455 results on '"McDermott MW"'
Search Results
2. Preoperative MR Imaging to Differentiate Chordoid Meningiomas from Other Meningioma Histologic Subtypes
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Baal, JD, Chen, WC, Solomon, DA, Pai, JS, Lucas, C-H, Hara, JH, Bush, NA Oberheim, McDermott, MW, Raleigh, DR, and Villanueva-Meyer, JE
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Brain Disorders ,Rare Diseases ,Biomedical Imaging ,Clinical Research ,Cancer ,Adult ,Aged ,Female ,Humans ,Image Interpretation ,Computer-Assisted ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male ,Meningeal Neoplasms ,Meningioma ,Middle Aged ,Neuroimaging ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:Chordoid meningiomas are uncommon WHO grade II primary intracranial neoplasms that possess unique chordoid histology and follow an aggressive clinical course. Our aim was to assess the utility of qualitative MR imaging features and quantitative apparent diffusion coefficient values as distinguishing preoperative MR imaging metrics to identify and differentiate chordoid histology from other meningioma histologic subtypes. MATERIALS AND METHODS:Twenty-one patients with meningiomas with chordoid histology, which included both chordoid meningiomas (>50% chordoid histology) and meningiomas with focal chordoid histology (
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- 2019
3. Resident-led Implementation of a Standardized Handoff System to Facilitate Transfer of Postoperative Neurosurgical Patients to the ICU.
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Theodosopoulos, Philip, Birk, HS, Han, SJ, Rolston, JD, Rowland, NC, Lau, C, Theodosopoulos, PV, and McDermott, MW
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Transitions in care are pivotal moments for patient safety. Although many strategies have been suggested for handoff improvement in the healthcare realm, little focus has been placed on patient safety during the transition from the operative to the postope
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- 2016
4. Surgical Cavity Constriction and Local Progression Between Resection and Adjuvant Radiosurgery for Brain Metastases.
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Aghi, Manish, Shah, JK, Potts, MB, Sneed, PK, Aghi, MK, and McDermott, MW
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Stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) to a surgical cavity after brain metastasis resection is a promising treatment for improving local control. The optimal timing of adjuvant SRS, however, has yet to be determined. Changes in resection cavity volume and local
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- 2016
5. A Method for Combining Thin and Thick Malleable Titanium Mesh in the Repair of Cranial Defects.
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McDermott, Michael, Lau, D, and McDermott, MW
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INTRODUCTION: Cranial defects following the removal of tumor involved bone require repair and reconstruction for brain protection and cosmesis. A variety of autologous bone substrates and synthetic materials can be employed, alone or in combination. In thi
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- 2015
6. Vertical diplopia and ptosis from removal of the orbital roof in pterional craniotomy
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Desai, SJ, Lawton, MT, McDermott, MW, and Horton, JC
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Ophthalmology & Optometry ,Clinical Sciences ,Opthalmology and Optometry ,Public Health and Health Services - Abstract
Purpose To describe a newly recognized clinical syndrome consisting of ptosis, diplopia, vertical gaze limitation, and abduction weakness that can occur after orbital roof removal during orbito-zygomatic-pterional craniotomy. Design Case series. Participants Eight study patients (7 women), 44 to 80 years of age, with neuro-ophthalmic symptoms after pterional craniotomy. Methods Case description of 8 study patients. Main Outcome Measures Presence of ptosis, diplopia, and gaze limitation. Results Eight patients had neuro-ophthalmic findings after pterional craniotomy for meningioma removal or aneurysm clipping. The cardinal features were ptosis, limited elevation, and hypotropia. Three patients also had limitation of downgaze and 2 patients had limitation of abduction. Imaging showed loss of the fat layers that normally envelop the superior rectus and levator palpebrae superioris. The muscles appeared attached to the defect in the orbital roof. Ptosis and diplopia developed in 2 patients despite Medpor titanium mesh implants. Deficits in all patients showed spontaneous improvement. In 2 patients, a levator advancement was required to repair ptosis. In 3 patients, an inferior rectus recession using an adjustable suture was performed to treat vertical diplopia. Follow-up a mean of 6.5 years later revealed that all patients had a slight residual upgaze deficit, but alignment was orthotropic in primary gaze. Conclusions After pterional craniotomy, ptosis, diplopia, and vertical gaze limitation can result from tethering of the superior rectus-levator palpebrae superioris complex to the surgical defect in the orbital roof. Lateral rectus function sometimes is compromised by muscle attachment to the lateral orbital osteotomy. This syndrome occurs in approximately 1% of patients after removal of the orbital roof and can be treated, if necessary, by prism glasses or surgery.
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- 2015
7. Intraoperative Conversion from Endoscopic to Open Transcortical-Transventricular Removal of Colloid Cysts as a Salvage Procedure.
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McDermott, Michael, Aghi, Manish, Clark, Aaron, Osorio, JA, Clark, AJ, Safaee, M, Tate, MC, Aghi, MK, Parsa, A, and McDermott, MW
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OBJECTIVE: To describe the transcortical-transventricular as an intraoperative salvage procedure and its effect of operative time and outcome. METHODS: Thirty-three patients were included in the study. Twenty patients had an endoscopic operation, five ha
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- 2015
8. Vertebral Artery Fenestration.
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McDermott, Michael, Ozpinar, A, Magill, ST, Davies, JM, and McDermott, MW
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Fenestration of the vertebral artery is a rare vascular anomaly that has been observed at autopsy and on angiography. It is most commonly seen in the extracranial segments of the vertebral artery. This congenital anomaly can arise during multiple different
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- 2015
9. Meningiomas of the Anterior Clinoid Process: Is It Wise to Drill Out the Optic Canal?
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Berger, Mitchel, McDermott, Michael, Sughrue, M, Kane, A, Rutkowski, MJ, Berger, MS, and McDermott, MW
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Meningiomas of the anterior clinoid process are uncommon tumors, acknowledged by most experienced surgeons to be among the most challenging meningiomas to completely remove. In this article, we summarize our institutional experience removing these uncommo
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- 2015
10. Deep arteriovenous malformations in the basal ganglia, thalamus, and insula: Multimodality management, patient selection, and results
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Potts, MB, Jahangiri, A, Jen, M, Sneed, PK, McDermott, MW, Gupta, N, Hetts, SW, Young, WL, and Lawton, MT
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Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This study sought to describe a single institutions experience treating arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) of the basal ganglia, thalamus, and insula in a multimodal fashion.
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- 2014
11. Recurrent Syncope Due to Refractory Cerebral Venous Sinus Thrombosis and Transient Elevations of Intracranial Pressure
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Larimer, P, McDermott, MW, Scott, BJ, Shih, TT, and Poisson, SN
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Hematology ,Cardiovascular ,intracranial hypertension ,cerebral venous sinus thrombosis ,autoimmune hemolytic anemia ,Lundberg A wave - Abstract
Chronic paroxysmal intracranial hypertension leading to syncope is a phenomenon not reported previously in patients with refractory cerebral venous sinus thrombosis. We report a case of paroxysmal intracranial hypertension leading to syncopal episodes in a patient with idiopathic autoimmune hemolytic anemia and venous sinus thrombosis. This case demonstrates that intermittent elevations in intracranial pressure can lead to syncope in patients with venous sinus thrombosis and emphasizes the importance of considering this potentially treatable etiology of syncopal episodes.
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- 2014
12. Super-Resolution Track Density Imaging of Glioblastoma: Histopathologic Correlation
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Barajas, RF, Hess, CP, Phillips, JJ, Von Morze, CJ, Yu, JP, Chang, SM, Nelson, SJ, McDermott, MW, Berger, MS, and Cha, S
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Brain Disorders ,Cancer ,Neurosciences ,Rare Diseases ,Clinical Research ,Brain Cancer ,Brain ,Brain Mapping ,Brain Neoplasms ,Cell Hypoxia ,Cell Nucleus ,Cell Proliferation ,Cell Shape ,Contrast Media ,Cytoplasm ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Female ,Glioblastoma ,Humans ,Hyperplasia ,Hypoxia ,Brain ,Image Enhancement ,Image Processing ,Computer-Assisted ,Immunohistochemistry ,Male ,Microvessels ,Middle Aged ,Necrosis ,Neoplasm Invasiveness ,Neuronavigation ,Prospective Studies ,Radiology ,Interventional ,Clinical Sciences ,Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging ,Clinical sciences ,Physical chemistry - Abstract
Background and purposeSuper-resolution track density imaging generates anatomic images with submillimeter voxel resolution by using high-angular-resolution diffusion imaging and fiber-tractography. TDI within the diseased human brain has not been previously described. The purpose of this study was to correlate TDI with histopathologic features of GBM.Materials and methodsA total of 43 tumor specimens (24 contrast-enhancing, 12 NE, and 7 centrally necrotic regions) were collected from 18 patients with treatment-naïve GBM by use of MR imaging-guided neurosurgical techniques. Immunohistochemical stains were used to evaluate the following histopathologic features: hypoxia, architectural disruption, microvascular hyperplasia, and cellular proliferation. We reconstructed track density maps at a 0.25-mm isotropic spatial resolution by using probabilistic streamline tractography combined with constrained spheric deconvolution (model order, 8; 0.1-mm step size; 1 million seed points). Track density values were obtained from each tissue site. A P value of .05 was considered significant and was adjusted for multiple comparisons by use of the false discovery rate method.ResultsTrack density was not significantly different between contrast-enhancing and NE regions but was more likely to be elevated within regions demonstrating aggressive histopathologic features (P < .05). Significant correlation between relative track density and hypoxia (odds ratio, 3.52; P = .01), architectural disruption (odds ratio, 3.49; P = .03), and cellular proliferation (odds ratio, 1.70; P = .05) was observed irrespective of the presence or absence of contrast enhancement.ConclusionsNumeric values of track density correlate with GBM biologic features and may be clinically useful for identification of regions of tumor infiltration within both enhancing and NE components of GBM.
