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Objective: Enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) protocols have been used in numerous specialties to improve the safety, efficiency, and cost of surgical interventions. Despite these successes, implementation of ERAS in cranial neurosurgery remains limited. In this study, a comprehensive ERAS protocol was implemented at two pilot sites within the Providence Health & Services system, and groundwork was laid for systemwide adoption., Methods: An enhanced recovery protocol was developed and implemented through an interdisciplinary team of clinicians, executive leadership, and clinical informatics professionals across preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative domains. Outcomes including length of stay, discharge destination, and cost were collected through systemwide databases and compared with nonprotocolized sites., Results: During the study period, both pilot sites became top performers across the regional system in all evaluated metrics. The median length of stay for elective craniotomy at site 1 was reduced to 1.25 days, with a home discharge rate of > 90%. The cost per case at the pilot sites was nearly $7000 less on average than that of the nonprotocolized sites., Conclusions: Implementation of enhanced recovery protocols for brain tumor surgery is feasible and effective, resulting in marked improvements in healthcare efficiency. Future studies, including implementation of the current protocol across the entire Providence system, are needed to maximize the potential benefits of enhanced recovery programs.
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- 2023
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17. An expanded safety/feasibility study of the EMulate Therapeutics Voyager™ System in patients with recurrent glioblastoma.
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Barkhoudarian G, Badruddoja M, Blondin N, Chowdhary S, Cobbs C, Duic JP, Flores JP, Fonkem E, McClay E, Nabors LB, Salacz M, Taylor L, Vaillant B, Gill J, and Kesari S
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- Humans, Feasibility Studies, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local, Prospective Studies, Brain Neoplasms drug therapy, Glioblastoma drug therapy
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Aim: The EMulate Therapeutics Voyager™ is a simple, wearable, home-use device that uses an alternating electromagnetic field to alter biologic signaling within cells. Objective: To assess the safety/feasibility of the Voyager in the treatment of recurrent glioblastoma (rGBM). Methods: In this study, patients with rGBM were treated with Voyager as monotherapy or in combination with standard chemotherapy at the Investigator's discretion. Safety was assessed by incidence of adverse events associated with the Voyager. Patients were followed until death. Results: A total of 75 patients were enrolled and treated for at least one day with the Voyager (safety population). Device-related adverse events were uncommon and generally did not result in interruption or withdrawal from treatment. There were no serious adverse events associated with Voyager. A total of 60 patients were treated for at least one month (clinical utility population). The median progression-free survival (PFS) was 17 weeks (4.3 months) in the Voyager only group (n = 24) and 21 weeks (5.3 months) in the Voyager + concurrent therapy group (n = 36). The median overall survival (OS) was 7 months in the Voyager only group and 9 months in the Voyager + concurrent therapy group. In patients treated with Voyager + concurrent therapy, the median OS for patients enrolled with their 1st or 2nd recurrence (n = 26) was 10 months, while in patients enrolled with their 3rd or 4th recurrence (n = 10) OS was 7 months. Conclusion: The data support the safety and feasibility of the Voyager for the treatment of rGBM. Further prospective study of the device is warranted. Trial Registration Number: NCT02296580 (ClinicalTrials.gov).
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- 2023
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18. Patient Perception of Education, Care Coordination, and Psychological Distress After Developing Facial Paralysis: A Qualitative Study.
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Kenton NR, Estafanous M, Itamura K, Filus A, Gowrinathan S, Martin NA, Sivakumar W, Barkhoudarian G, Byrne PJ, and Kochhar A
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- Adult, Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Male, Quality of Life psychology, Perception, Facial Paralysis psychology, Neuroma, Acoustic surgery, Psychological Distress
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Importance: The management of vestibular schwannoma may include observation, microsurgical resection, or radiation of a tumor near the facial nerve. Injury to the facial nerve can result in facial paralysis with major functional, social, and psychological sequelae, and the experiences of patients after paralysis are not well studied., Objective: To (1) identify patient preparedness for developing facial paralysis and how well their care is coordinated following its development and (2) present in their own words outcomes of facial paralysis in terms of physical health, emotional health, self-perception, and social interactions., Design, Setting, and Participants: A qualitative observational study was performed using semistructured interviews at a tertiary care academic medical center. Semistructured interviews were conducted between January 1, 2018, and June 30, 2019, with adults aged 25 to 70 years who developed facial paralysis after treatment for vestibular schwannoma. Data were analyzed from July 2019 to June 2020., Main Outcomes and Measures: Perceptions of the educational and emotional experiences of individuals who developed complete facial paralysis after surgical treatment of vestibular schwannoma., Results: Overall, 12 participants were interviewed (median age, 54 years [range, 25-70 years]; 11 were female). Saturation was achieved after 12 interviews, indicating that no further information could be elicited from additional interviews. Four major themes were identified: (1) lack of sufficient patient education about the diagnosis of facial paralysis; (2) lack of appropriate care coordination related to facial paralysis; (3) changes in physical and emotional health following facial paralysis; and (4) changes in social interactions and external support following facial paralysis., Conclusions and Relevance: It is well-known that patients with facial paralysis have reduced quality of life, severe psychological and emotional sequelae. However, little is currently done to help prepare patients for this undesirable outcome. In this qualitative study of facial paralysis, patients express, in their own words, their feeling that the education and management of facial paralysis by their clinicians was inadequate. Before patients undergo surgery, and certainly after injury to the facial nerve, clinicians should consider the patient's goals, preferences, and values to ensure that a comprehensive educational program and psychosocial support system are implemented. Facial reanimation research has not adequately captured these key patient factors associated with the quality of communication.
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- 2023
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19. Treatment of Cushing Disease With Pituitary-Targeting Seliciclib.
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Liu NA, Ben-Shlomo A, Carmichael JD, Wang C, Swerdloff RS, Heaney AP, Barkhoudarian G, Kelly D, Noureddin M, Lu L, Desai M, Stolyarov Y, Yuen K, Mamelak AN, Mirocha J, Tighiouart M, and Melmed S
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- Adult, Humans, Roscovitine therapeutic use, Prospective Studies, Hydrocortisone, Adrenocorticotropic Hormone, Pituitary ACTH Hypersecretion drug therapy
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Context: Preclinical studies show seliciclib (R-roscovitine) suppresses neoplastic corticotroph proliferation and pituitary adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) production., Objective: To evaluate seliciclib as an effective pituitary-targeting treatment for patients with Cushing disease (CD)., Methods: Two prospective, open-label, phase 2 trials, conducted at a tertiary referral pituitary center, included adult patients with de novo, persistent, or recurrent CD who received oral seliciclib 400 mg twice daily for 4 consecutive days each week for 4 weeks. The primary endpoint in the proof-of-concept single-center study was normalization of 24-hour urinary free cortisol (UFC; ≤ 50 µg/24 hours) at study end; in the pilot multicenter study, primary endpoint was UFC normalization or ≥ 50% reduction in UFC from baseline to study end., Results: Sixteen patients were consented and 9 were treated. Mean UFC decreased by 42%, from 226.4 ± 140.3 µg/24 hours at baseline to 131.3 ± 114.3 µg/24 hours by study end. Longitudinal model showed significant UFC reductions from baseline to each treatment week. Three patients achieved ≥ 50% UFC reduction (range, 55%-75%), and 2 patients exhibited 48% reduction; none achieved UFC normalization. Plasma ACTH decreased by 19% (P = 0.01) in patients who achieved ≥ 48% UFC reduction. Three patients developed grade ≤ 2 elevated liver enzymes, anemia, and/or elevated creatinine, which resolved with dose interruption/reduction. Two patients developed grade 4 liver-related serious adverse events that resolved within 4 weeks of seliciclib discontinuation., Conclusion: Seliciclib may directly target pituitary corticotrophs in CD and reverse hypercortisolism. Potential liver toxicity of seliciclib resolves with treatment withdrawal. The lowest effective dose requires further determination., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2023
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20. The RAPID Consortium: A Platform for Clinical and Translational Pituitary Tumor Research.
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Karsy M, Kshettry V, Gardner P, Chicoine M, Fernandez-Miranda JC, Evans JJ, Barkhoudarian G, Hardesty D, Kim W, Zada G, Crocker T, Torok I, and Little A
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Objectives Pituitary tumor treatment is hampered by the relative rarity of the disease, absence of a multicenter collaborative platform, and limited translational-clinical research partnerships. Prior studies offer limited insight into the formation of a multicenter consortium. Design The authors describe the establishment of a multicenter research initiative, Registry of Adenomas of the Pituitary and Related Disorders (RAPID), to encourage quality improvement and research, promote scholarship, and apply innovative solutions in outcomes research. Methods The challenges encountered during the formation of other research registries were reviewed with those lessons applied to the development of RAPID. Setting/Participants RAPID was formed by 11 academic U.S. pituitary centers. Results A Steering Committee, bylaws, data coordination center, and leadership team have been established. Clinical modules with standardized data fields for nonfunctioning adenoma, prolactinoma, acromegaly, Cushing's disease, craniopharyngioma, and Rathke's cleft cyst were created using a Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act-compliant cloud-based platform. Currently, RAPID has received institutional review board approval at all centers, compiled retrospective data and agreements from most centers, and begun prospective data collection at one site. Existing institutional databases are being mapped to one central repository. Conclusion The RAPID consortium has laid the foundation for a multicenter collaboration to facilitate pituitary tumor and surgical research. We sought to share our experiences so that other groups also contemplating this approach may benefit. Future studies may include outcomes benchmarking, clinically annotated biobank tissue, multicenter outcomes studies, prospective intervention studies, translational research, and health economics studies focused on value-based care questions., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest None declared., (Thieme. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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21. Critical appraisal of minimally invasive keyhole surgery for intracranial meningioma in a large case series.
