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Stereotactic radiosurgery versus active surveillance for asymptomatic, skull-based meningiomas: an international, multicenter matched cohort study

Authors :
Ahmed M. Nabeel
Abdurrahman I. Islim
Violaine Delabar
Selçuk Peker
Douglas Kondziolka
Yavuz Samanci
Roberto Martínez Álvarez
Khaled Abdelkarim
Ronald J. Benveniste
Michael D. Jenkinson
Reem M Emad
Manjul Tripathi
Kenneth E. Bernstein
Greg Bowden
Dade Lunsford
Georgios Mantziaris
Herwin Speckter
David Mathieu
Jaromir Hanuska
Nuria Martinez Moreno
Sameh R. Tawadros
Amr M N El-Shehaby
Camilo Albert
Cheng-Chia Lee
Stylianos Pikis
Huai-Che Yang
Jason P. Sheehan
Dev N Patel
Roman Liscak
Wael A. Reda
Peker, Selçuk (ORCID 0000-0003-3057-3355 & YÖK ID 11480)
Samancı, Yavuz
Mantziaris, Georgios
Pikis, Stylianos
Nabeel, Ahmed M.
Reda, Wael A.
Tawadros, Sameh R.
El-Shehaby, Amr M. N.
Abdelkarim, Khaled
Emad, Reem M.
Delabar, Violaine
Mathieu, David
Lee, Cheng-chia
Yang, Huai-che
Liscak, Roman
Hanuska, Jaromir
Alvarez, Roberto Martinez
Moreno, Nuria Martinez
Tripathi, Manjul
Speckter, Herwin
Albert, Camilo
Benveniste, Ronald J.
Bowden, Greg N.
Patel, Dev N.
Kondziolka, Douglas
Bernstein, Kenneth
Lunsford, L. Dade
Jenkinson, Michael D.
Islim, Abdurrahman I.
Sheehan, Jason
Koç University Hospital
School of Medicine
Source :
Journal of Neuro-Oncology
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Objective: the optimal management of asymptomatic, skull-based meningiomas is not well defined. The aim of this study is to compare the imaging and clinical outcomes of patients with asymptomatic, skull-based meningiomas managed either with upfront stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) or active surveillance. Methods: this retrospective, multicenter study involved patients with asymptomatic, skull-based meningiomas. The study end-points included local tumor control and the development of new neurological deficits attributable to the tumor. Factors associated with tumor progression and neurological morbidity were also analyzed. Results: the combined unmatched cohort included 417 patients. Following propensity score matching for age, tumor volume, and follow-up 110 patients remained in each cohort. Tumor control was achieved in 98.2% and 61.8% of the SRS and active surveillance cohorts, respectively. SRS was associated with superior local tumor control (p < 0.001, HR = 0.01, 95% CI = 0.002-0.13) compared to active surveillance. Three patients (2.7%) in the SRS cohort and six (5.5%) in the active surveillance cohort exhibited neurological deterioration. One (0.9%) patient in the SRS-treated and 11 (10%) patients in the active surveillance cohort required surgical management of their meningioma during follow-up. Conclusions: SRS is associated with superior local control of asymptomatic, skull-based meningiomas as compared to active surveillance and does so with low morbidity rates. SRS should be offered as an alternative to active surveillance as the initial management of asymptomatic skull base meningiomas. Active surveillance policies do not currently specify the optimal time to intervention when meningioma growth is noted. Our results indicate that if active surveillance is the initial management of choice, SRS should be recommended when radiologic tumor progression is noted and prior to clinical progression.<br />NA

Details

ISSN :
15737373 and 0167594X
Volume :
156
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Neuro-Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a445c73e0d3a8e3fcde44375a92be01c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11060-021-03923-3