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- 2013
13. Clinical, radiological and histopathological predictors for long-term prognosis after surgery for atypical meningiomas
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Streckert, EMS, Heß, K, Sporns, PB, Adeli, A, Brokinkel, C, Kriz, J, Holling, M, Eich, HT, Paulus, W, Spille, DC, van Eck, AT, Raleigh, DR, McDermott, MW, Stummer, W, Brokinkel, B, Streckert, EMS, Heß, K, Sporns, PB, Adeli, A, Brokinkel, C, Kriz, J, Holling, M, Eich, HT, Paulus, W, Spille, DC, van Eck, AT, Raleigh, DR, McDermott, MW, Stummer, W, and Brokinkel, B
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- 2020
14. An integrated genomic analysis of anaplastic meningioma identifies prognostic molecular signatures
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Collord, G, Tarpey, P, Kurbatova, N, Martincorena, I, Moran, S, Castro, M, Nagy, T, Bignell, G, Maura, F, Young, MD, Berna, J, Tubio, JMC, McMurran, CE, Young, AMH, Sanders, Mathijs, Noorani, I, Price, SJ, Watts, C, Leipnitz, E, Kirsch, M, Schackert, G, Pearson, D, Devadass, A, Ram, Z, Collins, VP, Allinson, K, Jenkinson, MD, Zakaria, R, Syed, K, Hanemann, C O, Dunn, J, McDermott, MW, Kirollos, RW, Vassiliou, GS, Esteller, M, Behjati, S, Brazma, A, Santarius, T, McDermott, U, Collord, G, Tarpey, P, Kurbatova, N, Martincorena, I, Moran, S, Castro, M, Nagy, T, Bignell, G, Maura, F, Young, MD, Berna, J, Tubio, JMC, McMurran, CE, Young, AMH, Sanders, Mathijs, Noorani, I, Price, SJ, Watts, C, Leipnitz, E, Kirsch, M, Schackert, G, Pearson, D, Devadass, A, Ram, Z, Collins, VP, Allinson, K, Jenkinson, MD, Zakaria, R, Syed, K, Hanemann, C O, Dunn, J, McDermott, MW, Kirollos, RW, Vassiliou, GS, Esteller, M, Behjati, S, Brazma, A, Santarius, T, and McDermott, U
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- 2018
15. Multiinstitutional validation of the University of California at San Francisco Low-Grade Glioma Prognostic Scoring System Clinical article
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Chang, E, Clark, A, Jensen, R, Bernstein, M, Guha, A, Carrabba, G, Mukhopadhyay, D, Kim, W, Liau, L, Chang, S, Smith, J, Berger, M, Mcdermott, M, Chang EF, Clark A, Jensen RL, Bernstein M, Guha A, Carrabba G, Mukhopadhyay D, Kim W, Liau LM, Chang SM, Smith JS, Berger MS, McDermott MW, Chang, E, Clark, A, Jensen, R, Bernstein, M, Guha, A, Carrabba, G, Mukhopadhyay, D, Kim, W, Liau, L, Chang, S, Smith, J, Berger, M, Mcdermott, M, Chang EF, Clark A, Jensen RL, Bernstein M, Guha A, Carrabba G, Mukhopadhyay D, Kim W, Liau LM, Chang SM, Smith JS, Berger MS, and McDermott MW
- Abstract
Object. Medical and surgical management of low-grade gliomas (LGGs) is complicated by a highly variable clinical course. The authors recently developed a preoperative scoring system to prognosticate outcomes of progression and survival in a cohort of patients treated at a single institution (University of California, San Francisco [UCSF]). The objective of this study was to validate the scoring system in a large patient group drawn from multiple external institutions. Methods. Clinical data from 3 outside institutions (University of Utah, Toronto Western Hospital, and University of California, Los Angeles) were collected for 256 patients (external validation set). Patients were assigned a prognostic score based upon the sum of points assigned to the presence of each of the 4 following factors: 1) location of tumor in presumed eloquent cortex, 2) Karnofsky Performance Scale (KPS) Score ≤ 80, 3) age > 50 years, and 4) maximum diameter > 4 cm. A chi-square analysis was used to analyze categorical differences between the institutions; Cox proportional hazard modeling was used to confirm that the individual factors were associated with shorter overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS); and Kaplan-Meier curves estimated OS and PFS for the score groups. Differences between score groups were analyzed by the log-rank test. Results. The median OS duration was 120 months, and there was no significant difference in survival between the institutions. Cox proportional hazard modeling confirmed that the 4 components of the UCSF Low-Grade Glioma Scoring System were associated with lower OS in the external validation set; presumed eloquent location (hazard ratio [HR] 2.04, 95% CI 1.28-2.56), KPS score ≤ 80 (HR 5.88, 95% CI 2.44-13.7), age > 50 years (HR 1.82, 95% CI 1.02-3.23), and maximum tumor diameter > 4 cm (HR 2.63, 95% CI 1.58-4.35). The stratification of patients based on scores generated groups (0-4) with statistically different OS and PFS estimat
- Published
- 2009
16. Phase II study of erlotinib plus temozolomide during and after radiation therapy in patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma multiforme or gliosarcoma.
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Prados MD, Chang SM, Butowski N, DeBoer R, Parvataneni R, Carliner H, Kabuubi P, Ayers-Ringler J, Rabbitt J, Page M, Fedoroff A, Sneed PK, Berger MS, McDermott MW, Parsa AT, Vandenberg S, James CD, Lamborn KR, Stokoe D, and Haas-Kogan DA
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- 2009
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17. Role of extent of resection in the long-term outcome of low-grade hemispheric gliomas.
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Smith JS, Chang EF, Lamborn KR, Chang SM, Prados MD, Cha S, Tihan T, Vandenberg S, McDermott MW, and Berger MS
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- 2008
18. Radiosurgery for brain metastases from primary lung carcinoma.
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Hoffman R, Sneed PK, McDermott MW, Chang S, Lamborn KR, Park E, Wara WM, and Larson DA
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PURPOSE: Brain metastases are a common problem in patients with lung cancer. This retrospective review was performed to describe the efficacy and toxicity of stereotactic radiosurgery for brain metastases from lung carcinoma and to evaluate prognostic factors for survival. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A retrospective review was performed of 113 patients with the diagnosis of lung carcinoma who underwent radiosurgery with or without whole-brain radiotherapy for management of newly diagnosed or recurrent, single, or multiple brain metastases from 1991 through 1998 at the University of California, San Francisco. Freedom from progression and survival were measured from the date of radiosurgery and estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method. Prognostic factors were evaluated with the log-rank test and Cox proportional hazards models. RESULTS: The median patient age at the time of radiosurgery was 59 years (range, 37-82 years), and the median Karnofsky performance score was 90 (range, 50-100). The median survival time from radiosurgery was 12.0 months overall, 13.9 months for 41 patients treated with radiosurgery alone initially, 14.5 months for 19 patients treated with radiosurgery and whole-brain radiotherapy initially, and 10.0 months for 53 patients with recurrent brain metastases. Among newly diagnosed patients, multivariate analysis showed that improved survival was associated with absence of extracranial metastases and fewer brain metastases. Among patients with recurrent brain metastases, improved survival was associated with higher Karnofsky performance score, control of the primary tumor, and fewer metastases. Measured by lesion, 1-year local freedom from progression probabilities were 81% for radiosurgery alone, 86% for radiosurgery and whole-brain radiotherapy, and 65% for radiosurgery performed after recurrence. In patients with newly diagnosed brain metastases, there was a significantly greater risk of developing subsequent brain metastases and of worse overall brain freedom from progression after radiosurgery alone versus radiosurgery and whole-brain radiotherapy. One-year brain freedom from progression probabilities were 13% without salvage therapy and 62% with salvage therapy in the 41 patients treated initially with radiosurgery alone, versus 67% without salvage therapy and 89% with salvage therapy in the 19 patients treated initially with radiosurgery plus whole-brain radiotherapy. DISCUSSION: Radiosurgery is an effective therapy for selected patients with newly diagnosed or recurrent brain metastases from lung carcinoma. Initial whole-brain radiotherapy with radiosurgery appears to improve brain control but not survival. Prospective, randomized trials are needed to further investigate the role of radiosurgery with and without whole-brain radiotherapy for brain metastases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2001
19. Gamma knife radiosurgery for malignant melanoma brain metastases.
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Seung SK, Sneed PK, Mcdermott MW, Shu HG, Leong SP, Chang S, Petti PL, Smith V, Verhey LJ, Wara WM, Phillips TL, and Larson DA
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PURPOSE: To evaluate the efficacy and toxicity of gamma knife radiosurgery in the treatment of melanoma metastases to the brain. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed 55 patients with single or multiple intracranial melanoma metastases treated at the University of California, San Francisco, with gamma knife radiosurgery from 1991 through 1995. Sixteen patients were treated with gamma knife radiosurgery for recurrence following previous radiation therapy, 11 received radiosurgery as a boost to whole-brain radiation therapy, and 28 had radiosurgery alone for initial management of brain metastases. The median minimum radiosurgery tumor dose for 140 treated lesions was 19 Gy (range, 10-22 Gy) prescribed at the 35% to 90% isodose contour (median, 50%). The median total target volume per patient was 6.1 cc (range, 0.25-28.3 cc). RESULTS: With a median follow-up of 75 weeks in living patients, the median survival times were 35 weeks overall: 35 weeks for patients with solitary metastases versus 33 weeks for those with multiple metastases. A factor that was significant in univariate analysis of survival was total target volume treated. This parameter remained significant on multivariate analysis. The actuarial median freedom from progression analyzed by lesion for 113 lesions in 46 patients with imaging follow-up was 89 weeks with 6-month and 1-year actuarial freedom from progression rates of 89% (95% confidence interval, 80%-95%) and 77% (95% confidence interval, 62%-87%). In univariate analysis, improved freedom from progression was associated with smaller target volume treated, smaller maximum diameter, or higher prescribed dose. Four patients (7%) developed acute Radiation Therapy Oncology Group grade > or = 2 morbidity, and five patients (9%) developed late grade > or = 2 morbidity. DISCUSSION: Median survival and freedom from progression in patients treated with radiosurgery for melanoma metastatic to the brain are comparable to results in published radiosurgery series of grouped histologies. For melanoma patients, total intracranial tumor volume appears to be of greater prognostic significance than the absolute number of metastases treated. We conclude that gamma knife radiosurgery is effective and should be considered among various management strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 1998
20. Initial feasibility cohort of temporally modulated pulsed proton re-irradiation (TMPPR) for recurrent high-grade intracranial malignancies.