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Thakur JD, Mallari RJ, Corlin A, Yawitz S, Eisenberg A, Rhee J, Sivakumar W, Krauss H, Martin N, Griffiths C, Barkhoudarian G, and Kelly DF
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- Aged, Humans, Middle Aged, Neurosurgical Procedures, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Meningeal Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Meningeal Neoplasms pathology, Meningeal Neoplasms surgery, Meningioma diagnostic imaging, Meningioma pathology, Meningioma surgery, Skull Base Neoplasms pathology
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Background: Meningioma surgery has evolved over the last 20 years with increased use of minimally invasive approaches including the endoscopic endonasal route and endoscope-assisted and gravity-assisted transcranial approaches. As the "keyhole" concept remains controversial, we present detailed outcomes in a cohort series., Methods: Retrospective analysis was done for all patients undergoing meningioma removal at a tertiary brain tumor referral center from 2008-2021. Keyhole approaches were defined as: use of a minimally invasive "retractorless" approach for a given meningioma in which a traditional larger approach is often used instead. The surgical goal was maximal safe removal including conservative (subtotal) removal for some invasive locations. Primary outcomes were resection rates, complications, length of stay and Karnofsky Performance Scale (KPS). Secondary outcomes were endoscopy use, perioperative treatments, tumor control and acute MRI FLAIR/T2 changes to assess for brain manipulation and retraction injury., Results: Of 329 patients, keyhole approaches were utilized in 193(59%) patients (mean age 59±13; 30 (15.5%) had prior surgery) who underwent 213 operations; 205(96%) were skull base location. Approaches included: endoscopic endonasal (n = 74,35%), supraorbital (n = 73,34%), retromastoid (n = 38,18%), mini-pterional (n = 20,9%), suboccipital (n = 4,2%), and contralateral transfalcine (n = 4,2%). Primary outcomes: Gross total/near total (>90%) resection was achieved in 125(59%) (5% for petroclival, cavernous sinus/Meckel's cave, spheno-cavernous locations vs 77% for all other locations). Major complications included: permanent neurological worsening 12(6%), CSF leak 2(1%) meningitis 2(1%). There were no DVTs, PEs, MIs or 30-day mortality. Median LOS decreased from 3 to 2 days in the last 2 years; 94% were discharged to home with favorable 90-day KPS in 176(96%) patients. Secondary outcomes: Increased FLAIR/T2 changes were noted on POD#1/2 MRI in 36/213(17%) cases, resolving in all but 11 (5.2%). Endoscopy was used in 87/139(63%) craniotomies, facilitating additional tumor removal in 55%. Tumor progression occurred in 26(13%) patients, mean follow-up 42±36 months., Conclusions & Relevance: Our experience suggests minimally invasive keyhole transcranial and endoscopic endonasal meningioma removal is associated with comparable resection rates and low complication rates, short hospitalizations and high 90-day performance scores in comparison to prior reports using traditional skull base approaches. Subtotal removal may be appropriate for invasive/adherent meningiomas to avoid neurological deficits and other post-operative complications, although longer follow-up is needed. With careful patient selection and requisite experience, these approaches may be considered reasonable alternatives to traditional transcranial approaches., Competing Interests: The authors have read the journal’s policy and have the following competing interests: DFK receives royalties from Mizuho Inc. GB is a consultant for Vascular Technologies Inc. and Cerevasc Inc. outside of the current study. WS is a consultant for Stryker Corporation outside of the current study. This does not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials. There are no patents, products in development or marketed products associated with this research to declare.
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- 2022
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22. Cell-free plasma microRNAs that identify patients with glioblastoma.
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Bustos MA, Rahimzadeh N, Ryu S, Gross R, Tran LT, Renteria-Lopez VM, Ramos RI, Eisenberg A, Hothi P, Kesari S, Barkhoudarian G, Takasumi Y, Cobbs C, Kelly DF, and Hoon DSB
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- Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Humans, Pilot Projects, Transcriptome, Brain Neoplasms diagnosis, Brain Neoplasms genetics, Circulating MicroRNA, Glioblastoma diagnosis, Glioblastoma genetics, MicroRNAs genetics
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Glioblastoma (GBM) is still one of the most commonly diagnosed advanced stage primary brain tumors. Current treatments for patients with primary GBM (pGBM) are often not effective and a significant proportion of the patients with pGBM recur. The effective treatment options for recurrent GBM (rGBM) are limited and survival outcomes are poor. This retrospective multicenter pilot study aims to determine potential cell-free microRNAs (cfmiRs) that identify patients with pGBM and rGBM tumors. 2,083 miRs were assessed using the HTG miRNA whole transcriptome assay (WTA). CfmiRs detection was compared in pre-operative plasma samples from patients with pGBM (n = 32) and rGBM (n = 13) to control plasma samples from normal healthy donors (n = 73). 265 cfmiRs were found differentially expressed in plasma samples from pGBM patients compared to normal healthy donors (FDR < 0.05). Of those 193 miRs were also detected in pGBM tumor tissues (n = 15). Additionally, we found 179 cfmiRs differentially expressed in rGBM, of which 68 cfmiRs were commonly differentially expressed in pGBM. Using Random Forest algorithm, specific cfmiR classifiers were found in the plasma of pGBM, rGBM, and both pGBM and rGBM combined. Two common cfmiR classifiers, miR-3180-3p and miR-5739, were found in all the comparisons. In receiving operating characteristic (ROC) curves analysis for rGBM miR-3180-3p showed a specificity of 87.7% and a sensitivity of 100% (AUC = 98.5%); while miR-5739 had a specificity of 79.5% and sensitivity of 92.3% (AUC = 90.2%). This study demonstrated that plasma samples from pGBM and rGBM patients have specific miR signatures. CfmiR-3180-3p and cfmiR-5739 have potential utility in diagnosing patients with pGBM and rGBM tumors using a minimally invasive blood assay., (© 2022. This is a U.S. government work and not under copyright protection in the U.S.; foreign copyright protection may apply.)
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- 2022
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23. Minimally invasive pericranial flap harvest through a supraorbital eyebrow craniotomy: Technical note in salvage skull base reconstruction.
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Olson MG, Avery MB, Javaherian S, Sivakumar W, Kelly DF, Griffiths C, and Barkhoudarian G
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- Adult, Craniotomy, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Skull Base surgery, Surgical Flaps surgery, Eyebrows, Plastic Surgery Procedures methods
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Background and Importance: The supraorbital eyebrow craniotomy is a minimally invasive approach that provides access to pathologies of the anterior and middle cranial fossae. Vascularized flaps are preferred when considering reconstructive options, however, small incisions may not provide adequate access to vascularized tissue. We present two cases demonstrating a modified technique for harvesting pericranium through an eyebrow supraorbital craniotomy for reconstruction of large skull base defects., Clinical Presentation: The first case is of a 62-year-old woman with an invasive esthesioneuroblastoma. Multiple resections and reconstructions, including a large frontal craniectomy and titanium mesh cranioplasty, resulted in refractory tension pneumocephalus. A supraorbital craniotomy was performed with endoscope-assisted harvesting of a pericranial flap through a coronal plane stab incision for definitive repair. The second case is a 44-year-old woman with a high-grade neuroendocrine tumor transgressing the anterior cranial fossa. Resection was achieved via combined supraorbital eyebrow craniotomy and endoscopic endonasal approach. A multilayered reconstruction including a pericranial flap from above and a nasoseptal flap from below was used to reconstruct the defect. The pericranial flap was again harvested with endoscope assistance through a coronal plane stab incision. Both cases had excellent outcomes with no post-operative cerebrospinal fluid leak., Conclusion: Repair of large anterior cranial fossa defects with a vascularized pericranial flap can be performed through a supraorbital eyebrow craniotomy. Utilizing small, strategically placed transverse (coronal plane) incisions behind the hairline allows for the endoscope-assisted harvesting of a highly customized flap. This modified technique increases the flexibility of the minimally invasive supraorbital craniotomy., (Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2022
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24. Diagnostic Pitfalls in Cushing Disease: Surgical Remission Rates, Test Thresholds, and Lessons Learned in 105 Patients.
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Mallari RJ, Thakur JD, Barkhoudarian G, Eisenberg A, Rodriguez A, Rettinger S, Cohan P, Nieman L, and Kelly DF
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- Adrenocorticotropic Hormone metabolism, Adult, Aged, Biopsy, Female, Humans, Hydrocortisone metabolism, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Pituitary ACTH Hypersecretion blood, Pituitary ACTH Hypersecretion surgery, Pituitary ACTH Hypersecretion urine, Pituitary Gland diagnostic imaging, Pituitary Gland metabolism, Pituitary Gland surgery, Predictive Value of Tests, Preoperative Period, Reference Values, Retrospective Studies, Saliva chemistry, Adrenocorticotropic Hormone blood, Hydrocortisone analysis, Hypophysectomy, Pituitary ACTH Hypersecretion diagnosis, Pituitary Gland pathology
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Context: Confirming a diagnosis of Cushing disease (CD) remains challenging, yet is critically important before recommending transsphenoidal surgery for adenoma resection., Objective: To describe predictive performance of preoperative biochemical and imaging data relative to post-operative remission and clinical characteristics in patients with presumed CD., Design, Setting, Patients, Interventions: Patients (n = 105; 86% female) who underwent surgery from 2007 through 2020 were classified into 3 groups: group A (n = 84) pathology-proven ACTH adenoma; group B (n = 6) pathology-unproven but with postoperative hypocortisolemia consistent with CD; and group C (n = 15) pathology-unproven, without postoperative hypocortisolemia. Group A + B were combined as confirmed CD and group C as unconfirmed CD., Main Outcomes: Group A + B was compared with group C regarding predictive performance of preoperative 24-hour urinary free cortisol (UFC), late night salivary cortisol (LNSC), 1-mg dexamethasone suppression test (DST), plasma ACTH, and pituitary magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)., Results: All groups had a similar clinical phenotype. Compared with group C, group A + B had higher mean UFC (P < 0.001), LNSC (P = 0.003), DST (P = 0.06), and ACTH (P = 0.03) and larger MRI-defined lesions (P < 0.001). The highest accuracy thresholds were: UFC 72 µg/24 hours; LNSC 0.122 µg/dL, DST 2.70 µg/dL, and ACTH 39.1 pg/mL. Early (3-month) biochemical remission was achieved in 76/105 (72%) patients: 76/90(84%) and 0/15(0%) of group A + B vs group C, respectively, P < 0.0001. In group A + B, nonremission was strongly associated with adenoma cavernous sinus invasion., Conclusions: Use of strict biochemical thresholds may help avoid offering transsphenoidal surgery to presumed CD patients with equivocal data and improve surgical remission rates. Patients with Cushingoid phenotype but equivocal biochemical data warrant additional rigorous testing., (© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society.)
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- 2022
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25. Complication avoidance protocols in endoscopic pituitary adenoma surgery: a retrospective cohort study in 514 patients.
