11 results on '"Suki D"'
Search Results
2. Cellular Density in Adult Glioma, Estimated with MR Imaging Data and a Machine Learning Algorithm, Has Prognostic Power ApproachingWorld Health Organization Histologic Grading in a Cohort of 1181 Patients.
- Author
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Gates, E. D. H., Suki, D., Celaya, A., Weinberg, J. S., Prabhu, S. S., Sawaya, R., Huse, J. T., Long, J. P., Fuentes, D., and Schellingerhout, D.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Response of treatment-naive brain metastases to stereotactic radiosurgery.
- Author
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Ene CI, Abi Faraj C, Beckham TH, Weinberg JS, Andersen CR, Haider AS, Rao G, Ferguson SD, Alvarez-Brenkenridge CA, Kim BYS, Heimberger AB, McCutcheon IE, Prabhu SS, Wang CM, Ghia AJ, McGovern SL, Chung C, McAleer MF, Tom MC, Perni S, Swanson TA, Yeboa DN, Briere TM, Huse JT, Fuller GN, Lang FF, Li J, Suki D, and Sawaya RE
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Melanoma pathology, Adult, Treatment Outcome, Tumor Burden, Aged, 80 and over, Treatment Failure, Retrospective Studies, Radiosurgery methods, Brain Neoplasms secondary, Brain Neoplasms radiotherapy, Brain Neoplasms surgery, Magnetic Resonance Imaging
- Abstract
With improvements in survival for patients with metastatic cancer, long-term local control of brain metastases has become an increasingly important clinical priority. While consensus guidelines recommend surgery followed by stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) for lesions >3 cm, smaller lesions (≤3 cm) treated with SRS alone elicit variable responses. To determine factors influencing this variable response to SRS, we analyzed outcomes of brain metastases ≤3 cm diameter in patients with no prior systemic therapy treated with frame-based single-fraction SRS. Following SRS, 259 out of 1733 (15%) treated lesions demonstrated MRI findings concerning for local treatment failure (LTF), of which 202 /1733 (12%) demonstrated LTF and 54/1733 (3%) had an adverse radiation effect. Multivariate analysis demonstrated tumor size (>1.5 cm) and melanoma histology were associated with higher LTF rates. Our results demonstrate that brain metastases ≤3 cm are not uniformly responsive to SRS and suggest that prospective studies to evaluate the effect of SRS alone or in combination with surgery on brain metastases ≤3 cm matched by tumor size and histology are warranted. These studies will help establish multi-disciplinary treatment guidelines that improve local control while minimizing radiation necrosis during treatment of brain metastasis ≤3 cm., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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4. Subependymomas of the fourth ventricle: To operate or not to operate?
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Haider AS, McCutcheon IE, Ene CI, Fuller GN, Schomer DF, Gule-Monroe M, DeMonte F, Ferguson SD, Lang FF, Prabhu SS, Raza SM, Suki D, Weinberg JS, and Sawaya R
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Female, Fourth Ventricle diagnostic imaging, Fourth Ventricle surgery, Fourth Ventricle pathology, Retrospective Studies, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Glioma, Subependymal diagnostic imaging, Glioma, Subependymal surgery, Cerebral Ventricle Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Cerebral Ventricle Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Background: There is a paucity of literature regarding the clinical characteristics and management of subependymomas of the fourth ventricle due to their rarity. Here, we describe the operative and non-operative management and outcomes of patients with such tumors., Methods: This retrospective single-institution case series was gathered after Institutional Review Board (IRB) approval. Patients diagnosed with a subependymoma of the fourth ventricle between 1993 and 2021 were identified. Clinical, radiology and pathology reports along with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) images were reviewed., Results: Patients identified (n = 20), showed a male predominance (n = 14). They underwent surgery (n = 9) with resection and histopathological confirmation of subependymoma or were followed with imaging surveillance (n = 11). The median age at diagnosis was 51.5 years. Median tumor volume for the operative cohort was 8.64 cm
3 and median length of follow-up was 65.8 months. Median tumor volume for the non-operative cohort was 0.96 cm3 and median length of follow-up was 78 months. No tumor recurrence post-resection was noted in the operative group, and no tumor growth from baseline was noted in the non-operative group. Most patients (89 %) in the operative group had symptoms at diagnosis, all of which improved post-resection. No patients were symptomatic in the non-operative group., Conclusions: Surgical resection is safe and is associated with alleviation of presenting symptoms in patients with large tumors. Observation and routine surveillance are warranted for smaller, asymptomatic tumors., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
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5. Postoperative Management of Recurrence After Radiosurgery and Surgical Resection for Brain Metastases and Predicting Benefit From Adjuvant Radiation.