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La Rosa A, Fellows Z, Wroe AJ, Coutinho L, Pons E, McAllister NC, Tolakanahalli R, Kutuk T, Hall MD, Press RH, McDermott MW, Odia Y, Ahluwalia MS, Mehta MP, Gutierrez AN, and Kotecha R
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- Humans, Middle Aged, Male, Aged, Female, Adult, Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated methods, Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated adverse effects, Treatment Outcome, Cohort Studies, Proton Therapy methods, Proton Therapy adverse effects, Re-Irradiation methods, Brain Neoplasms radiotherapy, Feasibility Studies, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local radiotherapy
- Abstract
Recurrent high-grade intracranial malignancies have a grim prognosis and uniform management guidelines are lacking. Re-irradiation is underused due to concerns about irreversible side effects. Pulsed-reduced dose rate radiotherapy (PRDR) aims to reduce toxicity while improving tumor control by exploiting dose-rate effects. We share our initial experience with temporally modulated pulsed proton re-irradiation (TMPPR), focusing on workflow, safety, feasibility, and outcomes for the first patient cohort. TMPPR was administered to patients with recurrent or progressive central nervous system malignancies using intensity modulated proton therapy with three fields. Patient and treatment data were collected, responses categorized using RANO assessment, and toxicities graded using CTCAE v5.0. Five patients received TMPPR between October 2022 and May 2023, with a median age of 54 years (Range: 32-72), and a median time from initial radiotherapy to re-RT of 23 months (Range 14-40). Treatment was completed without delay, with a median dose of 60 GyRBE in 30 fractions. Initial treatment response assessment showed complete (n = 1) or partial (n = 3) responses. Limited toxicity was observed, primarily grade 2 alopecia and one case of radiation necrosis graded at 2. This early experience demonstrates the feasibility of TMPPR delivery, highlighting the importance of prospective evaluations in the re-irradiation setting., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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21. Efficacy of 3D-TSE Sequence-based Radiosurgery in Prolonging Time to Distant Intracranial Failure: A Session-wise Analysis in a Histology-Diverse Patient Cohort.
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Akdemir EY, Gurdikyan S, Rubens M, Abrams KJ, Sidani C, Chaneles MC, Hall MD, Press RH, Wieczorek DJ, Tolakanahalli R, Gutierrez AN, Gal O, La Rosa A, Kutuk T, McDermott MW, Odia Y, Mehta MP, and Kotecha R
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Background: Stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) for patients with brain metastases (BM) is associated with a risk of distant intracranial failure (DIF). This study evaluates the impact of integrating dedicated 3D-TSE sequences to MPRAGE in BM detection and DIF prolongation in a histology-agnostic patient cohort., Methods: The study population included adults treated with SRS from February 2019 to January 2024 who underwent MPRAGE alone or dual-sequence with the addition of 3D-TSE starting from February 2020. Median times to DIF were estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method., Results: The 216 study patients who underwent 332 SRS courses for 1456 BM imaged with MPRAGE and 3D-TSE (primary cohort) were compared to a control cohort (92 patients, 135 SRS courses, 462 BM). In the session-wise analysis, the median time to DIF between the cohorts was significantly prolonged in the primary vs. control cohorts (11.4 vs. 6.8 months, p=0.029), more pronounced in the subgroups with 1-4 metastases (14.7 vs. 8.1 months, p=0.008) and with solitary BM (36.4 vs. 10.9 months, p=0.001). While patients relapsing on immunotherapy or targeted therapy did not significantly benefit from 3D-FSE (7.2 vs. 5.7 months, p=0.280), those who relapsed on chemotherapy or who were off systemic therapy (including synchronous metastases) exhibited a trend towards longer time to DIF with 3D-TSE integration (14.7 vs. 7.9 months, p=0.057)., Conclusions: Implementing 3D-TSE sequences into SRS practice increases BM detection across all patients and translates into clinical relevance by prolonging time to DIF, particularly in those with limited intracranial disease and those not receiving CNS-active agents., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Neuro-Oncology. All rights reserved. For commercial re-use, please contact reprints@oup.com for reprints and translation rights for reprints. All other permissions can be obtained through our RightsLink service via the Permissions link on the article page on our site—for further information please contact journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2024
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22. Meningioma: International Consortium on Meningiomas consensus review on scientific advances and treatment paradigms for clinicians, researchers, and patients.
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Wang JZ, Landry AP, Raleigh DR, Sahm F, Walsh KM, Goldbrunner R, Yefet LS, Tonn JC, Gui C, Ostrom QT, Barnholtz-Sloan J, Perry A, Ellenbogen Y, Hanemann CO, Jungwirth G, Jenkinson MD, Tabatabai G, Mathiesen TI, McDermott MW, Tatagiba M, la Fougère C, Maas SLN, Galldiks N, Albert NL, Brastianos PK, Ehret F, Minniti G, Lamszus K, Ricklefs FL, Schittenhelm J, Drummond KJ, Dunn IF, Pathmanaban ON, Cohen-Gadol AA, Sulman EP, Tabouret E, Le Rhun E, Mawrin C, Moliterno J, Weller M, Bi WL, Gao A, Yip S, Niyazi M, Aldape K, Wen PY, Short S, Preusser M, Nassiri F, and Zadeh G
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- Humans, Consensus, Biomarkers, Tumor, Meningioma therapy, Meningioma pathology, Meningioma diagnosis, Meningioma classification, Meningeal Neoplasms therapy, Meningeal Neoplasms pathology, Meningeal Neoplasms diagnosis, Meningeal Neoplasms classification
- Abstract
Meningiomas are the most common primary intracranial tumors in adults and are increasing in incidence due to the aging population and increased access to neuroimaging. While most exhibit nonmalignant behavior, a subset of meningiomas are biologically aggressive and are associated with treatment resistance, resulting in significant neurologic morbidity and even mortality. In recent years, meaningful advances in our understanding of the biology of these tumors have led to the incorporation of molecular biomarkers into their grading and prognostication. However, unlike other central nervous system (CNS) tumors, a unified molecular taxonomy for meningiomas has not yet been established and remains an overarching goal of the Consortium to Inform Molecular and Practical Approaches to CNS Tumor Taxonomy-Not Official World Health Organization (cIMPACT-NOW) working group. Additionally, clinical equipoise still remains on how specific meningioma cases and patient populations should be optimally managed. To address these existing gaps, members of the International Consortium on Meningiomas including field-leading experts, have prepared this comprehensive consensus narrative review directed toward clinicians, researchers, and patients. Included in this manuscript are detailed overviews of proposed molecular classifications, novel biomarkers, contemporary treatment strategies, trials on systemic therapies, health-related quality-of-life studies, and management strategies for unique meningioma patient populations. In each section, we discuss the current state of knowledge as well as ongoing clinical and research challenges to road map future directions for further investigation., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Neuro-Oncology.)
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- 2024
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23. Toward standardized brain tumor tissue processing protocols in neuro-oncology: a perspective for gliomas and beyond.
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Rodriguez A, Ahluwalia MS, Bettegowda C, Brem H, Carter BS, Chang S, Das S, Eberhart C, Garzon-Muvdi T, Hadjipanayis CG, Hawkins C, Jacques TS, Khalessi AA, McDermott MW, Mikkelsen T, Orr BA, Phillips JJ, Rosenblum M, Shelton WJ, Solomon DA, von Deimling A, Woodworth GF, and Rutka JT
- Abstract
Implementation of standardized protocols in neurooncology during the surgical resection of brain tumors is needed to advance the clinical treatment paradigms that use tissue for diagnosis, prognosis, bio-banking, and treatment. Currently recommendations on intraoperative tissue procurement only exist for diffuse gliomas but management of other brain tumor subtypes can also benefit from these protocols. Fresh tissue from surgical resection can now be used for intraoperative diagnostics and functional precision medicine assays. A multidisciplinary neuro-oncology perspective is critical to develop the best avenues for practical standardization. This perspective from the multidisciplinary Oncology Tissue Advisory Board (OTAB) discusses current advances, future directions, and the imperative of adopting standardized protocols for diverse brain tumor entities. There is a growing need for consistent operating room practices to enhance patient care, streamline research efforts, and optimize outcomes., Competing Interests: The authors, except WJS, are members of an advisory board sponsored by Nico Corporation. However, Nico Corporation was not involved in the study design, collection, analysis, interpretation of data, the writing of this article or the decision to submit it for publication. CB is a consultant for Depuy-Synthes, Bionaut Labs, Haystack Oncology and Privo Technologies. CB is a co-founder of OrisDx and Belay Diagnostics. HB is a chairman of the Medical Advisory Board for Insightec. Insightec is developing focused ultrasound treatments for brain tumors. This arrangement has been reviewed and approved by the Johns Hopkins University in accordance with its conflict-of-interest policies. HB has consultation agreements with Insightec, Candel Therapeutics, Inc., Catalio Nexus Fund II, LLC, LikeMinds, Inc*, and Nurami Medical*, Intragel *includes equity or options. The remaining author declares that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. The author(s) declared that they were an editorial board member of Frontiers, at the time of submission. This had no impact on the peer review process and the final decision., (Copyright © 2024 Rodriguez, Ahluwalia, Bettegowda, Brem, Carter, Chang, Das, Eberhart, Garzon-Muvdi, Hadjipanayis, Hawkins, Jacques, Khalessi, McDermott, Mikkelsen, Orr, Phillips, Rosenblum, Shelton, Solomon, von Deimling, Woodworth and Rutka.)