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Thakur JD, Corlin A, Mallari RJ, Yawitz S, Eisenberg A, Sivakumar W, Griffiths C, Carrau RL, Rettinger S, Cohan P, Krauss H, Araque KA, Barkhoudarian G, and Kelly DF
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- Adult, Aged, Endoscopy, Humans, Middle Aged, Postoperative Complications, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Adenoma surgery, Hypopituitarism, Pituitary Neoplasms surgery
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Purpose: To evaluate the impact of using consistent complication-avoidance protocols in patients undergoing endoscopic pituitary adenoma surgery including techniques for avoiding anosmia, epistaxis, carotid artery injury, hypopituitarism, cerebrospinal fluid leaks and meningitis., Methods: All patients undergoing endoscopic adenoma resection from 2010 to 2020 were included. Primary outcomes included 90-day complication rates, gland function outcomes, reoperations, readmissions and length of stay. Secondary outcomes were extent of resection, short-term endocrine remission, vision recovery., Results: Of 514 patients, (mean age 51 ± 16 years; 78% macroadenomas, 19% prior surgery) major complications occurred in 18(3.5%) patients, most commonly CSF leak (9, 1.7%) and meningitis (4, 0.8%). In 14 of 18 patients, complications were deemed preventable. Four (0.8%) had complications with permanent sequelae (3 before 2016): one unexplained mortality, one stroke, one oculomotor nerve palsy, one oculoparesis. There were no internal carotid artery injuries, permanent visual worsening or permanent anosmia. New hypopituitarism occurred in 23/485(4.7%). Partial or complete hypopituitarism resolution occurred in 102/193(52.8%) patients. Median LOS was 2 days; 98.3% of patients were discharged home. Comparing 18 patients with major complications versus 496 without, median LOS was 7 versus 2 days, respectively p < 0.001. Readmissions occurred in 6%(31/535), mostly for hyponatremia (18/31). Gross total resection was achieved in 214/312(69%) endocrine-inactive adenomas; biochemical remission was achieved in 148/209(71%) endocrine-active adenomas. Visual field or acuity defects improved in 126/138(91.3%) patients., Conclusion: This study suggests that conformance to established protocols for endoscopic pituitary surgery may minimize complications, re-admissions and LOS while enhancing the likelihood of preserving gland function, although there remains opportunity for further improvements., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2021
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26. Supraorbital and mini-pterional keyhole craniotomies for brain tumors: a clinical and anatomical comparison of indications and outcomes in 204 cases.
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Avery MB, Mallari RJ, Barkhoudarian G, and Kelly DF
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Objective: The authors' objective was to compare the indications, outcomes, and anatomical limits of supraorbital (SO) and mini-pterional (MP) craniotomies in patients with intra- and extraaxial brain tumors, and to assess approach selection, utility of endoscopy, and surgical field overlap., Methods: A retrospective analysis was conducted of all brain tumor patients who underwent an SO or MP approach. The analyzed characteristics included pathology, endoscopy use, extent of resection, length of stay (LOS), and complications. On the basis of preoperative MRI data, tumor heatmaps were constructed to compare surgical access provided by both routes, including coronal projection heatmaps for parasellar tumors., Results: From 2007 to 2020, 158 patients underwent 173 (84.8%) SO craniotomies and 30 patients underwent 31 (15.2%) MP craniotomies; 71 (34.8%) procedures were reoperations. Of these 204 operations, 110 (63.6%) SO and 21 (67.7%) MP approaches were for extraaxial tumors (meningiomas in 65% and 76.2%, respectively). Gliomas and metastases together represented 84.1% and 70% of intraaxial tumors accessed with SO and MP approaches, respectively. Overall, 56.1% of tumors accessed with the SO approach and 41.9% of those accessed with the MP approach were in the parasellar region. Axial projection heatmaps showed that SO access extended along the entire ipsilateral and medial contralateral anterior cranial fossa, parasellar region, ipsilateral sylvian fissure, medial middle cranial fossa, and anterior midbrain, whereas MP access was limited to the ipsilateral middle cranial fossa, sylvian fissure, lateral parasellar region, and posterior aspect of anterior cranial fossa. Coronal projection heatmaps showed that parasellar access extended further superiorly with the SO approach compared with that of the MP approach. Endoscopy was utilized in 98 (56.6%) SO craniotomies and 7 (22.6%) MP craniotomies, with further tumor resection in 48 (49%) and 5 (71.4%) cases, respectively. Endoscope-assisted tumor removal was clustered in areas that were generally at farther distances from the craniotomy or in angled locations such as the cribriform plate region where microscopic visualization is limited. Gross-total or near-total resection was achieved in 120/173 (69%) SO approaches and 21/31 (68%) MP approaches. Major complications occurred in 11 (6.4%) SO approaches and 1 (3.2%) MP approach (p = 0.49). The median LOS decreased to 2 days in the last 2 years of the study., Conclusions: This clinical experience suggests the SO and MP craniotomies are versatile, safe, and complementary approaches for tumors located in the anterior and middle cranial fossae and perisylvian and parasellar regions. The SO route, used in 85% of cases, achieved greater overall reach than the MP route. Both approaches may benefit from expanded visualization with endoscopy.
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- 2021
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27. Streamlining brain tumor surgery care during the COVID-19 pandemic: A case-control study.
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Mallari RJ, Avery MB, Corlin A, Eisenberg A, Hammond TC, Martin NA, Barkhoudarian G, and Kelly DF
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- Case-Control Studies, Craniotomy methods, Enhanced Recovery After Surgery, Female, Hospitalization, Humans, Length of Stay, Male, Middle Aged, Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures methods, Patient Discharge, Patient Readmission, Postoperative Complications prevention & control, Postoperative Period, Reoperation methods, Retrospective Studies, Brain Neoplasms surgery, COVID-19 prevention & control, Pandemics prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic forced a reconsideration of surgical patient management in the setting of scarce resources and risk of viral transmission. Herein we assess the impact of implementing a protocol of more rigorous patient education, recovery room assessment for non-ICU admission, earlier mobilization and post-discharge communication for patients undergoing brain tumor surgery., Methods: A case-control retrospective review was undertaken at a community hospital with a dedicated neurosurgery and otolaryngology team using minimally invasive surgical techniques, total intravenous anesthesia (TIVA) and early post-operative imaging protocols. All patients undergoing craniotomy or endoscopic endonasal removal of a brain, skull base or pituitary tumor were included during two non-overlapping periods: March 2019-January 2020 (pre-pandemic epoch) versus March 2020-January 2021 (pandemic epoch with streamlined care protocol implemented). Data collection included demographics, preoperative American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) status, tumor pathology, and tumor resection and remission rates. Primary outcomes were ICU utilization and hospital length of stay (LOS). Secondary outcomes were complications, readmissions and reoperations., Findings: Of 295 patients, 163 patients were treated pre-pandemic (58% women, mean age 53.2±16 years) and 132 were treated during the pandemic (52% women, mean age 52.3±17 years). From pre-pandemic to pandemic, ICU utilization decreased from 92(54%) to 43(29%) of operations (p<0.001) and hospital LOS≤1 day increased from 21(12.2%) to 60(41.4%), p<0.001, respectively. For craniotomy cohort, median LOS was 2 days for both epochs; median ICU LOS decreased from 1 to 0 days (p<0.001), ICU use decreased from 73(80%) to 29(33%),(p<0.001). For endonasal cohort, median LOS decreased from 2 to 1 days; median ICU LOS was 0 days for both epochs; (p<0.001). There were no differences pre-pandemic versus pandemic in ASA scores, resection/remission rates, readmissions or reoperations., Conclusion: This experience suggests the COVID-19 pandemic provided an opportunity for implementing a brain tumor care protocol to facilitate safely decreasing ICU utilization and accelerating discharge home without an increase in complications, readmission or reoperations. More rigorous patient education, recovery room assessment for non-ICU admission, earlier mobilization and post-discharge communication, layered upon a foundation of minimally invasive surgery, TIVA anesthesia and early post-operative imaging are possible contributors to these favorable trends., Competing Interests: I have read the journal’s policy and the authors of this manuscript have the following competing interests: Dr. Kelly receives royalties from Mizuho, Inc., Dr. Barkhoudarian is a consultant for Vascular Technologies and Cerevasc, Inc.. No other authors have conflicts of interests to disclose. Regarding sharing data: This does not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials.
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- 2021
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28. Characterization of outcomes and practices utilized in the management of internal carotid artery injury not requiring definitive endovascular management.
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London NR Jr, AlQahtani A, Barbosa S, Castelnuovo P, Locatelli D, Stamm A, Cohen-Gadol AA, Elbosraty H, Casiano R, Morcos J, Pasquini E, Frank G, Mazzatenta D, Barkhoudarian G, Griffiths C, Kelly D, Georgalas C, Janakiram TN, Nicolai P, Prevedello DM, and Carrau RL
- Abstract
Background: After internal carotid artery (ICA) injury during endoscopic skull base surgery, the majority of patients undergo ICA embolization or stenting to treat active extravasation or pseudoaneurysm development. However, management practices when embolization or stenting is not required have not been well described. The objective of this study was to determine how patients with ICA injury but no embolization, stenting, or ligation do long-term and ascertain the reconstruction methods utilized., Methods: Twenty-nine cases of ICA injury were identified in an international multi-institutional retrospective review. Of these, we identified six cases that were not treated with embolization, stenting, or ICA sacrifice. Information was available for five cases., Results: A muscle patch was used in the immediate repair of each case. A nasoseptal flap was used in one case. Prefabricated nasal tampons were used in all cases. Nasal packing was initially left in for a median of 7 days prior to removal. The initial muscle patch was reinforced with a second muscle graft in one case. One case demonstrated ICA bleeding at the time of packing removal and was repacked an additional week. Follow-up for each of these cases was at least 2 years. No cases of subsequent carotid rupture were found and none of these cases ultimately underwent endovascular stenting. Radiation or proton therapy has not been subsequently used in any of these patients., Conclusions: This study details the reconstruction, lessons learned, and long-term follow-up for five cases of ICA injury not treated with embolization, stenting, or ligation., Competing Interests: Dr London holds stock in Navigen Pharmaceuticals, was a consultant for Cooltech Inc, and receives research funding from Merck Inc, none of which are relevant to this study. Dr Casiano reported receiving ad hoc consulting fees from Medtronic, Olympus ENT, and MeilMed Inc outside the submitted work. Dr Barkhoudarian reported receiving personal fees from Vascular Technology Inc outside the submitted work. Dr Kelly reported receiving ad hoc consulting fees from Mizuho Inc outside the submitted work. Dr Prevedello reported being a consultant for Stryker, Medtronic, and Integra and receiving royalties from ACE Medical, Mizuho, KLS‐Martin and honorarium from Storz. No other disclosures were reported., (© 2021 The Authors. Laryngoscope Investigative Otolaryngology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC. on behalf of The Triological Society.)