- Author
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Buszek SM, Tran B, Long JP, Luo D, Suki D, Li J, Ferguson S, and Chung C
- Subjects
- Humans, Radiotherapy, Adjuvant, Treatment Outcome, Retrospective Studies, Radiosurgery adverse effects, Radiosurgery methods, Brain Neoplasms radiotherapy, Brain Neoplasms surgery, Brain Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) is often used as upfront treatment for brain metastases. Progression or radionecrosis after SRS is common and can prompt resection. However, postoperative management strategies after resection for SRS failure vary widely, and no standard practice has been established. In this approved study, we retrospectively reviewed patients who received SRS for a brain metastasis followed by resection of the same lesion. We extracted patient-, disease-, and treatment-related variables and information on disease-related outcomes. Univariate and multivariate analyses of clinicopathologic variables were used to create a model to predict factors associated with local failure (LF). A total of 225 patients with brain metastases treated with SRS from 2009 to 2017 followed by surgical resection were identified. Overall, 65% of cases had gross total resection (GTR) on postoperative imaging review. Twenty-one patients (9.3%) received adjuvant radiation therapy to the surgical cavity, and 204 (90.7%) were observed. Of these 204 patients, 118 had GTR with evidence of tumor within the pathology specimen. With a median follow-up of 13 months after resection, 47 patients (40%) developed LF after surgery. After salvage resection of a brain metastasis initially treated with SRS, the observed LF rate was 40% among those who had a GTR and evidence of tumor on pathologic examination. This LF rate is sufficiently high that adjuvant radiation to the surgical bed after salvage resection should be considered in these cases when there is tumor in the pathology, even after a GTR., Competing Interests: Disclosures None., (Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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6. Characterization of recurrence patterns and outcomes of medulloblastoma in adults: The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center experience.
- Author
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Gregory TA, Mastall M, Lin H, Hess KR, Yuan Y, Martin-Bejarano Garcia M, Fuller GN, Alfaro KD, Gule-Monroe MK, Huse JT, Khatua S, Rao G, Sandberg DI, Wefel JS, Yeboa DN, Paulino AC, McGovern SL, Zaky W, Mahajan A, Suki D, Weathers SP, Harrison RA, de Groot JF, Puduvalli VK, Penas-Prado M, and Majd NK
- Abstract
Background: Medulloblastoma in adults is rare and treatment decisions are largely driven from pediatric literature. We sought to characterize recurrent medulloblastoma in adults., Methods: From a single-institution dataset of 200 adult patients diagnosed with medulloblastoma during 1978-2017, those with recurrence were analyzed for clinical features, treatment, and outcome., Results: Of the 200 patients, 82 (41%) with median age of 29 years (18-59) had recurrence after a median follow-up time of 8.4 years (95% CI = 7.1, 10.3). Of these, 30 (37%) were standard-risk, 31 (38%) were high-risk, and 21 (26%) had unknown-risk diseases at the time of initial diagnosis. Forty-eight (58%) presented with recurrence outside the posterior fossa, of whom 35 (43%) had distant recurrence only. Median Progression-free survival (PFS) and OS from initial surgery were 33.5 and 62.4 months, respectively. Neither PFS nor OS from initial diagnosis differed between the standard-risk and high-risk groups in those who experience recurrence ( P = .505 and .463, respectively). Median OS from first recurrence was 20.3 months, also with no difference between the standard-risk and high-risk groups ( P = .518). Recurrences were treated with combinations of re-resection (20 patients; 25%), systemic chemotherapy (61 patients; 76%), radiation (29 patients; 36%), stem cell transplant (6 patients; 8%), and intrathecal chemotherapy (4 patients; 5%). Patients who received radiation at recurrence had better OS (32.9 months) than those who did not (19.2 months) ( P = .034)., Conclusions: Recurrent medulloblastoma in adults has a poor prognosis irrespective of initial risk stratification. Recurrence commonly arises outside the posterior fossa years after initial diagnosis., Competing Interests: The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press, the Society for Neuro-Oncology and the European Association of Neuro-Oncology.)
- Published
- 2023
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7. Volumetric extent of resection and survival for recurrent atypical meningioma.