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- 2024
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24. Program Signaling and Geographic Preferences in the United States Residency Match for Neurosurgery.
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Ozair A, Hanson JT, Detchou DK, Blackwell MP, Jenkins A, Tissot MI, Barrie U, and McDermott MW
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Postgraduate residency training has long been the cornerstone of academic medicine in the United States. The Electronic Residency Application Service (ERAS), managed by the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC), is the central residency application platform in the United States for most clinical specialties, with the National Residency Matching Program (NRMP) being the algorithm for matching residency programs with applicants. However, the determination of the best fit between ERAS applicants and programs has been increasingly challenged by the rising number of applicants per residency spot. This application overburdening across competitive specialties led to several adverse downstream effects, which affected all stakeholders. While several changes and proposals were made to rectify the issue of application overburdening, the 2020-2021 ERAS Match Cycle finally saw several competitive specialties, including otolaryngology and urology, utilize a new system of supplemental residency application based on preference signals/tokens. These tokens permit applicants to electronically signal a select number of programs in a specialty of choice, with the program reviewing the application now cognizant that they have been signaled, i.e., the applicant has chosen to use up a limited set of signals for their program. Initial results from otolaryngology and urology, as described in this article, indicated the value of this new system to both applicants and educators. Given the favorable outcomes and broader uptake of the system among other specialties, the field of neurosurgery adopted the utilization of the ERAS-based program signaling and geographic preference for the first time for the 2022-2023 Residency Application Cycle and later opted to continue them for the 2023-2024 and 2024-2025 cycles. For the 2024-2025 Match Cycle, neurosurgery applicants have 25 signals, i.e., a "high-signal" approach, where non-signaled programs have a low interview conversion rate. This literature review discusses the rationale behind the change, the outcomes of other competitive specialties from prior cycles, the evolving nature of the change, and the potential impact on applicants and programs. As we describe in this review, signaling may potentially represent a surrogate form of an application cap. Other considerations relate to cost savings for both applicants and programs from a high-signal approach in neurosurgery. These modifications represent a foundational attempt to alleviate the application overburdening and non-holistic review in the residency application process, including for neurosurgery. While these changes have been a welcomed addition for all stakeholders in residency match cycles so far, further prospectively directed surveys along with qualitative research studies are warranted to better delineate the downstream impact of these changes and guide further optimization of the application system., Competing Interests: Conflicts of interest: In compliance with the ICMJE uniform disclosure form, all authors declare the following: Payment/services info: All authors have declared that no financial support was received from any organization for the submitted work. Financial relationships: All authors have declared that they have no financial relationships at present or within the previous three years with any organizations that might have an interest in the submitted work. Other relationships: All authors have declared that there are no other relationships or activities that could appear to have influenced the submitted work., (Copyright © 2024, Ozair et al.)
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- 2024
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25. Surgically targeted radiation therapy versus stereotactic radiation therapy: A dosimetric comparison for brain metastasis resection cavities.
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Kutuk T, Kotecha R, Herrera R, Wieczorek DJJ, Fellows ZW, Chaswal V, La Rosa A, Mishra V, McDermott MW, Siomin V, Mehta MP, Gutierrez AN, and Tolakanahalli R
- Abstract
Purpose: Surgically targeted radiation therapy (STaRT) with Cesium-131 seeds embedded in a collagen tile is a promising treatment for recurrent brain metastasis. In this study, the biological effective doses (BED) for normal and target tissues from STaRT plans were compared with those of external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) modalities., Methods: Nine patients (n = 9) with 12 resection cavities (RCs) who underwent STaRT (cumulative physical dose of 60 Gy to a depth of 5 mm from the RC edge) were replanned with CyberKnife
Ⓡ (CK), Gamma KnifeⓇ (GK), and intensity modulated proton therapy (IMPT) using an SRT approach (30 Gy in 5 fractions). Statistical significance comparing D95% and D90% in BED10Gy (BED10Gy 95% and BED10Gy 90%) and to RC + 0 to + 5 mm expansion margins, and parameters associated with radiation necrosis risk (V83Gy , V103Gy , V123Gy and V243Gy ) to the normal brain were evaluated by a Wilcoxon-signed rank test., Results: For RC + 0 mm, median BED10Gy 90% for STaRT (90.1 Gy10 , range: 64.1-140.9 Gy10 ) was significantly higher than CK (74.3 Gy10 , range:59.3-80.4 Gy10 , p = 0.04), GK (69.4 Gy10 , range: 59.8-77.1 Gy10 , p = 0.005), and IMPT (49.3 Gy10 , range: 49.0-49.7 Gy10 , p = 0.003), respectively. However, for the RC + 5 mm, the median BED10Gy 90% for STaRT (34.1 Gy10 , range: 22.2-59.7 Gy10 ) was significantly lower than CK (44.3 Gy10 , range: 37.8-52.4 Gy10 ), and IMPT (46.6 Gy10 , range: 45.1-48.5 Gy10 ), respectively, but not significantly different from GK (34.1 Gy10 , range: 22.8-47.0 Gy10 ). The median V243Gy was significantly higher in CK (11.7 cc, range: 4.7-20.1 cc), GK(6.2 cc, range: 2.3-11.9 cc) and IMPT (19.9 cc, range: 11.1-36.6 cc) compared to STaRT (1.1 cc, range: 0.0-7.8 cc) (p < 0.01)., Conclusions: This comparative analysis suggests a STaRT approach may treat recurrent brain tumors effectively via delivery of higher radiation doses with equivalent or greater BED up to at least 3 mm from the RC edge as compared to EBRT approaches., Competing Interests: Disclosure Tugce Kutuk: None. Rupesh Kotecha: Honoraria from Accuray Inc., Elekta AB, ViewRay Inc., Novocure Inc., Elsevier Inc., Brainlab, Kazia Therapeutics, Castle Biosciences, and institutional research funding from Medtronic Inc., Blue Earth Diagnostics Ltd., Novocure, Inc., GT Medical Technologies, AstraZeneca, Exelixis, ViewRay, Inc., Brainlab, Cantex Pharmaceuticals, and Kazia Therapeutics. Roberto Herrera: None. DJay J Wieczorek: None. Zachary W. Fellows: None. Vibha Chaswal: None. Alonso La Rosa: None. Vivek Mishra: None. Michael W McDermott: Consultant Deinde Medical and Stryker Medical. Vitaly Siomin: None. Minesh P Mehta: Consulting fees from Karyopharm, Sapience, Zap, Mevion, Xoft, BOD Oncoceutics, Kazia Therapeutics; stock in Chimerix. Alonso N Gutierrez: Honoraria from ViewRay, Inc., Elekta AB, IBA AB. Ranjini Tolakanahalli: None., (Copyright © 2024 American Brachytherapy Society. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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26. Comparative evaluation of outcomes amongst different radiosurgery management paradigms for patients with large brain metastasis.
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Kutuk T, Zhang Y, Akdemir EY, Yarlagadda S, Tolakanahalli R, Hall MD, La Rosa A, Wieczorek DJ, Lee YC, Press RH, Appel H, McDermott MW, Odia Y, Ahluwalia MS, Gutierrez AN, Mehta MP, and Kotecha R
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- Humans, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Aged, Retrospective Studies, Adult, Treatment Outcome, Survival Rate, Follow-Up Studies, Radiosurgery methods, Brain Neoplasms secondary, Brain Neoplasms surgery, Brain Neoplasms radiotherapy, Brain Neoplasms mortality
- Abstract
Introduction: This study compares four management paradigms for large brain metastasis (LMB): fractionated SRS (FSRS), staged SRS (SSRS), resection and postoperative-FSRS (postop-FSRS) or preoperative-SRS (preop-SRS)., Methods: Patients with LBM (≥ 2 cm) between July 2017 and January 2022 at a single tertiary institution were evaluated. Primary endpoints were local failure (LF), radiation necrosis (RN), leptomeningeal disease (LMD), a composite of these variables, and distant intracranial failure (DIF). Gray's test compared cumulative incidence, treating death as a competing risk with a random survival forests (RSF) machine-learning model also used to evaluate the data., Results: 183 patients were treated to 234 LBMs: 31.6% for postop-FSRS, 28.2% for SSRS, 20.1% for FSRS, and 20.1% for preop-SRS. The overall 1-year composite endpoint rates were comparable (21 vs 20%) between nonoperative and operative strategies, but 1-year RN rate was 8 vs 4% (p = 0.012), 1-year overall survival (OS) was 48 vs. 69% (p = 0.001), and 1-year LMD rate was 5 vs 10% (p = 0.052). There were differences in the 1-year RN rates (7% FSRS, 3% postop-FSRS, 5% preop-SRS, 10% SSRS, p = 0.037). With RSF analysis, the out-of-bag error rate for the composite endpoint was 47%, with identified top-risk factors including widespread extracranial disease, > 5 total lesions, and breast cancer histology., Conclusion: This is the first study to conduct a head-to-head retrospective comparison of four SRS methods, addressing the lack of randomized data in LBM literature amongst treatment paradigms. Despite patient characteristic trends, no significant differences were found in LF, composite endpoint, and DIF rates between non-operative and operative approaches., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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27. Deconstructing Intratumoral Heterogeneity through Multiomic and Multiscale Analysis of Serial Sections.