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- 2021
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29. Endoscopic Endonasal and Supraorbital Removal of Tuberculum Sellae Meningiomas: Anatomic Guides and Operative Nuances for Keyhole Approach Selection.
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Mallari RJ, Thakur JD, Rhee JH, Eisenberg A, Krauss H, Griffiths C, Sivakumar W, Barkhoudarian G, and Kelly DF
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- Adult, Aged, Endoscopy, Humans, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Sella Turcica diagnostic imaging, Sella Turcica surgery, Treatment Outcome, Meningeal Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Meningeal Neoplasms surgery, Meningioma diagnostic imaging, Meningioma surgery
- Abstract
Background: With growing worldwide endoscopy experience, endonasal and supraorbital removal of tuberculum sellae meningiomas (TSM) has increased., Objective: To describe anatomic factors for guiding approach selection and outcomes., Methods: Retrospective analysis of patients undergoing endonasal or supraorbital TSM resection: approach criteria, clinical outcomes, acute magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) fluid-attenuated inversion-recovery (FLAIR)/T2 changes., Results: From 2008 to 2020, 33 patients (mean age 55 ± 11 yr) were identified: 20 (61%) had endonasal and 13 (39%) supraorbital removal. Comparing endonasal and supraorbital approaches, mean tumor volume (3.7 ± 3.5 cm3 vs 7.7 ± 8.5 cm3, P = .07); percent tumor above planum (42% vs 65%, P = .02), and lateral tumor beyond supraclinoid internal carotid arteries (1.4 ± 2.0 mm vs 4.0 ± 3.2 mm, P = .006) were greater for supraorbital route. Sellar depth was greater for endonasal route tumors (12.2 ± 2.6 mm vs 9.3 ± 2.4 mm, P = .003). Endoscopy, used in 10/13(77%) supraorbital cases, was helpful in additional tumor removal in 4/10(40%). Gross total removal and mean volumetric tumor resection were 16/20(80%) and 97.5% by endonasal, and 5/13(39%) and 96% by supraorbital route. Vision improved in 12/17 (71%) endonasal, 6/8 (75%) supraorbital operations, and worsened in 1 (3%) supraorbital case. Endonasal approach with optic canal decompression increased over study period: 15/20 (75%) endonasal patients vs 1/13(8%) supraorbital (P < .001). Postoperative FLAIR/T2 MRI changes occurred in 2/12 supraorbital and 0/20 endonasal cases., Conclusion: In our experience, both endonasal and supraorbital routes are safe and effective for TSM removal. Greater tumor extension below planum and medial optic canal invasion favor endonasal route, while larger size and lateral extension favor supraorbital route. Given high frequency of TSM growth into optic canals and better access for medial optic canal tumor removal, endonasal route may be preferred for most TSMs., (© Congress of Neurological Surgeons 2021.)
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- 2021
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30. Pituitary adenomas in older adults (≥ 65 years): 90-day outcomes and readmissions: a 10-year endoscopic endonasal surgical experience.
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Thakur JD, Corlin A, Mallari RJ, Huang W, Eisenberg A, Sivakumar W, Krauss H, Griffiths C, Rettinger S, Cohan P, Barkhoudarian G, Araque KA, and Kelly D
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- Adenoma physiopathology, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Headache physiopathology, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Neurosurgical Procedures methods, Pituitary Neoplasms physiopathology, Retrospective Studies, Visual Acuity physiology, Adenoma surgery, Pituitary Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Introduction: Longer lifespan and newer imaging protocols have led to more older adults being diagnosed with pituitary adenomas. Herein, we describe outcomes of patients ≥ 65 years undergoing endoscopic adenoma removal. To address selection criteria, we also assess a conservatively managed cohort., Methods: A retrospective analysis of 90-day outcomes of patients undergoing endoscopic pituitary adenomectomy from 2010 to 2019 by a neurosurgical/ENT team was performed. Tumor subtype, cavernous sinus invasion, extent of resection/early remission, endocrinology outcomes, complications, re-operations and readmissions were analyzed. A comparator cohort ≥ 65 years undergoing clinical surveillance without surgery was also analyzed., Results: Of 468 patients operated on for pituitary adenoma, 123 (26%) were ≥ 65 years (range 65-93 years); 106 (86.2%) had endocrine-inactive adenomas; 18 (14.6%) had prior surgery. Of 106 patients with endocrine-inactive adenomas, GTR was achieved in 70/106 (66%). Of 17 patients with endocrine-active adenomas, early biochemical remission was: Cushing's 6/8; acromegaly 1/4; prolactinomas 1/5. Gland function recovery occurred in 28/58 (48.3%) patients with various degrees of preoperative hypopituitarism. New anterior hypopituitarism occurred in 3/110 (2.4%) patients; permanent DI in none. Major complications in 123 patients were: CSF leak 2 (1.6%), meningitis 1 (0.8%), vision decline 1 (0.8%). There were no vascular injuries, operative hematomas, anosmia, deaths, MIs, or thromboembolic events. Median length of stay was 2 days. Readmissions occurred in 14/123 (11.3%) patients, 57% for delayed hyponatremia. Intra-cohort analysis by age (65-69, 70-74, 75-79, ≥ 80 years) revealed no outcome differences. Cavernous sinus invasion (OR 7.7, CI 1.37-44.8; p = 0.02) and redo-surgery (OR 8.5, CI 1.7-42.8; p = 0.009) were negative predictors for GTR/NTR. Of 105 patients evaluated for presumed pituitary adenoma beginning in 2015, 72 (69%) underwent surgery, 8 (7%) had prolactinomas treated with cabergoline and 25 (24%) continue clinical surveillance without surgery, including two on new hormone replacement., Conclusion: This study suggests that elderly patients carefully selected for endoscopic adenoma removal can have excellent short-term outcomes including high resection rates, low complication rates and short length of stay. Our experience supports a multidisciplinary approach and the concept of pituitary centers of excellence. Based on our observations, approximately 25% of elderly patients with pituitary adenomas referred for possible surgery can be monitored closely without surgery.
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- 2021
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31. Virtual education in neurosurgery during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Lazaro T, Srinivasan VM, Rahman M, Asthagiri A, Barkhoudarian G, Chambless LB, Kan P, Rao G, Nahed BV, and Patel AJ
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- Adult, Aged, Education, Distance methods, Female, Humans, Internship and Residency methods, Male, Middle Aged, Neurosurgical Procedures methods, Neurosurgical Procedures standards, COVID-19 epidemiology, Education, Distance standards, Internship and Residency standards, Neurosurgical Procedures education, Surveys and Questionnaires, Telecommunications standards
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Objective: Neurosurgical education in the US has changed significantly as a consequence of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. Institutional social distancing requirements have resulted in many neurosurgical programs utilizing video conferencing for educational activities. However, it is unclear how or if these practices should continue after the pandemic. The objective of this study was to characterize virtual education in neurosurgery and understand how it should be utilized after COVID-19., Methods: A 24-question, 3-part online survey was administered anonymously to all 117 US neurosurgical residency programs from May 15, 2020, to June 15, 2020. Questions pertained to the current use of virtual conferencing, preferences over traditional conferences, and future inclinations. The Likert scale (1 = strongly disagree, 3 = neutral, 5 = strongly agree) was used. Comparisons were calculated using the Mann-Whitney U-test. Statistical significance was set at 0.05., Results: One-hundred eight responses were recorded. Overall, 38 respondents (35.2%) were attendings and 70 (64.8%) were trainees. Forty-one respondents (38.0%) indicated attending 5-6 conferences per week and 70 (64.8%) attend national virtual conferences. When considering different conference types, there was no overall preference (scores < 3) for virtual conferences over traditional conferences. In regard to future use, respondents strongly agreed that they would continue the practice at some capacity after the pandemic (median score 5). Overall, respondents agreed that virtual conferences would partially replace traditional conferences (median score 4), whereas they strongly disagreed with the complete replacement of traditional conferences (median score 1). The most common choices for the partial replacement of tradition conferences were case conferences (59/108, 55%) and board preparation (64/108, 59%). Lastly, there was a significant difference in scores for continued use of virtual conferencing in those who attend nationally sponsored conferences (median score 5, n = 70) and those who do not (median score 4, n = 38; U = 1762.50, z = 2.97, r = 0.29, p = 0.003)., Conclusions: Virtual conferences will likely remain an integral part of neurosurgical education after the COVID-19 pandemic has abated. Across the country, residents and faculty report a preference for continued use of virtual conferencing, especially virtual case conferences and board preparation. Some traditional conferences may even be replaced with virtual conferences, in particular those that are more didactic. Furthermore, nationally sponsored virtual conferences have a positive effect on the preferences for continued use of virtual conferences.
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- 2020
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32. Multidisciplinary management of acromegaly: A consensus.
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Giustina A, Barkhoudarian G, Beckers A, Ben-Shlomo A, Biermasz N, Biller B, Boguszewski C, Bolanowski M, Bollerslev J, Bonert V, Bronstein MD, Buchfelder M, Casanueva F, Chanson P, Clemmons D, Fleseriu M, Formenti AM, Freda P, Gadelha M, Geer E, Gurnell M, Heaney AP, Ho KKY, Ioachimescu AG, Lamberts S, Laws E, Losa M, Maffei P, Mamelak A, Mercado M, Molitch M, Mortini P, Pereira AM, Petersenn S, Post K, Puig-Domingo M, Salvatori R, Samson SL, Shimon I, Strasburger C, Swearingen B, Trainer P, Vance ML, Wass J, Wierman ME, Yuen KCJ, Zatelli MC, and Melmed S
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- Acromegaly diagnosis, Humans, Acromegaly therapy, Consensus, Dopamine Agonists therapeutic use, Neurosurgical Procedures methods, Neurosurgical Procedures standards, Patient Care Team, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Radiotherapy methods, Radiotherapy standards, Receptors, Somatotropin antagonists & inhibitors, Somatostatin analysis
- Abstract
The 13th Acromegaly Consensus Conference was held in November 2019 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and comprised acromegaly experts including endocrinologists and neurosurgeons who considered optimal approaches for multidisciplinary acromegaly management. Focused discussions reviewed techniques, results, and side effects of surgery, radiotherapy, and medical therapy, and how advances in technology and novel techniques have changed the way these modalities are used alone or in combination. Effects of treatment on patient outcomes were considered, along with strategies for optimizing and personalizing therapeutic approaches. Expert consensus recommendations emphasize how best to implement available treatment options as part of a multidisciplinary approach at Pituitary Tumor Centers of Excellence.