- Author
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Przybylowski CJ, Suki D, Raza SM, and DeMonte F
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Neurosurgical Procedures, Progression-Free Survival, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local surgery, Disease-Free Survival, Meningioma pathology, Meningeal Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Objective: In recurrent atypical meningioma, the survival impact of volumetric extent of resection (vEOR) and residual tumor volume (RTV) has not been previously studied., Methods: The authors performed a retrospective vEOR analysis of patients with recurrent World Health Organization grade II meningiomas treated with reresection from 2000 to 2019. The Kaplan-Meier method and multivariate Cox regression analysis were used to study progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS)., Results: Fifty-nine patients with a median follow-up duration of 95 (95% CI 42-148) months were included. The median (range) vEOR was 100% (32%-100%) and the mean ± SD was 90.7% ± 15.3%. Among patients who underwent gross-total resection (GTR) (n = 32 [54%]), Simpson grade I and II resections were achieved in 23 (72%) and 9 (28%) patients, respectively. Among patients who underwent subtotal resection (n = 27 [46%]), the median (range) RTV was 4.3 (0.3-40) cm3. The 1-, 2-, and 5-year actuarial PFS rates for the cohort were 76%, 56%, and 34%, respectively. The 1-, 2-, and 5-year actuarial OS rates for the cohort were 98%, 78%, and 60%, respectively. Variables reflecting EOR significantly impacted both PFS and OS in multivariate analysis: GTR (p < 0.01) was significantly associated with longer PFS, and lower Simpson grade (p = 0.04) was significantly associated with longer OS. Additional factors including RTV, Ki-67 index, and pretreatment and posttreatment history also impacted survival outcomes (p < 0.05)., Conclusions: EOR and Simpson grade were independently associated with survival outcomes in patients with recurrent atypical meningioma. These findings support the practice of thorough reresection for maximal cytoreduction in appropriate surgical candidates.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Cellular Density in Adult Glioma, Estimated with MR Imaging Data and a Machine Learning Algorithm, Has Prognostic Power Approaching World Health Organization Histologic Grading in a Cohort of 1181 Patients.
- Author
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Gates EDH, Suki D, Celaya A, Weinberg JS, Prabhu SS, Sawaya R, Huse JT, Long JP, Fuentes D, and Schellingerhout D
- Subjects
- Humans, Adult, Prognosis, Neoplasm Grading, Retrospective Studies, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Algorithms, Machine Learning, World Health Organization, Brain Neoplasms pathology, Glioma pathology
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: Recent advances in machine learning have enabled image-based prediction of local tissue pathology in gliomas, but the clinical usefulness of these predictions is unknown. We aimed to evaluate the prognostic ability of imaging-based estimates of cellular density for patients with gliomas, with comparison to the gold standard reference of World Health Organization grading., Materials and Methods: Data from 1181 (207 grade II, 246 grade III, 728 grade IV) previously untreated patients with gliomas from a single institution were analyzed. A pretrained random forest model estimated voxelwise tumor cellularity using MR imaging data. Maximum cellular density was correlated with the World Health Organization grade and actual survival, correcting for covariates of age and performance status., Results: A maximum estimated cellular density of >7681 nuclei/mm
2 was associated with a worse prognosis and a univariate hazard ratio of 4.21 ( P < .001); the multivariate hazard ratio after adjusting for covariates of age and performance status was 2.91 ( P < .001). The concordance index between maximum cellular density (adjusted for covariates) and survival was 0.734. The hazard ratio for a high World Health Organization grade (IV) was 7.57 univariate ( P < .001) and 5.25 multivariate ( P < .001). The concordance index for World Health Organization grading (adjusted for covariates) was 0.761. The maximum cellular density was an independent predictor of overall survival, and a Cox model using World Health Organization grade, maximum cellular density, age, and Karnofsky performance status had a higher concordance (C = 0.764; range 0.748-0.781) than the component predictors., Conclusions: Image-based estimation of glioma cellularity is a promising biomarker for predicting survival, approaching the prognostic power of World Health Organization grading, with added values of early availability, low risk, and low cost., (© 2022 by American Journal of Neuroradiology.)- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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9. An efficient magnetic resonance image data quality screening dashboard.
- Author
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Gates EDH, Celaya A, Suki D, Schellingerhout D, and Fuentes D
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- Data Accuracy, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted methods, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Artificial Intelligence, Brain Neoplasms
- Abstract
Purpose: Complex data processing and curation for artificial intelligence applications rely on high-quality data sets for training and analysis. Manually reviewing images and their associated annotations is a very laborious task and existing quality control tools for data review are generally limited to raw images only. The purpose of this work was to develop an imaging informatics dashboard for the easy and fast review of processed magnetic resonance (MR) imaging data sets; we demonstrated its ability in a large-scale data review., Methods: We developed a custom R Shiny dashboard that displays key static snapshots of each imaging study and its annotations. A graphical interface allows the structured entry of review data and download of tabulated review results. We evaluated the dashboard using two large data sets: 1380 processed MR imaging studies from our institution and 285 studies from the 2018 MICCAI Brain Tumor Segmentation Challenge (BraTS)., Results: Studies were reviewed at an average rate of 100/h using the dashboard, 10 times faster than using existing data viewers. For data from our institution, 1181 of the 1380 (86%) studies were of acceptable quality. The most commonly identified failure modes were tumor segmentation (9.6% of cases) and image registration (4.6% of cases). Tumor segmentation without visible errors on the dashboard had much better agreement with reference tumor volume measurements (root-mean-square error 12.2 cm
3 ) than did segmentations with minor errors (20.5 cm3 ) or failed segmentations (27.4 cm3 ). In the BraTS data, 242 of 285 (85%) studies were acceptable quality after processing. Among the 43 cases that failed review, 14 had unacceptable raw image quality., Conclusion: Our dashboard provides a fast, effective tool for reviewing complex processed MR imaging data sets. It is freely available for download at https://github.com/EGates1/MRDQED., (© 2022 The Authors. Journal of Applied Clinical Medical Physics published by Wiley Periodicals, LLC on behalf of The American Association of Physicists in Medicine.)- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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10. Long term outcomes following surgery for pineal region tumors.