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Schupp PG, Shelton SJ, Brody DJ, Eliscu R, Johnson BE, Mazor T, Kelley KW, Potts MB, McDermott MW, Huang EJ, Lim DA, Pieper RO, Berger MS, Costello JF, Phillips JJ, and Oldham MC
- Abstract
Tumors may contain billions of cells, including distinct malignant clones and nonmalignant cell types. Clarifying the evolutionary histories, prevalence, and defining molecular features of these cells is essential for improving clinical outcomes, since intratumoral heterogeneity provides fuel for acquired resistance to targeted therapies. Here we present a statistically motivated strategy for deconstructing intratumoral heterogeneity through multiomic and multiscale analysis of serial tumor sections (MOMA). By combining deep sampling of IDH-mutant astrocytomas with integrative analysis of single-nucleotide variants, copy-number variants, and gene expression, we reconstruct and validate the phylogenies, spatial distributions, and transcriptional profiles of distinct malignant clones. By genotyping nuclei analyzed by single-nucleus RNA-seq for truncal mutations, we further show that commonly used algorithms for identifying cancer cells from single-cell transcriptomes may be inaccurate. We also demonstrate that correlating gene expression with tumor purity in bulk samples can reveal optimal markers of malignant cells and use this approach to identify a core set of genes that are consistently expressed by astrocytoma truncal clones, including AKR1C3 , whose expression is associated with poor outcomes in several types of cancer. In summary, MOMA provides a robust and flexible strategy for precisely deconstructing intratumoral heterogeneity and clarifying the core molecular properties of distinct cellular populations in solid tumors.
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- 2024
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28. Pulmonary contusion with hemoptysis from lacrosse ball strike: A case report.
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Marin EF, Ozair A, DeRosimo J, Candela J, and McDermott MW
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Lacrosse, a sport of increasing popularity, is played with netted sticks and a firm rubber ball propelled at speeds frequently reaching over 100 miles/hour. While lacrosse injuries have been previously described, little published literature exists on lacrosse balls causing pulmonary contusion. We present a case of a 17-year-old male lacrosse player athlete who suffered a lacrosse ball strike to the left posterolateral chest, leading to a clinical presentation of local bruising, shortness of breath, and hemoptysis. Despite delayed arrival to the emergency room, where imaging revealed pulmonary contusion, multidisciplinary supportive management led to favorable clinical outcome with no residual effect on athletic ability and quality of life. Although pulmonary contusion may be a rare injury in the setting of thoracic trauma from lacrosse ball strikes, prompt evaluation and a high index of suspicion can rule out more life-threatening processes and ensure an excellent clinical prognosis., Competing Interests: The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: Michael W McDermott reports a relationship with Stryker Instruments that includes: consulting or advisory. Michael W McDermott reports a relationship with ZAP Surgical Systems, Inc. that includes: consulting or advisory. Michael W McDermott reports a relationship with Deinde Medical that includes: consulting or advisory. Michael W McDermott reports a relationship with Light Helmets that includes: consulting or advisory. If there are other authors, they declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (© 2024 The Authors.)
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- 2024
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29. The outcomes measured and reported in observational studies of incidental and untreated intracranial meningioma: A systematic review.
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Millward CP, Islim AI, Armstrong TS, Barrington H, Bell S, Brodbelt AR, Bulbeck H, Dirven L, Grundy PL, Javadpour M, Keshwara SM, Koszdin SD, Marson AG, McDermott MW, Meling TR, Oliver K, Plaha P, Preusser M, Santarius T, Srikandarajah N, Taphoorn MJB, Turner C, Watts C, Weller M, Williamson PR, Zadeh G, Zamanipoor Najafabadi AH, and Jenkinson MD
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Background: The clinical management of patients with incidental intracranial meningioma varies markedly and is often based on clinician choice and observational data. Heterogeneous outcome measurement has likely hampered knowledge progress by preventing comparative analysis of similar cohorts of patients. This systematic review aimed to summarize the outcomes measured and reported in observational studies., Methods: A systematic literature search was performed to identify published full texts describing active monitoring of adult cohorts with incidental and untreated intracranial meningioma (PubMed, EMBASE, MEDLINE, and CINAHL via EBSCO, completed January 24, 2022). Reported outcomes were extracted verbatim, along with an associated definition and method of measurement if provided. Verbatim outcomes were de-duplicated and the resulting unique outcomes were grouped under standardized outcome terms. These were classified using the taxonomy proposed by the "Core Outcome Measures in Effectiveness Trials" (COMET) initiative., Results: Thirty-three published articles and 1 ongoing study were included describing 32 unique studies: study designs were retrospective n = 27 and prospective n = 5. In total, 268 verbatim outcomes were reported, of which 77 were defined. Following de-duplication, 178 unique verbatim outcomes remained and were grouped into 53 standardized outcome terms. These were classified using the COMET taxonomy into 9 outcome domains and 3 core areas., Conclusions: Outcome measurement across observational studies of incidental and untreated intracranial meningioma is heterogeneous. The standardized outcome terms identified will be prioritized through an eDelphi survey and consensus meeting of key stakeholders (including patients), in order to develop a Core Outcome Set for use in future observational studies., Competing Interests: M.D.J. received a grant from the National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment program for the Radiation versus Observation for Atypical Meningioma (ROAM) trial (NIHR ID: 12/173/14). M.D.J. and S.J.M. received a grant from the National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment program for Surgeons Trial Of Prophylaxis for Epilepsy in seizure naïve patients with Meningioma (STOP’EM) (NIHR ID: NIHR129748). T.S. founded and leads the Anaplastic Meningioma International Consortium (AMiCo). T.S. and M.D.J. cofounded the British-Irish Meningioma Society (BIMS). A.G.M. is a National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Senior Investigator and is also part-funded by NIHR ARC North West Coast. The views expressed in this article are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NIHR or the Department of Health and Social Care. M.P. has received honoraria for lectures, consultation or advisory board participation from the following for-profit companies: Bayer, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Novartis, Gerson Lehrman Group (GLG), CMC Contrast, GlaxoSmithKline, Mundipharma, Roche, BMJ Journals, MedMedia, Astra Zeneca, AbbVie, Lilly, Medahead, Daiichi Sankyo, Sanofi, Merck Sharp & Dome, Tocagen, Adastra, Servier. M.W. has received research grants from Quercis and Versameb, and honoraria for lectures or advisory board participation or consulting from Bayer, Curevac, Medac, Novartis, Novocure, Orbus, Philogen, Roche and Sandoz., (© 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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30. The outcomes measured and reported in intracranial meningioma clinical trials: A systematic review.
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Millward CP, Keshwara SM, Armstrong TS, Barrington H, Bell S, Brodbelt AR, Bulbeck H, Dirven L, Grundy PL, Islim AI, Javadpour M, Koszdin SD, Marson AG, McDermott MW, Meling TR, Oliver K, Plaha P, Preusser M, Santarius T, Srikandarajah N, Taphoorn MJB, Turner C, Watts C, Weller M, Williamson PR, Zadeh G, Zamanipoor Najafabadi AH, and Jenkinson MD
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Background: Meningioma clinical trials have assessed interventions including surgery, radiotherapy, and pharmacotherapy. However, agreement does not exist on what, how, and when outcomes of interest should be measured. To do so would allow comparative analysis of similar trials. This systematic review aimed to summarize the outcomes measured and reported in meningioma clinical trials., Methods: Systematic literature and trial registry searches were performed to identify published and ongoing intracranial meningioma clinical trials (PubMed, Embase, Medline, CINAHL via EBSCO, and Web of Science, completed January 22, 2022). Reported outcomes were extracted verbatim, along with an associated definition and method of measurement if provided. Verbatim outcomes were deduplicated and the resulting unique outcomes were grouped under standardized outcome terms. These were classified using the taxonomy proposed by the "Core Outcome Measures in Effectiveness Trials" (COMET) initiative., Results: Thirty published articles and 18 ongoing studies were included, describing 47 unique clinical trials: Phase 2 n = 33, phase 3 n = 14. Common interventions included: Surgery n = 13, radiotherapy n = 8, and pharmacotherapy n = 20. In total, 659 verbatim outcomes were reported, of which 84 were defined. Following de-duplication, 415 unique verbatim outcomes remained and were grouped into 115 standardized outcome terms. These were classified using the COMET taxonomy into 29 outcome domains and 5 core areas., Conclusions: Outcome measurement across meningioma clinical trials is heterogeneous. The standardized outcome terms identified will be prioritized through an eDelphi survey and consensus meeting of key stakeholders (including patients), in order to develop a core outcome set for use in future meningioma clinical trials., Competing Interests: MDJ received a grant from the National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment program for the Radiation versus Observation for Atypical Meningioma (ROAM) trial (NIHR ID: 12/173/14). MDJ and SJM received a grant from the National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment program for Surgeons Trial Of Prophylaxis for Epilepsy in seizure naïve patients with Meningioma (STOP’EM; NIHR ID: NIHR129748). TS founded and leads the Anaplastic Meningioma International Consortium (AMiCo). TS and MDJ co-founded the British-Irish Meningioma Society (BIMS). AGM is a National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Senior Investigator and is also part-funded by NIHR ARC North West Coast. The views expressed in this article are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NIHR, or the Department of Health and Social Care. MP has received honoraria for lectures, consultation or advisory board participation from the following for-profit companies: Bayer, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Novartis, Gerson Lehrman Group (GLG), CMC Contrast, GlaxoSmithKline, Mundipharma, Roche, BMJ Journals, MedMedia, Astra Zeneca, AbbVie, Lilly, Medahead, Daiichi Sankyo, Sanofi, Merck Sharp & Dome, Tocagen, Adastra, Servier. MW has received research grants from Quercis and Versameb, and honoraria for lectures or advisory board participation or consulting from Bayer, Curevac, Medac, Novartis, Novocure, Orbus, Philogen, Roche, and Sandoz., (© 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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31. "Open-window" craniectomy for the removal of frontal sinus mucosa to prevent a delayed mucocele: illustrative case.