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- 2020
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33. The Supraorbital Eyebrow Craniotomy for Intra- and Extra-Axial Brain Tumors: A Single-Center Series and Technique Modification.
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Ansari SF, Eisenberg A, Rodriguez A, Barkhoudarian G, and Kelly DF
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- Adult, Aged, Craniotomy, Eyebrows, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Orbit surgery, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Brain Neoplasms surgery, Meningeal Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Background: The supraorbital (SO) eyebrow craniotomy provides minimally invasive access to the anterior and middle fossae and parasellar region., Objective: To present a series of patients treated with the SO approach to assess outcomes, the impact of endoscopy, and describe a modified pericranial flap aimed at reducing postoperative frontalis paresis and hypesthesia., Methods: A retrospective analysis was undertaken of our prospective database of patients who underwent SO craniotomy for tumor/cyst removal. Patients were evaluated based on pathology, utility of endoscopy, extent of resection, complications, and functional/esthetic recovery., Results: From 2007 to 2018, 129 operations were performed in 117 patients (54% women; mean age 60 ± 16.5 yr). The most common lesions were meningiomas (43%), gliomas (15%), and metastases (15%). Prior surgery and/or radiation had been performed in 37% and 26% of patients, respectively. Endoscopy was used in 76 (61%) operations and allowed more complete tumor removal in 38 (50%). For first-time operations, gross-total removal was achieved in 78%. Major complications included stroke (3%), cranial nerve deficit (3%), acute hematoma (1%), and cerebrospinal fluid leak (1%). The modified pericranial flap technique used in 18 recent patients resulted in a shorter duration of transient frontalis paresis and forehead hypesthesia with complete functional recovery in all 18., Conclusion: The SO craniotomy is an effective keyhole approach for intra- and extra-axial tumors. Endoscopic assistance may allow additional tumor removal in almost 30% of the cases. The modified pericranial flap appears to accelerate functional recovery, although additional patients and follow-up are required to better assess this technique., (Copyright © 2020 by the Congress of Neurological Surgeons.)
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- 2020
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34. Tuberculum Sellae Meningiomas in Pregnancy: 3 Cases Treated in the Second Trimester and Literature Review.
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Mallari RJ, Thakur JD, Griffiths C, Krauss H, Eisenberg A, Barkhoudarian G, and Kelly DF
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- Adult, Anesthesia, Blindness etiology, Craniotomy, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Meningioma complications, Meningioma diagnostic imaging, Middle Aged, Nasal Cavity surgery, Pituitary Neoplasms complications, Pituitary Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Trimester, Second, Recovery of Function, Treatment Outcome, Vision, Ocular, Meningioma surgery, Neurosurgical Procedures methods, Pituitary Neoplasms surgery, Sella Turcica
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Background: Tuberculum sella meningiomas typically present with progressive visual loss. It is also known that meningiomas can become symptomatic during pregnancy. Herein we report on 3 patients who presented with progressive visual decline during pregnancy, prompting urgent surgical removal of their meningiomas., Case Descriptions: From our prospectively collected brain tumor database, all women surgically treated for tuberculum sella meningioma since 2006 were retrospectively reviewed. Clinical presentation, surgical approach, perioperative management, and pathology of pregnant patients were reviewed and compared with those of the nonpregnant cohort. Of 43 women with newly diagnosed tuberculum sella meningioma, 3 (7%) presented in pregnancy with progressive visual loss, 1 in the late first trimester and 2 in the early second trimester. One woman pregnant with twins had a broad-based meningioma and underwent a supraorbital craniotomy and gross total tumor removal in her second trimester. Two women with singleton pregnancies both underwent endoscopic endonasal gross total tumor removal during their second trimesters. All 3 patients had visual recovery, 2 of which were complete, and all went on to have successful uncomplicated deliveries of their children and maintain normal pituitary gland function., Conclusions: Presentation of tuberculum sella meningioma during pregnancy is uncommon but not rare, accounting for 7% of women in our series. Ideally, surgery is performed in the second trimester, ensuring fetal safety while restoring maternal vision and maintaining pituitary gland function are essential. Depending on tumor size and sellar anatomy, endoscopic endonasal or supraorbital keyhole craniotomy approaches are both viable options., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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35. Minimally invasive surgical treatment of intracranial meningiomas in elderly patients (≥ 65 years): outcomes, readmissions, and tumor control.
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Thakur JD, Mallari RJ, Corlin A, Yawitz S, Huang W, Eisenberg A, Sivakumar W, Krauss HR, Griffiths C, Barkhoudarian G, and Kelly DF
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local, Patient Readmission, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Meningeal Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Meningeal Neoplasms surgery, Meningioma surgery
- Abstract
Objective: Increased lifespan has led to more elderly patients being diagnosed with meningiomas. In this study, the authors sought to analyze and compare patients ≥ 65 years old with those < 65 years old who underwent minimally invasive surgery for meningioma. To address surgical selection criteria, the authors also assessed a cohort of patients managed without surgery., Methods: In a retrospective analysis, consecutive patients with meningiomas who underwent minimally invasive (endonasal, supraorbital, minipterional, transfalcine, or retromastoid) and conventional surgical treatment approaches during the period from 2008 to 2019 were dichotomized into those ≥ 65 and those < 65 years old to compare resection rates, endoscopy use, complications, and length of hospital stay (LOS). A comparator meningioma cohort of patients ≥ 65 years old who were observed without surgery during the period from 2015 to 2019 was also analyzed., Results: Of 291 patients (median age 60 years, 71.5% females, mean follow-up 36 months) undergoing meningioma resection, 118 (40.5%) were aged ≥ 65 years and underwent 126 surgeries, including 20% redo operations, as follows: age 65-69 years, 46 operations; 70-74 years, 40 operations; 75-79 years, 17 operations; and ≥ 80 years, 23 operations. During 2015-2019, of 98 patients referred for meningioma, 67 (68%) had surgery, 1 (1%) had radiosurgery, and 31 (32%) were observed. In the 11-year surgical cohort, comparing 173 patients < 65 years versus 118 patients ≥ 65 years old, there were no significant differences in tumor location, size, or outcomes. Of 126 cases of surgery in 118 elderly patients, the approach was a minimally invasive approach to skull base meningioma (SBM) in 64 cases (51%) as follows: endonasal 18, supraorbital 28, minipterional 6, and retrosigmoid 12. Endoscope-assisted surgery was performed in 59.5% of patients. A conventional approach to SBM was performed in 15 cases (12%) (endoscope-assisted 13.3%), and convexity craniotomy for non-skull base meningioma (NSBM) in 47 cases (37%) (endoscope-assisted 17%). In these three cohorts (minimally invasive SBM, conventional SBM, and NSBM), the gross-total/near-total resection rates were 59.5%, 60%, and 91.5%, respectively, and an improved or stable Karnofsky Performance Status score occurred in 88.6%, 86.7%, and 87.2% of cases, respectively. For these 118 elderly patients, the median LOS was 3 days, and major complications occurred in 10 patients (8%) as follows: stroke 4%, vision decline 3%, systemic complications 0.7%, and wound infection or death 0. Eighty-three percent of patients were discharged home, and readmissions occurred in 5 patients (4%). Meningioma recurrence occurred in 4 patients (3%) and progression in 11 (9%). Multivariate regression analysis showed no significance of American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status score, comorbidities, or age subgroups on outcomes; patients aged ≥ 80 years showed a trend of longer hospitalization., Conclusions: This analysis suggests that elderly patients with meningiomas, when carefully selected, generally have excellent surgical outcomes and tumor control. When applied appropriately, use of minimally invasive approaches and endoscopy may be helpful in achieving maximal safe resection, reducing complications, and promoting short hospitalizations. Notably, one-third of our elderly meningioma patients referred for possible surgery from 2015 to 2019 were managed nonoperatively.
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- 2020
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36. Assessment of Factors Associated With Internal Carotid Injury in Expanded Endoscopic Endonasal Skull Base Surgery.
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AlQahtani A, London NR Jr, Castelnuovo P, Locatelli D, Stamm A, Cohen-Gadol AA, Elbosraty H, Casiano R, Morcos J, Pasquini E, Frank G, Mazzatenta D, Barkhoudarian G, Griffiths C, Kelly D, Georgalas C, Janakiram N, Nicolai P, Prevedello DM, and Carrau RL
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- Carotid Artery, Internal anatomy & histology, Clinical Competence, Endoscopy instrumentation, Endoscopy methods, Facility Design and Construction, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neurosurgical Procedures instrumentation, Neurosurgical Procedures methods, Operating Rooms, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Skull Base diagnostic imaging, Skull Base Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Skull Base Neoplasms surgery, Carotid Artery, Internal, Dissection etiology, Endoscopy adverse effects, Neurosurgical Procedures adverse effects, Skull Base surgery
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Importance: Injury to the internal carotid artery (ICA) during endoscopic endonasal skull base surgery does not typically occur as an isolated circumstance but often is the result of multiple factors., Objective: To assess the factors associated with ICA injury in an effort to reduce its occurrence., Design, Setting, and Participants: This quality improvement study used a multicenter root cause analysis of ICA injuries sustained during endoscopic endonasal skull base surgery performed at 11 tertiary care centers across 4 continents (North America, South America, Europe, and Asia) from January 1, 1993, to December 31, 2018. A fishbone model was built to facilitate the root cause analysis. Patients who underwent an expanded endoscopic endonasal approach that carried a substantial potential risk of an ICA injury were included in the analysis. A questionnaire was completed by surgeons at the centers to assess relevant human, patient, process, technique, instrument, and environmental factors associated with the injury., Main Outcomes and Measures: Root cause analysis of demographic, human, patient, process, technique, instrument, and environmental factors as well as mortality and morbidity data., Results: Twenty-eight cases of ICA injury occurred during 7160 expanded endoscopic endonasal approach procedures (incidence of 0.4%). The mean age of the patients was 49 years, with a female to male predominance ratio of 1.8:1 (18 women to 10 men). Anatomical (23 [82%]), pathological (15 [54%]), and surgical resection (26 [93%]) factors were most frequently reported. The surgeon's mental or physical well-being was reported as inadequate in 4 cases (14%). Suboptimal imaging was reported in 6 cases (21%). The surgeon's experience level was not associated with ICA injury. The ICA injury was associated with use of powered or sharp instruments in 20 cases (71%), and use of new instruments or technology in 7 cases (25%). Two patients (7%) died in the operating room, and 3 (11%) were alive with neurological deficits. Overall, patient-related factors were the most frequently reported risk factors (in 27 of 28 cases [96%]). Factors associated with ICA injury catalyzed a list of preventive recommendations., Conclusions and Relevance: This study found that human factors were associated with intraoperative ICA injuries; however, they were usually accompanied by other deficiencies. These findings suggest that identifying risk factors is crucial for preventing such injuries. Preoperative planning and minimizing the potential for ICA injury also appear to be essential.