- Author
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Shepard MJ, Haider AS, Prabhu SS, Sawaya R, DeMonte F, McCutcheon IE, Weinberg JS, Ferguson SD, Suki D, Fuller GN, and Lang FF
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- Adolescent, Adult, Humans, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Pinealoma surgery
- Abstract
Purpose: Pineal region tumors are surgically demanding tumors to resect. Long term neuro-oncologic outcomes following surgical excision of tumors from this region have been underreported. We sought to define the long term outcomes of patients undergoing resection of pineal region tumors., Methods: A retrospective analysis of a prospectively maintained database was performed on patients who underwent intended surgical excision of pineal region tumors. Overall survival (OS) and progression free survival (PFS) were the primary endpoints of this study. Factors associated with OS, PFS and the degree of resection were analyzed, along with 30-day complication rates and dependence on CSF diversion., Results: Sixty-eight patients with a mean age of 30.9 ± 15.3 years were analyzed. The median clinical and radiographic follow-up was 95.7 and 48.2 months, respectively. The supracerebellar infratentorial and the occipital transtentorial corridors were utilized in the majority of cases (80.9%). The gross total resection (GTR) rate was 52.9% (n=36). The 5-year OS and PFS rates were 70.2% and 58.5%, respectively. Achieving GTR was associated with improved OS (HR 0.39, p = 0.03) and PFS (HR 0.4, p = 0.006). The 30-day mortality rate was 5.9%. The need for CSF diversion was high with 77.9% of patients requiring a shunt or ETV by last follow-up., Conclusions: This is the first modern surgical series providing long term follow-up for patients undergoing surgical resection of pineal region tumors. Obtaining a GTR of these challenging tumors is beneficial with regards to PFS/OS. Higher grade tumors have diminished PFS/OS and are treated with adjuvant chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy., (© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Circumferential sulcus-guided resection technique for improved outcomes of low-grade gliomas.
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Al-Holou WN, Suki D, Hodges TR, Everson RG, Freeman J, Ferguson SD, McCutcheon IE, Prabhu SS, Weinberg JS, Sawaya R, and Lang FF
- Abstract
Objective: Many neurosurgeons resect nonenhancing low-grade gliomas (LGGs) by using an inside-out piecemeal resection (PMR) technique. At the authors' institution they have increasingly used a circumferential, perilesional, sulcus-guided resection (SGR) technique. This technique has not been well described and there are limited data on its effectiveness. The authors describe the SGR technique and assess the extent to which SGR correlates with extent of resection and neurological outcome., Methods: The authors identified all patients with newly diagnosed LGGs who underwent resection at their institution over a 22-year period. Demographics, presenting symptoms, intraoperative data, method of resection (SGR or PMR), volumetric imaging data, and postoperative outcomes were obtained. Univariate analyses used ANOVA and Fisher's exact test. Multivariate analyses were performed using multivariate logistic regression., Results: Newly diagnosed LGGs were resected in 519 patients, 208 (40%) using an SGR technique and 311 (60%) using a PMR technique. The median extent of resection in the SGR group was 84%, compared with 77% in the PMR group (p = 0.019). In multivariate analysis, SGR was independently associated with a higher rate of complete (100%) resection (27% vs 18%) (OR 1.7, 95% CI 1.1-2.6; p = 0.03). SGR was also associated with a statistical trend toward lower rates of postoperative neurological complications (11% vs 16%, p = 0.09). A subset analysis of tumors located specifically in eloquent brain demonstrated SGR to be as safe as PMR., Conclusions: The authors describe the SGR technique used to resect LGGs and show that SGR is independently associated with statistically significantly higher rates of complete resection, without an increase in neurological complications, than with PMR. SGR technique should be considered when resecting LGGs.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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