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Rutledge WC, Ozair A, Villanueva-Meyer JE, Niehaus B, and McDermott MW
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Background: Frontal craniotomies for a medial subfrontal approach necessitate crossing the frontal sinus. Large superior extensions of the frontal sinus into frontal bone can result in mucosal retention in a free craniotomy bone flap, leading to a delayed mucocele with significant associated morbidity. The authors describe an "open-window" craniectomy technique that permits mucosal removal under direct vision and maintains the inner table on the bone flap's inferior side, helping to seal off the sinus opening with a pericranial flap., Observations: An illustrative case involving a medial right frontal craniotomy for a third ventricle mass in a patient with a large superior extension of the frontal sinus into frontal bone is presented. After creating a free frontal bone flap, the inner table was drilled out to the margins of the frontal sinus cavity and any remaining mucosa was cleared. A portion of the inner table above the bone flap's inferior margin was left in place, resembling an open window when viewed from the inner table side. The remaining anterior and posterior wall of the flap inferiorly provided a matched surface for the opening into the remaining frontal sinus, which was covered by pericranium. Long-term follow-up indicated no major complications or delayed mucocele., Lessons: The open-window craniectomy technique can be considered for frontal sinus violations in patients with large superior frontal bone extension.
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- 2024
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32. The importance of considering competing risks in recurrence analysis of intracranial meningioma.
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Mirian C, Jensen LR, Juratli TA, Maier AD, Torp SH, Shih HA, Morshed RA, Young JS, Magill ST, Bertero L, Stummer W, Spille DC, Brokinkel B, Oya S, Miyawaki S, Saito N, Proescholdt M, Kuroi Y, Gousias K, Simon M, Moliterno J, Prat-Acin R, Goutagny S, Prabhu VC, Tsiang JT, Wach J, Güresir E, Yamamoto J, Kim YZ, Lee JH, Koshy M, Perumal K, Baskaya MK, Cannon DM, Shrieve DC, Suh CO, Chang JH, Kamenova M, Straumann S, Soleman J, Eyüpoglu IY, Catalan T, Lui A, Theodosopoulos PV, McDermott MW, Wang F, Guo F, Góes P, de Paiva Neto MA, Jamshidi A, Komotar R, Ivan M, Luther E, Souhami L, Guiot MC, Csonka T, Endo T, Barrett OC, Jensen R, Gupta T, Patel AJ, Klisch TJ, Kim JW, Maiuri F, Barresi V, Tabernero MD, Skyrman S, Broechner A, Bach MJ, Law I, Scheie D, Kristensen BW, Munch TN, Meling T, Fugleholm K, Blanche P, and Mathiesen T
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- Humans, Aged, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local epidemiology, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local pathology, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Meningioma pathology, Meningeal Neoplasms pathology
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Background: The risk of recurrence is overestimated by the Kaplan-Meier method when competing events, such as death without recurrence, are present. Such overestimation can be avoided by using the Aalen-Johansen method, which is a direct extension of Kaplan-Meier that accounts for competing events. Meningiomas commonly occur in older individuals and have slow-growing properties, thereby warranting competing risk analysis. The extent to which competing events are considered in meningioma literature is unknown, and the consequences of using incorrect methodologies in meningioma recurrence risk analysis have not been investigated., Methods: We surveyed articles indexed on PubMed since 2020 to assess the usage of competing risk analysis in recent meningioma literature. To compare recurrence risk estimates obtained through Kaplan-Meier and Aalen-Johansen methods, we applied our international database comprising ~ 8,000 patients with a primary meningioma collected from 42 institutions., Results: Of 513 articles, 169 were eligible for full-text screening. There were 6,537 eligible cases from our PERNS database. The discrepancy between the results obtained by Kaplan-Meier and Aalen-Johansen was negligible among low-grade lesions and younger individuals. The discrepancy increased substantially in the patient groups associated with higher rates of competing events (older patients with high-grade lesions)., Conclusion: The importance of considering competing events in recurrence risk analysis is poorly recognized as only 6% of the studies we surveyed employed Aalen-Johansen analyses. Consequently, most of the previous literature has overestimated the risk of recurrence. The overestimation was negligible for studies involving low-grade lesions in younger individuals; however, overestimation might have been substantial for studies on high-grade lesions., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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33. Prophylactic Radiotherapy Of MInimally Symptomatic Spinal Disease (PROMISSeD): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial.
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Rothrock RJ, Ozair A, Avendano MC, Herrera S, Appel H, Ramos S, Starosciak AK, Leon-Ariza DS, Rubens M, McDermott MW, Ahluwalia MS, Mehta MP, and Kotecha RR
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- Adult, Humans, Spine, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Spinal Fractures, Spinal Neoplasms radiotherapy
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Background: Early palliative/pre-emptive intervention improves clinical outcomes and quality of life for patients with metastatic cancer. A previous signal-seeking randomized controlled trial (RCT) demonstrated that early upfront radiotherapy to asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic high-risk osseous metastases led to reduction in skeletal-related events (SREs), a benefit driven primarily by subgroup of high-risk spine metastasis. The current RCT aims to determine whether early palliative/pre-emptive radiotherapy in patients with high-risk, asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic spine metastases will lead to fewer SREs within 1 year., Methods: This is a single-center, parallel-arm, in-progress RCT in adults (≥ 18 years) with ECOG performance status 0-2 and asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic (not requiring opioids) high-risk spine metastases from histologically confirmed solid tumor malignancies with > 5 sites of metastatic disease on cross-sectional imaging. High-risk spine metastases are defined by the following: (a) bulkiest disease sites ≥ 2 cm; (b) junctional disease (occiput to C2, C7-T1, T12-L2, L5-S1); (c) posterior element involvement; or (d) vertebral body compression deformity > 50%. Patients are randomized 1:1 to receive either standard-of-care systemic therapy (arm 1) or upfront, early radiotherapy to ≤ 5 high-risk spine lesions plus standard-of-care systemic therapy (arm 2), in the form of 20-30 Gy of radiation in 2-10 fractions. The primary endpoint is SRE, a composite outcome including spinal fracture, spinal cord compression, need for palliative radiotherapy, interventional procedures, or spinal surgery. Secondary endpoints include (1) surrogates of health care cost, including the number and duration of SRE-related hospitalizations; (2) overall survival; (3) pain-free survival; and (4) quality of life. Study instruments will be captured pre-treatment, at baseline, during treatment, and at 1, 3, 6, 12, and 24 months post-treatment. The trial aims to accrue 74 patients over 2 years to achieve > 80% power in detecting difference using two-sample proportion test with alpha < 0.05., Discussion: The results of this RCT will demonstrate the value, if any, of early radiotherapy for high-risk spine metastases. The trial has received IRB approval, funding, and prospective registration (NCT05534321) and has been open to accrual since August 19, 2022. If positive, the trial will expand the scope and utility of spine radiotherapy., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.Gov NCT05534321 . Registered September 9, 2022., Trial Status: Version 2.0 of the protocol (2021-KOT-002), revised last on September 2, 2022, was approved by the WCG institutional review board (Study Number 1337188, IRB tracking number 20223735). The trial was first posted on ClinicalTrials.Gov on September 9, 2022 (NCT05534321). Patient enrollment commenced on August 19, 2022, and is expected to be completed in 2 years, likely by August 2024., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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34. Epigenetic reprogramming shapes the cellular landscape of schwannoma.
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Liu SJ, Casey-Clyde T, Cho NW, Swinderman J, Pekmezci M, Dougherty MC, Foster K, Chen WC, Villanueva-Meyer JE, Swaney DL, Vasudevan HN, Choudhury A, Pak J, Breshears JD, Lang UE, Eaton CD, Hiam-Galvez KJ, Stevenson E, Chen KH, Lien BV, Wu D, Braunstein SE, Sneed PK, Magill ST, Lim D, McDermott MW, Berger MS, Perry A, Krogan NJ, Hansen MR, Spitzer MH, Gilbert L, Theodosopoulos PV, and Raleigh DR
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- Humans, Epigenesis, Genetic, Cellular Reprogramming genetics, Tumor Microenvironment genetics, Neurilemmoma genetics, Neurilemmoma pathology
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Mechanisms specifying cancer cell states and response to therapy are incompletely understood. Here we show epigenetic reprogramming shapes the cellular landscape of schwannomas, the most common tumors of the peripheral nervous system. We find schwannomas are comprised of 2 molecular groups that are distinguished by activation of neural crest or nerve injury pathways that specify tumor cell states and the architecture of the tumor immune microenvironment. Moreover, we find radiotherapy is sufficient for interconversion of neural crest schwannomas to immune-enriched schwannomas through epigenetic and metabolic reprogramming. To define mechanisms underlying schwannoma groups, we develop a technique for simultaneous interrogation of chromatin accessibility and gene expression coupled with genetic and therapeutic perturbations in single-nuclei. Our results elucidate a framework for understanding epigenetic drivers of tumor evolution and establish a paradigm of epigenetic and metabolic reprograming of cancer cells that shapes the immune microenvironment in response to radiotherapy., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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35. Epidemiology, Genetics, and DNA Methylation Grouping of Hyperostotic Meningiomas.