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- 2020
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37. Evaluation of Surgical Resection Goal and Its Relationship to Extent of Resection and Patient Outcomes in a Multicenter Prospective Study of Patients With Surgically Treated, Nonfunctioning Pituitary Adenomas: A Case Series.
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Little AS, Chicoine MR, Kelly DF, Sarris CE, Mooney MA, White WL, Gardner PA, Fernandez-Miranda JC, Barkhoudarian G, Chandler JP, Prevedello DM, Liebelt BD, Sfondouris J, and Mayberg MR
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- Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care, Patient Care Planning, Preoperative Care, Prospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Adenoma surgery, Pituitary Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Background: The influence of the surgeon's preoperative goal regarding the extent of tumor resection on patient outcomes has not been carefully studied among patients with nonfunctioning pituitary adenomas., Objective: To analyze the relationship between surgical tumor removal goal and patient outcomes in a prospective multicenter study., Methods: Centrally adjudicated extent of tumor resection (gross total resection [GTR] and subtotal resection [STR]) data were analyzed using standard univariate and multivariable analyses., Results: GTR was accomplished in 148 of 171 (86.5%) patients with planned GTR and 32 of 50 (64.0%) patients with planned STR (P = .001). Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of GTR goal were 82.2, 43.9, 86.5, and 36.0%, respectively. Knosp grade 0-2, first surgery, and being an experienced surgeon were associated with surgeons choosing GTR as the goal (P < .01). There was no association between surgical goal and presence of pituitary deficiency at 6 mo (P = .31). Tumor Knosp grade (P = .004) and size (P = .001) were stronger predictors of GTR than was surgical goal (P = .014). The most common site of residual tumor was the cavernous sinus (29 of 41 patients; 70.1%)., Conclusion: This is the first pituitary surgery study to examine surgical goal regarding extent of tumor resection and associated patient outcomes. Surgical goal is a poor predictor of actual tumor resection. A more aggressive surgical goal does not correlate with pituitary gland dysfunction. A better understanding of the ability of surgeons to meet their expectations and of the factors associated with surgical result should improve prognostication and preoperative counseling., (Copyright © 2019 by the Congress of Neurological Surgeons.)
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- 2020
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38. Pituitary gland recovery following fully endoscopic transsphenoidal surgery for nonfunctioning pituitary adenoma: results of a prospective multicenter study.
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Little AS, Gardner PA, Fernandez-Miranda JC, Chicoine MR, Barkhoudarian G, Prevedello DM, Yuen KCJ, and Kelly DF
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Objective: Recovery from preexisting hypopituitarism after transsphenoidal surgery for pituitary adenoma is an important outcome to investigate. Furthermore, pituitary function has not been thoroughly evaluated after fully endoscopic surgery, and benchmark outcomes have not been clearly established. Here, the authors characterize pituitary gland outcomes with a focus on gland recovery following endoscopic transsphenoidal removal of clinically nonfunctioning adenomas., Methods: This multicenter prospective study was conducted at 6 US pituitary centers among adult patients with nonfunctioning pituitary macroadenomas who had undergone endoscopic endonasal pituitary surgery. Pituitary gland function was evaluated 6 months after surgery., Results: The 177 enrolled patients underwent fully endoscopic transsphenoidal surgery; 169 (95.5%) of them were available for follow-up. Ninety-five (56.2%) of the 169 patients had had a preoperative deficiency in at least one hormone axis, and 20/95 (21.1%) experienced recovery in at least one axis at the 6-month follow-up. Patients with adrenal insufficiency were more likely to recover (10/34 [29.4%]) than were those with hypothyroidism (8/72 [11.1%]) or male hypogonadism (5/50 [10.0%]). At the 6-month follow-up, 14/145 (9.7%) patients had developed at least one new deficiency. The study did not identify any predictors of gland recovery (p ≥ 0.20). Permanent diabetes insipidus was observed in 4/166 (2.4%) patients. Predictors of new gland dysfunction included a larger tumor size (p = 0.009) and Knosp grade 3 and 4 (p = 0.051)., Conclusions: Fully endoscopic pituitary surgery resulted in improvement of pituitary gland function in a substantial minority of patients. The deficiency from which patients were most likely to recover was adrenal insufficiency. Overall rates of postoperative permanent diabetes insipidus were low. This study provides multicenter benchmark neuroendocrine clinical outcome data for the endoscopic technique.
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- 2019
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39. Proposal and Validation of a Simple Grading Scale (TRANSSPHER Grade) for Predicting Gross Total Resection of Nonfunctioning Pituitary Macroadenomas After Transsphenoidal Surgery.
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Mooney MA, Sarris CE, Zhou JJ, Barkhoudarian G, Chicoine MR, Fernandez-Miranda JC, Gardner PA, Hardesty DA, Jahnke H, Kelly DF, Liebelt BD, Mayberg MR, Prevedello DM, Sfondouris J, Sheehy JP, Chandler JP, Yuen KCJ, White WL, and Little AS
- Subjects
- Adenoma diagnostic imaging, Adenoma pathology, Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Pituitary Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Pituitary Neoplasms pathology, Prospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Sphenoid Sinus, Tumor Burden, Young Adult, Adenoma surgery, Margins of Excision, Microsurgery, Neuroendoscopy, Pituitary Neoplasms surgery
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Background: A simple, reliable grading scale to better characterize nonfunctioning pituitary adenomas (NFPAs) preoperatively has potential for research and clinical applications., Objective: To develop a grading scale from a prospective multicenter cohort of patients that accurately and reliably predicts the likelihood of gross total resection (GTR) after transsphenoidal NFPA surgery., Methods: Extent-of-resection (EOR) data from a prospective multicenter study in transsphenoidal NFPA surgery were analyzed (TRANSSPHER study; ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02357498). Sixteen preoperative radiographic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) tumor characteristics (eg, tumor size, invasion measures, tumor signal characteristics, and parameters impacting surgical access) were evaluated to determine EOR predictors, to calculate receiver-operating characteristic curves, and to develop a grading scale. A separate validation cohort (n = 165) was examined to assess the scale's performance and inter-rater reliability., Results: Data for 222 patients from 7 centers treated by 15 surgeons were analyzed. Approximately one-fifth of patients (18.5%; 41 of 222) underwent subtotal resection (STR). Maximum tumor diameter > 40 mm; nodular tumor extension through the diaphragma into the frontal lobe, temporal lobe, posterior fossa, or ventricle; and Knosp grades 3 to 4 were identified as independent STR predictors. A grading scale (TRANSSPHER grade) based on a combination of these 3 features outperformed individual variables in predicting GTR (AUC, 0.732). In a validation cohort, the scale exhibited high sensitivity and specificity (AUC, 0.779) and strong inter-rater reliability (kappa coefficient, 0.617)., Conclusion: This simple, reliable grading scale based on preoperative MRI characteristics can be used to better characterize NFPAs for clinical and research purposes and to predict the likelihood of achieving GTR., (Copyright © 2019 by the Congress of Neurological Surgeons.)
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- 2019
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40. Strategy and Technique of Endonasal Endoscopic Bony Decompression and Selective Tumor Removal in Symptomatic Skull Base Meningiomas of the Cavernous Sinus and Meckel's Cave.
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Sivakumar W, Barkhoudarian G, Lobo BM, Zhang X, Zhao F, Eisenberg A, Kesari S, Krauss H, Cohan P, Griffiths C, Wollman R, Chaiken L, and Kelly DF
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cavernous Sinus diagnostic imaging, Cranial Nerve Diseases etiology, Female, Humans, Male, Meningeal Neoplasms complications, Meningeal Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Meningeal Neoplasms radiotherapy, Meningioma complications, Meningioma diagnostic imaging, Meningioma radiotherapy, Middle Aged, Nasal Cavity, Natural Orifice Endoscopic Surgery, Pituitary Diseases etiology, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Radiosurgery, Retrospective Studies, Skull Base Neoplasms complications, Skull Base Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Skull Base Neoplasms radiotherapy, Cavernous Sinus surgery, Cytoreduction Surgical Procedures methods, Decompression, Surgical methods, Meningeal Neoplasms surgery, Meningioma surgery, Neuroendoscopy methods, Skull Base Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Background: Parasellar meningiomas involving the cavernous sinus and Meckel's cave pose a management challenge because of invasion around neurovascular structures and the pituitary gland. The management options range from aggressive resection to focused radiotherapy alone. We present a strategy for these tumors that includes endonasal bony decompression, partial tumor removal, and stereotactic radiotherapy (SRT) in select cases., Methods: The tumor location, previous treatments, cranial neuropathies, pituitary dysfunction, tumor control rates, use of stereotactic radiosurgery, SRT, and complications were retrospectively evaluated., Results: Twenty patients (age range, 43-81 years; 65% women; 90% with World Health Organization grade I; median follow-up, 57 months; 14 without previous debulking and RT; 6 with previous debulking and RT) underwent endonasal bony decompression and partial tumor removal. The most common tumor locations were cavernous sinus (95%), Meckel's cave (95%), sella (75%), petroclival (60%), and optic canal/orbit (30%). Three patients with large meningiomas underwent staged transcranial and endonasal debulking. Of the 14 patients without previous debulking and RT, 11 had undergone postoperative SRT, with tumor shrinkage in 3 (27%). At the last follow-up examination, for these 14 patients and the 6 patients who had undergone previous surgery and RT, tumor control was 100% and 33% (P < 0.001) and the cranial neuropathies had improved in 57% and 33%, respectively. Major complications occurred in 2 patients: a permanent sixth cranial nerve palsy and cerebrospinal fluid leakage requiring reoperation., Conclusions: Endonasal bony decompression and selective tumor removal, followed by SRT, appears to be a reasonable treatment option for most previously untreated parasellar meningiomas. For patients who have undergone previous debulking and RT, new targeted treatment strategies are needed., (Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2019
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41. Analysis of Olfaction after Bilateral Nasoseptal Rescue Flap Transsphenoidal Approach with Olfactory Mucosal Preservation.
