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Clinical and pathological impact of an optimal assessment of brain invasion for grade 2 meningioma diagnosis: lessons from a series of 291 cases

Authors :
Thiébaud Picart
Chloé Dumot
Jacques Guyotat
Vladislav Pavlov
Nathalie Streichenberger
Alexandre Vasiljevic
Tanguy Fenouil
Anne Durand
Emmanuel Jouanneau
François Ducray
Timothée Jacquesson
Moncef Berhouma
David Meyronet
Source :
Neurosurgical Review. 45:2797-2809
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Brain invasion has not been recognized as a standalone criterion for atypical meningioma by the WHO classification until 2016. Since the 2007 edition suggested that meningiomas harboring brain invasion could be classified as grade 2, brain invasion study was progressively strengthened in our center, based on a strong collaboration between neurosurgeons and neuropathologists regarding sample orientation and examination. Practice changes were considered homogeneous enough in 2011. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the impact of gross practice change on the clinical and pathological characteristics of intracranial meningiomas classified as grade 2.The characteristics of consecutive patients with a grade 2 meningioma surgically managed before (1998-2005, n = 125, group A) and after (2011-2014, n = 166, group B) practices changed were retrospectively reviewed.Sociodemographical and clinical parameters were comparable in groups A and B, and the median age was 62 years in both groups (p = 0.18). The 5-year recurrence rates (23.2% vs 29.5%, p = 0.23) were similar. In group A, brain invasion was present in 48/125 (38.4%) cases and was more frequent than in group B (14/166, 8.4%, p 0.001). In group A, 33 (26.4%) meningiomas were classified as grade 2 solely based on brain invasion (group A

Details

ISSN :
14372320
Volume :
45
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurosurgical Review
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2a9de2ac7ddd61352372ea8a92a4c380