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Umbach G, Tran EB, Eaton CD, Choudhury A, Morshed R, Villanueva-Meyer JE, Theodosopoulos PV, Magill ST, McDermott MW, Raleigh DR, and Goldschmidt E
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Meningiomas are the most common primary intracranial tumors and are among the only tumors that can form lamellar, hyperostotic bone in the tumor microenvironment. Little is known about the epidemiology or molecular features of hyperostotic meningiomas., Methods: Using a retrospective database of 342 meningiomas treated with surgery at a single institution, we correlated clinical, tumor-related, targeted next-generation DNA sequencing (n = 39 total, 16 meningioma-induced hyperostosis [MIH]), and surgical variables with the presence of MIH using generalized linear models. Meningioma DNA methylation grouping was analyzed on a separate population of patients from the same institution with preoperative imaging studies sufficient for identification of MIH (n = 200)., Results: MIH was significantly correlated with anterior fossa (44.3% of MIH vs 17.5% of non-MIH were in the anterior fossa P < .001, c2) or skull base location (62.5% vs 38.3%, P < .001, c2) and lower MIB-1 labeling index. Gross total resection was accomplished in 27.3% of tumors with MIH and 45.5% of nonhyperostotic meningiomas (P < .05, t test). There was no association between MIH and histological World Health Organization grade (P = .32, c2). MIH was significantly more frequent in meningiomas from the Merlin-intact DNA methylation group (P < .05). Somatic missense mutations in the WD-repeat-containing domain of the TRAF7 gene were the most common genetic alteration associated with MIH (n = 12 of 15, 80%, P < .01, c2)., Conclusion: In this article, we show that MIH has a predilection for the anterior skull base and affected tumors are less amenable to gross total resection. We find no association between MIH and histological World Health Organization grade, but show that MIH is more common in the Merlin-intact DNA methylation group and is significantly associated with TRAF7 somatic missense mutations. These data provide a framework for future investigation of biological mechanisms underlying MIH., (Copyright © Congress of Neurological Surgeons 2023. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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36. Targeted gene expression profiling predicts meningioma outcomes and radiotherapy responses.
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Chen WC, Choudhury A, Youngblood MW, Polley MC, Lucas CG, Mirchia K, Maas SLN, Suwala AK, Won M, Bayley JC, Harmanci AS, Harmanci AO, Klisch TJ, Nguyen MP, Vasudevan HN, McCortney K, Yu TJ, Bhave V, Lam TC, Pu JK, Li LF, Leung GK, Chan JW, Perlow HK, Palmer JD, Haberler C, Berghoff AS, Preusser M, Nicolaides TP, Mawrin C, Agnihotri S, Resnick A, Rood BR, Chew J, Young JS, Boreta L, Braunstein SE, Schulte J, Butowski N, Santagata S, Spetzler D, Bush NAO, Villanueva-Meyer JE, Chandler JP, Solomon DA, Rogers CL, Pugh SL, Mehta MP, Sneed PK, Berger MS, Horbinski CM, McDermott MW, Perry A, Bi WL, Patel AJ, Sahm F, Magill ST, and Raleigh DR
- Subjects
- Humans, Biomarkers, Gene Expression Profiling, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local pathology, Prospective Studies, Meningeal Neoplasms genetics, Meningeal Neoplasms radiotherapy, Meningeal Neoplasms pathology, Meningioma genetics, Meningioma radiotherapy, Meningioma pathology
- Abstract
Surgery is the mainstay of treatment for meningioma, the most common primary intracranial tumor, but improvements in meningioma risk stratification are needed and indications for postoperative radiotherapy are controversial. Here we develop a targeted gene expression biomarker that predicts meningioma outcomes and radiotherapy responses. Using a discovery cohort of 173 meningiomas, we developed a 34-gene expression risk score and performed clinical and analytical validation of this biomarker on independent meningiomas from 12 institutions across 3 continents (N = 1,856), including 103 meningiomas from a prospective clinical trial. The gene expression biomarker improved discrimination of outcomes compared with all other systems tested (N = 9) in the clinical validation cohort for local recurrence (5-year area under the curve (AUC) 0.81) and overall survival (5-year AUC 0.80). The increase in AUC compared with the standard of care, World Health Organization 2021 grade, was 0.11 for local recurrence (95% confidence interval 0.07 to 0.17, P < 0.001). The gene expression biomarker identified meningiomas benefiting from postoperative radiotherapy (hazard ratio 0.54, 95% confidence interval 0.37 to 0.78, P = 0.0001) and suggested postoperative management could be refined for 29.8% of patients. In sum, our results identify a targeted gene expression biomarker that improves discrimination of meningioma outcomes, including prediction of postoperative radiotherapy responses., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc.)
- Published
- 2023
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37. International Tuberculum Sellae Meningioma Study: Preoperative Grading Scale to Predict Outcomes and Propensity-Matched Outcomes by Endonasal Versus Transcranial Approach.
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Magill ST, Schwartz TH, Couldwell WT, Gardner PA, Heilman CB, Sen C, Akagami R, Cappabianca P, Prevedello DM, and McDermott MW
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Sella Turcica surgery, Meningioma surgery, Meningeal Neoplasms surgery, Neuroendoscopy methods, Skull Base Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Tuberculum sellae meningiomas are resected via an expanded endonasal (EEA) or transcranial approach (TCA). Which approach provides superior outcomes is debated. The Magill-McDermott (M-M) grading scale evaluating tumor size, optic canal invasion, and arterial involvement remains to be validated for outcome prediction. The objective of this study was to validate the M-M scale for predicting visual outcome, extent of resection (EOR), and recurrence, and to use propensity matching by M-M scale to determine whether visual outcome, EOR, or recurrence differ between EEA and TCA., Methods: Forty-site retrospective study of 947 patients undergoing tuberculum sellae meningiomas resection. Standard statistical methods and propensity matching were used., Results: The M-M scale predicted visual worsening (odds ratio [OR]/point: 1.22, 95% CI: 1.02-1.46, P = .0271) and gross total resection (GTR) (OR/point: 0.71, 95% CI: 0.62-0.81, P < .0001), but not recurrence ( P = .4695). The scale was simplified and validated in an independent cohort for predicting visual worsening (OR/point: 2.34, 95% CI: 1.33-4.14, P = .0032) and GTR (OR/point: 0.73, 95% CI: 0.57-0.93, P = .0127), but not recurrence ( P = .2572). In propensity-matched samples, there was no difference in visual worsening ( P = .8757) or recurrence ( P = .5678) between TCA and EEA, but GTR was more likely with TCA (OR: 1.49, 95% CI: 1.02-2.18, P = .0409). Matched patients with preoperative visual deficits who had an EEA were more likely to have visual improvement than those undergoing TCA (72.9% vs 58.4%, P = .0010) with equal rates of visual worsening (EEA 8.0% vs TCA 8.6%, P = .8018)., Conclusion: The refined M-M scale predicts visual worsening and EOR preoperatively. Preoperative visual deficits are more likely to improve after EEA; however, individual tumor features must be considered during nuanced approach selection by experienced neurosurgeons., (Copyright © Congress of Neurological Surgeons 2023. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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38. Management of Brain Metastases: A Review of Novel Therapies.
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Bellur S, Khosla AA, Ozair A, Kotecha R, McDermott MW, and Ahluwalia MS
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- Adult, Humans, Trastuzumab therapeutic use, Vemurafenib therapeutic use, Protein Kinase Inhibitors therapeutic use, Proto-Oncogene Proteins therapeutic use, Brain Neoplasms genetics
- Abstract
Brain metastases (BMs) represent the most common intracranial tumors in adults, and most commonly originate from lung, followed by breast, melanoma, kidney, and colorectal cancer. Management of BM is individualized based on the size and number of brain metastases, the extent of extracranial disease, the primary tumor subtype, neurological symptoms, and prior lines of therapy. Until recently, treatment strategies were limited to local therapies, like surgical resection and radiotherapy, the latter in the form of whole-brain radiotherapy or stereotactic radiosurgery. The next generation of local strategies includes laser interstitial thermal therapy, magnetic hyperthermic therapy, post-resection brachytherapy, and focused ultrasound. New targeted therapies and immunotherapies with documented intracranial activity have transformed clinical outcomes. Novel systemic therapies with intracranial utility include new anaplastic lymphoma kinase inhibitors like brigatinib and ensartinib; selective "rearranged during transfection" inhibitors like selpercatinib and pralsetinib; B-raf proto-oncogene inhibitors like encorafenib and vemurafenib; Kirsten rat sarcoma viral oncogene inhibitors like sotorasib and adagrasib; ROS1 gene rearrangement (ROS1) inhibitors, anti-neurotrophic tyrosine receptor kinase agents like larotrectinib and entrectinib; anti-human epidermal growth factor receptor 2/epidermal growth factor receptor exon 20 agent like poziotinib; and antibody-drug conjugates like trastuzumab-emtansine and trastuzumab-deruxtecan. This review highlights the modern multidisciplinary management of BM, emphasizing the integration of systemic and local therapies., Competing Interests: M.S.A. has provided updated disclosures that encompass a range of professional involvements. In terms of grants, he has received support from Seagen. Additionally, his consultations extend to various organizations, including but not limited to Bayer, Novocure, Kiyatec, Insightec, GSK, Xoft, Nuvation, Cellularity, SDP Oncology, Apollomics, Prelude, Janssen, Tocagen, Voyager Therapeutics, Viewray, Caris Lifesciences, Pyramid Biosciences, Varian Medical Systems, Cairn Therapeutics, Anheart Therapeutics, Theraguix, Menarini Ricerche, Sumitomo Pharma Oncology, Autem therapeutics, and GT Medical Technologies. Furthermore, he serves on the Scientific Advisory Board of Cairn Therapeutics, Pyramid Biosciences, Modifi biosciences, and Bugworks. Additionally, his stock holdings include shares in Mimivax, Cytodyn, MedInnovate Advisors LLC, and Trisalus Lifesciences. These disclosures aim to provide transparency regarding his professional engagements and affiliations., (Thieme. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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39. International Tuberculum Sellae Meningioma Study: Surgical Outcomes and Management Trends.