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Griffiths CF, Barkhoudarian G, Cutler A, Duong HT, Karimi K, Doyle O, Carrau R, and Kelly DF
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Incidence, Male, Middle Aged, Nasal Mucosa surgery, Pituitary Neoplasms surgery, Plastic Surgery Procedures methods, Retrospective Studies, Smell, Sphenoid Sinus surgery, Young Adult, Endoscopy adverse effects, Nasal Septum surgery, Olfaction Disorders epidemiology, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Plastic Surgery Procedures adverse effects, Surgical Flaps
- Abstract
Objective: To ascertain the impact of septal olfactory strip preservation and bilateral rescue flap elevation on the incidence of olfactory dysfunction., Study Design: Case series with chart review of patients undergoing endoscopic endonasal skull base surgery (2012-2014)., Setting: Providence Saint John's Health Center and John Wayne Cancer Institute., Subjects and Methods: The incidences of postoperative epistaxis, hyposmia, and anosmia were analyzed using the Brief Smell Identification Test (B-SIT), which was completed in 110 of the 165 patients., Results: Seventy-eight patients required extended approaches. Bilateral nasoseptal rescue flaps were elevated in 144 patients (87.3%) and pedicled nasoseptal or middle turbinate flaps in 21 patients (12.7%). The neurovascular pedicles were preserved in all patients, and there were no episodes of postoperative arterial epistaxis. Normal olfaction was noted in 95 patients (86%), with new hyposmia noted in 5 patients (5.5%). Within the rescue flap cohort, new hyposmia occurred in 6.3% ( P < .01) of patients, balanced by improvement of olfaction in 43% of patients with preoperative dysfunction (overall pre- and postoperative olfactory function: 85% vs 86%). Patients with pedicled nasoseptal flaps did not have new hyposmia, with a net improvement of olfaction (71% vs 86%, P = .07). No patients experienced new anosmia. There was no difference between flap type within either subgroup., Conclusions: Superior olfactory strip preservation during elevation of reconstructive flaps preserves olfactory function and maintains adequate surgical exposure. In addition, rescue flaps have significantly diminished the rate of arterial postoperative epistaxis while maintaining the ability to harvest nasoseptal flaps for future reconstruction.
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- 2019
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42. Pituitary Apoplexy.
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Barkhoudarian G and Kelly DF
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- Adenoma complications, Adenoma diagnosis, Adenoma surgery, Humans, Pituitary Apoplexy complications, Pituitary Neoplasms complications, Pituitary Neoplasms diagnosis, Pituitary Neoplasms surgery, Pituitary Apoplexy diagnosis, Pituitary Apoplexy surgery
- Abstract
Pituitary apoplexy is a clinical condition with acute-onset headaches, vision loss, and/or pituitary dysfunction associated with a hemorrhagic or infarcted pituitary tumor or cyst. Treatment varies based on clinical presentation, although often urgent or emergent surgical resection is indicated. Conservative treatment strategies tend to be applied for more mild conditions of apoplexy. Overall outcomes may be similar in this less severe cohort. Acute-onset vision loss with apoplexy should be treated with urgent or emergent surgical evacuation of hematoma and resection of tumor when possible., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2019
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43. Commentary: Essential Neurosurgery for Medical Students.
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Barkhoudarian G
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- 2019
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44. Rathke's cleft cysts: a 6-year experience of surgery vs. observation with comparative volumetric analysis.
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Barkhoudarian G, Palejwala SK, Ansari S, Eisenberg AA, Huang X, Griffiths CF, Cohan P, Rettinger S, Lavin N, and Kelly DF
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- Adult, Central Nervous System Cysts diagnostic imaging, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Pituitary Gland diagnostic imaging, Pituitary Gland physiology, Retrospective Studies, Young Adult, Central Nervous System Cysts pathology, Central Nervous System Cysts surgery
- Abstract
Background: Rathke's cleft cysts (RCCs) are common sellar lesions. Their management remains controversial, particularly when small or asymptomatic. Herein we review a consecutive series of RCC patients managed with surgery or observation., Methods: All patients with a new diagnosis of presumed RCC, based on MRI, from February 2012-March 2018 were retrospectively divided into observational and surgical cohorts based on an intent-to-treat model. The cohorts were compared for clinical presentation, and cyst volume. The observational cohort was followed for change in cyst size. The surgical cohort was followed for changes in endocrinopathy, visual symptoms, headache and recurrence., Results: Of 90 patients (mean age 36.7 ± 19.4 years; 68% female), 60% (n = 54) were in the observational cohort and 40% (n = 36) in the surgical cohort. Average follow-up was 13 ± 23 months in the observational cohort and 24 ± 19 months in the surgical group. In comparing the cohorts, mean ages were similar with more women in the surgical group (81% vs. 56%, p = 0.04). Most patients in the observational cohort had incidentally-discovered RCCs (n = 50, 88%) as opposed to the surgical cohort (n = 6, 17%). The surgical cohort had higher rates of headache (89% vs 26%, p < 0.001), endocrinopathy (36% vs 0%, p < 0.001), and visual dysfunction (19% vs 0%, p = 0.001). Mean cyst volume and maximal cyst dimensions were greater in the surgical cohort (0.94 ± 0.77 cm
3 and 14.2 ± 4.1 mm), compared to the observational cohort (0.1 ± 0.14 cm3 and 6.4 ± 3 mm), (p < 0.001). Among the 53% (n = 30/54) of patients in the observational group with follow-up, 3 (10%) had spontaneous RCC shrinkage, 1 (3%) had modest asymptomatic growth (at 10 months from initial MRI), and 87% had stable cyst size. Of the 36 patients recommended to have surgery, 89% (n = 32) did so. Post-operatively, complete or partial resolution of headache, endocrinopathy and visual dysfunction were documented in 90% (n = 28/30), 75% (n = 10/12), and 100% (n = 7/7), respectively. On follow-up MRI, 8 (22%) patients had some cyst reaccumulation, of whom 3 (8%) were symptomatic and underwent uneventful reoperation. No major complications such as hematoma, CSF leak, new endocrinopathy or visual deficits occurred., Conclusion: From this consecutive series, a majority (60%) of RCCs do not appear to warrant surgical intervention and have a low risk of cyst progression. However, surgical cyst removal appears to be indicated and safe for patients with larger, symptomatic RCCs. Simple cyst drainage has a high rate of improvement in pituitary gland function, visual function and headache resolution with low complication rates and symptomatic recurrence risk. These findings stress the importance of careful case selection and potential utility of volumetric assessment for patients with RCCs.- Published
- 2019
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45. Correction to: Rathke's cleft cysts: a 6-year experience of surgery vs. observation with comparative volumetric analysis.
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Barkhoudarian G, Palejwala SK, Ansari S, Eisenberg AA, Huang X, Griffiths CF, Cohan P, Rettinger S, Lavin N, and Kelly DF
- Abstract
The original version of this article unfortunately contained errors in legend numbers of Figure 2 caption.
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- 2019
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46. Prolactinomas and nonfunctioning adenomas: preoperative diagnosis of tumor type using serum prolactin and tumor size.
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Burke WT, Penn DL, Castlen JP, Donoho DA, Repetti CS, Iuliano S, Barkhoudarian G, and Laws ER
- Abstract
Objective: Prolactinoma and nonfunctioning adenoma (NFA) are the most common sellar pathologies, and both can present with hyperprolactinemia. There are no definitive studies analyzing the relationship between the sizes of prolactinomas and NFAs and the serum prolactin level. Current guidelines for serum prolactin level cutoffs to distinguish between pathologies are suboptimal because they fail to consider the adenoma volume. In this study, the authors attempted to describe the relationship between serum prolactin level and prolactinoma volume. They also examined the predictive value that can be gained by considering tumor volume in differentiating prolactinoma from NFA and provide cutoff values based on a large sample of patients., Methods: A retrospective analysis of consecutive patients with prolactinomas (n = 76) and NFAs (n = 217) was performed. Patients were divided into groups based on adenoma volume, and the two pathologies were compared., Results: A strong correlation was found between prolactinoma volume and serum prolactin level (r = 0.831, p < 0.001). However, there was no significant correlation between NFA volume and serum prolactin level (r = -0.020, p = 0.773). Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis of three different adenoma volume groups was performed and resulted in different serum prolactin level cutoffs for each group. For group 1 (≤ 0.5 cm3), the most accurate cutoff was 43.65 μg/L (area under the curve [AUC] = 0.951); for group 2 (> 0.5 to 4 cm3), 60.05 μg/L (AUC = 0.949); and for group 3 (> 4 cm3), 248.15 μg/L (AUC = 1.0)., Conclusions: Prolactinoma volume has a significant impact on serum prolactin level, whereas NFA volume does not. This finding indicates that the amount of prolactin-producing tissue is a more important factor regarding serum prolactin level than absolute adenoma volume. Hence, volume should be a determining factor to distinguish between prolactinoma and NFA prior to surgery. Current serum prolactin threshold level guidelines are suboptimal and cannot be generalized across all adenoma volumes.
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- 2019
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47. Analysis of cell-free circulating tumor DNA in 419 patients with glioblastoma and other primary brain tumors.
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Piccioni DE, Achrol AS, Kiedrowski LA, Banks KC, Boucher N, Barkhoudarian G, Kelly DF, Juarez T, Lanman RB, Raymond VM, Nguyen M, Truong JD, Heng A, Gill J, Saria M, Pingle SC, and Kesari S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Biomarkers, Tumor blood, Brain Neoplasms blood, Brain Neoplasms diagnosis, Brain Neoplasms pathology, Child, Child, Preschool, Circulating Tumor DNA blood, Female, Glioblastoma blood, Glioblastoma diagnosis, Glioblastoma pathology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Mutation, Prognosis, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Young Adult, Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Brain Neoplasms genetics, Circulating Tumor DNA genetics, Glioblastoma genetics
- Abstract
Aim: Genomically matched trials in primary brain tumors (PBTs) require recent tumor sequencing. We evaluated whether circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) could facilitate genomic interrogation in these patients. Methods: Data from 419 PBT patients tested clinically with a ctDNA NGS panel at a CLIA-certified laboratory were analyzed. Results: A total of 211 patients (50%) had ≥1 somatic alteration detected. Detection was highest in meningioma (59%) and gliobastoma (55%). Single nucleotide variants were detected in 61 genes, with amplifications detected in ERBB2, MET, EGFR and others. Conclusion: Contrary to previous studies with very low yields, we found half of PBT patients had detectable ctDNA with genomically targetable off-label or clinical trial options for almost 50%. For those PBT patients with detectable ctDNA, plasma cfDNA genomic analysis is a clinically viable option for identifying genomically driven therapy options.
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- 2019
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48. Results of a prospective multicenter controlled study comparing surgical outcomes of microscopic versus fully endoscopic transsphenoidal surgery for nonfunctioning pituitary adenomas: the Transsphenoidal Extent of Resection (TRANSSPHER) Study.
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Little AS, Kelly DF, White WL, Gardner PA, Fernandez-Miranda JC, Chicoine MR, Barkhoudarian G, Chandler JP, Prevedello DM, Liebelt BD, Sfondouris J, and Mayberg MR
- Abstract
Objective: Many surgeons have adopted fully endoscopic over microscopic transsphenoidal surgery for nonfunctioning pituitary tumors, although no high-quality evidence demonstrates superior patient outcomes with endoscopic surgery. The goal of this analysis was to compare these techniques in a prospective multicenter controlled study., Methods: Extent of tumor resection was compared after endoscopic or microscopic transsphenoidal surgery in adults with nonfunctioning adenomas. The primary end point was gross-total tumor resection determined by postoperative MRI. Secondary end points included volumetric extent of tumor resection, pituitary hormone outcomes, and standard quality measures., Results: Seven pituitary centers and 15 surgeons participated in the study. Of the 530 patients screened, 260 were enrolled (82 who underwent microscopic procedures, 177 who underwent endoscopic procedures, and 1 who cancelled surgery) between February 2015 and June 2017. Surgeons who used the microscopic technique were more experienced than the surgeons who used the endoscopic technique in terms of years in practice and number of transsphenoidal surgeries performed (p < 0.001). Gross-total resection was achieved in 80.0% (60/75) of microscopic surgery patients and 83.7% (139/166) of endoscopic surgery patients (p = 0.47, OR 0.8, 95% CI 0.4-1.6). Volumetric extent of resection, length of stay, surgery-related deaths, and unplanned readmission rates were similar between groups (p > 0.2). New hormone deficiency was present at 6 months in 28.4% (19/67) of the microscopic surgery patients and 9.7% (14/145) of the endoscopic surgery patients (p < 0.001, OR 3.7, 95% CI 1.7-7.7). Microscopic surgery cases were significantly shorter in duration than endoscopic surgery cases (p < 0.001)., Conclusions: Experienced surgeons who performed microscopic surgery and less experienced surgeons who performed endoscopic surgery achieved similar extents of tumor resection and quality outcomes in patients with nonfunctioning pituitary adenomas. The endoscopic technique may be associated with lower rates of postoperative pituitary gland dysfunction. This study generally supports the transition to endoscopic pituitary surgery when the procedure is performed by proficient surgeons, although both techniques yield overall acceptable surgical outcomes.■ CLASSIFICATION OF EVIDENCE Type of question: therapeutic; study design: prospective cohort trial; evidence: class III.Clinical trial registration no.: NCT02357498 (clinicaltrials.gov).
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- 2019
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49. Evolution of the graded repair of CSF leaks and skull base defects in endonasal endoscopic tumor surgery: trends in repair failure and meningitis rates in 509 patients.
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Conger A, Zhao F, Wang X, Eisenberg A, Griffiths C, Esposito F, Carrau RL, Barkhoudarian G, and Kelly DF
- Subjects
- Adenoma surgery, Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Antibiotic Prophylaxis, Body Mass Index, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pituitary Neoplasms surgery, Plastic Surgery Procedures, Retrospective Studies, Skull Base Neoplasms surgery, Treatment Failure, Young Adult, Cerebrospinal Fluid Leak epidemiology, Endoscopy methods, Meningitis epidemiology, Nasal Cavity surgery, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Postoperative Complications surgery, Skull Base surgery
- Abstract
Objective: The authors previously described a graded approach to skull base repair following endonasal microscopic or endoscope-assisted tumor surgery. In this paper they review their experience with skull base reconstruction in the endoscopic era., Methods: A retrospective review of a single-institution endonasal endoscopic patient database (April 2010–April 2017) was undertaken. Intraoperative CSF leaks were graded based on size (grade 0 [no leak], 1, 2, or 3), and repair technique was documented across grades. The series was divided into 2 epochs based on implementation of a strict perioperative antibiotic protocol and more liberal use of permanent and/or temporary buttresses; repair failure rates and postoperative meningitis rates were assessed for the 2 epochs and compared., Results: In total, 551 operations were performed in 509 patients for parasellar pathology, including pituitary adenoma (66%), Rathke’s cleft cyst (7%), meningioma (6%), craniopharyngioma (4%), and other (17%). Extended approaches were used in 41% of cases. There were 9 postoperative CSF leaks (1.6%) and 6 cases of meningitis (1.1%). Postoperative leak rates for all 551 operations by grade 0, 1, 2, and 3 were 0%, 1.9%, 3.1%, and 4.8%, respectively. Fat grafts were used in 33%, 84%, 97%, and 100% of grade 0, 1, 2, and 3 leaks, respectively. Pedicled mucosal flaps (78 total) were used in 2.6% of grade 0–2 leaks (combined) and 79.5% of grade 3 leaks (60 nasoseptal and 6 middle turbinate flaps). Nasoseptal flap usage was highest for craniopharyngioma operations (80%) and lowest for pituitary adenoma operations (2%). Two (3%) nasoseptal flaps failed. Contributing factors for the 9 repair failures were BMI ≥ 30 (7/9), lack of buttress (4/9), grade 3 leak (4/9), and postoperative vomiting (4/9). Comparison of the epochs showed that grade 1–3 repair failures decreased from 6/143 (4.1%) to 3/141 (2.1%) and grade 1–3 meningitis rates decreased from 5 (3.5%) to 1 (0.7%) (p = 0.08). Prophylactic lumbar CSF drainage was used in only 4 cases (< 1%), was associated with a higher meningitis rate in grades 1–3 (25% vs 2%), and was discontinued in 2012. Comparison of the 2 epochs showed increase buttress use in the second, with use of a permanent buttress in grade 1 and 3 leaks increasing from 13% to 55% and 32% to 76%, respectively (p < 0.001), and use of autologous septal/keel bone as a permanent buttress in grade 1, 2, and 3 leaks increasing from 15% to 51% (p < 0.001)., Conclusions: A graded approach to skull base repair after endonasal surgery remains valid in the endoscopic era. However, the technique has evolved significantly, with further reduction of postoperative CSF leak rates. These data suggest that buttresses are beneficial for repair of most grade 1 and 2 leaks and all grade 3 leaks. Similarly, pedicled flaps appear advantageous for grade 3 leaks, while CSF diversion may be unnecessary and a risk factor for meningitis. High BMI should prompt an aggressive multilayered repair strategy. Achieving repair failure and meningitis rates lower than 1% is a reasonable goal in endoscopic skull base tumor surgery.
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- 2019
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50. Hypothalamic Vasopressin-Producing Tumors: Often Inappropriate Diuresis But Occasionally Cushing Disease.
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Asa SL, Ezzat S, Kelly DF, Cohan P, Takasumi Y, Barkhoudarian G, Heaney AP, Ridout R, Chik CL, Thompson LDR, Gentili F, and Mete O
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Female, Ganglioneuroma complications, Humans, Hypothalamic Neoplasms complications, Male, Neurocytoma complications, Vasopressins metabolism, Diuresis, Ganglioneuroma pathology, Hypothalamic Neoplasms pathology, Neurocytoma pathology, Pituitary ACTH Hypersecretion etiology
- Abstract
Tumors of hypothalamic neurons that produce vasopressin are rare. We retrieved all cases of vasopressin-positive tumors in the sellar region from the database of the Department of Pathology. Five cases fulfilled the selection criteria, representing the first series of such tumors. Clinical, radiologic, and pathologic features were reviewed. Four tumors classified as neurocytomas were identified in 3 females and 1 male patient; the ages at onset of symptoms ranged from 17 to 40 years. All were large sellar masses with suprasellar extension and/or invasion of the parasellar sinuses. Three patients had the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuresis; in one of these, a 6-year history was initially considered to be idiopathic. One patient died of progressive disease; 3 had incomplete resections and are being followed. In contrast to these patients with neurocytoma, a 65-year-old woman had Cushing disease and a 0.8 cm mass that was completely resected at transsphenoidal surgery; this tumor was a gangliocytoma producing vasopressin associated with corticotroph hyperplasia. We postulate that the small amount of vasopressin secreted by this mature gangliocytic tumor was locally bound to corticotrophs, resulting in hyperplasia and Cushing disease, without sufficient overproduction to cause systemic effects of vasopressin excess. Hypothalamic neurocytoma is a tumor that can mimic pituitary neuroendocrine tumors and olfactory neuroblastoma but is distinguished by positivity for neurofilaments, NeuN, and TTF-1 and negative staining for adenohypophysial biomarkers. Our cases illustrate that neurocytoma and gangliocytoma are 2 variants of tumors of hypothalamic neurons that can produce vasopressin. The morphologic and proliferative features of these 2 tumor types represent 2 ends of a spectrum; their function also can result in divergent clinical manifestations, one characterized by reduced urine output and the other by the more insidious features of glucocorticoid excess.
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- 2019
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