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Magill ST, Schwartz TH, Couldwell WT, Gardner PA, Heilman CB, Sen C, Akagami R, Cappabianca P, Prevedello DM, and McDermott MW
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Neurosurgical Procedures methods, Cerebrospinal Fluid Leak surgery, Meningioma surgery, Meningioma complications, Meningeal Neoplasms surgery, Meningeal Neoplasms complications, Neuroendoscopy methods, Skull Base Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Tuberculum sellae meningiomas (TSMs) can be resected through transcranial (TCA) or expanded endonasal approach (EEA). The objective of this study was to report TSM management trends and outcomes in a large multicenter cohort., Methods: This is a 40-site retrospective study using standard statistical methods., Results: In 947 cases, TCA was used 66.4% and EEA 33.6%. The median maximum diameter was 2.5 cm for TCA and 2.1 cm for EEA ( P < .0001). The median follow-up was 26 months. Gross total resection (GTR) was achieved in 70.2% and did not differ between EEA and TCA ( P = .5395). Vision was the same or better in 87.5%. Vision improved in 73.0% of EEA patients with preoperative visual deficits compared with 57.1% of TCA patients ( P < .0001). On multivariate analysis, a TCA (odds ratio [OR] 1.78, P = .0258) was associated with vision worsening, while GTR was protective (OR 0.37, P < .0001). GTR decreased with increased diameter (OR: 0.80 per cm, P = .0036) and preoperative visual deficits (OR 0.56, P = .0075). Mortality was 0.5%. Complications occurred in 23.9%. New unilateral or bilateral blindness occurred in 3.3% and 0.4%, respectively. The cerebrospinal fluid leak rate was 17.3% for EEA and 2.2% for TCA (OR 9.1, P < .0001). The recurrence rate was 10.9% (n = 103). Longer follow-up (OR 1.01 per month, P < .0001), World Health Organization II/III (OR 2.20, P = .0262), and GTR (OR: 0.33, P < .0001) were associated with recurrence. The recurrence rate after GTR was lower after EEA compared with TCA (OR 0.33, P = .0027)., Conclusion: EEA for appropriately selected TSM may lead to better visual outcomes and decreased recurrence rates after GTR, but cerebrospinal fluid leak rates are high, and longer follow-up is needed. Tumors were smaller in the EEA group, and follow-up was shorter, reflecting selection, and observation bias. Nevertheless, EEA may be superior to TCA for appropriately selected TSM., (Copyright © Congress of Neurological Surgeons 2023. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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40. A study on inter-planner plan quality variability using a manual planning- or Lightning dose optimizer-approach for single brain lesions treated with the Gamma Knife ® Icon™.
- Author
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Lee YC, Wieczorek DJ, Chaswal V, Kotecha R, Hall MD, Tom MC, Mehta MP, McDermott MW, Gutierrez AN, and Tolakanahalli R
- Subjects
- Humans, Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted, Radiotherapy Dosage, Brain, Radiosurgery, Lightning, Brain Neoplasms secondary
- Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to investigate inter-planner plan quality variability using a manual forward planning (MFP)- or fast inverse planning (FIP, Lightning)-approach for single brain lesions treated with the Gamma Knife
® (GK) Icon™., Methods: Thirty patients who were previously treated with GK stereotactic radiosurgery or radiotherapy were selected and divided into three groups (post-operative resection cavity, intact brain metastasis, and vestibular schwannoma [10 patients per group]). Clinical plans for the 30 patients were generated by multiple planners using FIP only (1), a combination of FIP and MFP (12), and MFP only (17). Three planners (Senior, Junior, and Novice) with varying experience levels re-planned the 30 patients using MFP and FIP (two plans per patient) with planning time limit of 60 min. Statistical analysis was performed to compare plan quality metrics (Paddick conformity index, gradient index, number of shots, prescription isodose line, target coverage, beam-on-time (BOT), and organs-at-risk doses) of MFP or FIP plans among three planners and to compare plan quality metrics between each planner's MFP/FIP plans and clinical plans. Variability in FIP parameter settings (BOT, low dose, and target max dose) and in planning time among the planners was also evaluated., Results: Variations in plan quality metrics of FIP plans among three planners were smaller than those of MFP plans for all three groups. Junior's MFP plans were the most comparable to the clinical plans, whereas Senior's and Novice's MFP plans were superior and inferior, respectively. All three planners' FIP plans were comparable or superior to the clinical plans. Differences in FIP parameter settings among the planners were observed. Planning time was shorter and variations in planning time among the planners were smaller for FIP plans in all three groups., Conclusions: The FIP approach is less planner dependent and more time-honored than the MFP approach., (© 2023 The Authors. Journal of Applied Clinical Medical Physics published by Wiley Periodicals, LLC on behalf of The American Association of Physicists in Medicine.)- Published
- 2023
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41. Surgically targeted radiation therapy (STaRT) for recurrent brain metastases: Initial clinical experience.
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Kutuk T, Tolakanahalli R, Chaswal V, Yarlagadda S, Herrera R, Appel H, La Rosa A, Mishra V, Wieczorek DJJ, McDermott MW, Siomin V, Mehta MP, Odia Y, Gutierrez AN, and Kotecha R
- Subjects
- Humans, Cesium Radioisotopes therapeutic use, Necrosis etiology, Brachytherapy methods, Brain Neoplasms radiotherapy
- Abstract
Purpose: This study evaluates the outcomes of recurrent brain metastasis treated with resection and brachytherapy using a novel Cesium-131 carrier, termed surgically targeted radiation therapy (STaRT), and compares them to the first course of external beam radiotherapy (EBRT)., Methods: Consecutive patients who underwent STaRT between August 2020 and June 2022 were included. All patients underwent maximal safe resection with pathologic confirmation of viable disease prior to STaRT to 60 Gy to a 5-mm depth from the surface of the resection cavity. Complications were assessed using CTCAE version 5.0., Results: Ten patients with 12 recurrent brain metastases after EBRT (median 15.5 months, range: 4.9-44.7) met the inclusion criteria. The median BED
10Gy 90% and 95% were 132.2 Gy (113.9-265.1 Gy) and 116.0 Gy (96.8-250.6 Gy), respectively. The median maximum point dose BED10Gy for the target was 1076.0 Gy (range: 120.7-1478.3 Gy). The 6-month and 1-year local control rates were 66.7% and 33.3% for the prior EBRT course; these rates were 100% and 100% for STaRT, respectively (p < 0.001). At a median follow-up of 14.5 months, there was one instance of grade two radiation necrosis. Surgery-attributed complications were observed in two patients including pseudomeningocele and minor headache., Conclusions: STaRT with Cs-131 presents an alternative approach for operable recurrent brain metastases and was associated with superior local control than the first course of EBRT in this series. Our initial clinical experience shows that STaRT is associated with a high local control rate, modest surgical complication rate, and low radiation necrosis risk in the reirradiation setting., (Copyright © 2023 American Brachytherapy Society. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
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42. In Reply: International Tuberculum Sellae Meningioma Study: Surgical Outcomes and Management Trends.
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Magill ST and McDermott MW
- Subjects
- Humans, Neurosurgical Procedures, Treatment Outcome, Meningioma surgery, Meningeal Neoplasms surgery, Skull Base Neoplasms surgery
- Published
- 2023
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43. Intraventricular meningioma resection and visual outcomes.
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Andrews JP, Cummins DD, Morshed RA, Kinde B, Aghi MK, McDermott MW, Berger MS, and Theodosopoulos PV
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- Adult, Humans, Diffusion Tensor Imaging, Retrospective Studies, Visual Fields, Treatment Outcome, Meningioma diagnostic imaging, Meningioma surgery, Meningioma pathology, Meningeal Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Meningeal Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Objective: Intraventricular meningiomas (IVMs) of the lateral ventricle are rare tumors that present surgical challenges because of their deep location. Visual field deficits (VFDs) are one risk associated with these tumors and their treatment. VFDs may be present preoperatively due to the tumor and mass effect (tumor VFDs) or may develop postoperatively due to the surgical approach (surgical VFDs). This institutional series aimed to review surgical outcomes following resection of IVMs, with a focus on VFDs., Methods: Patients who received IVM resection at one academic institution between the years 1996 and 2021 were retrospectively reviewed. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) reconstructions of the optic radiations around the tumor were performed from preoperative IVM imaging. The VFD course and resolution were documented., Results: Thirty-two adult patients underwent IVM resection, with gross-total resection in 30 patients (93.8%). Preoperatively, tumor VFDs were present in 6 patients, resolving after surgery in 5 patients. Five other patients (without preoperative VFD) had new persistent surgical VFDs postoperatively (5/32, 15.6%) that persisted to the most recent follow-up. Of the 5 patients with persistent surgical VFDs, 4 received a transtemporal approach and 1 received a transparietal approach, and all these deficits occurred prior to regular use of DTI in preoperative imaging., Conclusions: New surgical VFDs are a common neurological deficit after IVM resection. Preoperative DTI may demonstrate distortion of the optic radiations around the tumor, thus revealing safe operative corridors to prevent surgical VFDs.
- Published
- 2023
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44. Postoperative Complications and Neurological Deficits After Petroclival Region Meningioma Resection: A Case Series.
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Nguyen MP, Morshed RA, Cheung SW, Theodosopoulos PV, and McDermott MW
- Subjects
- Humans, Neurosurgical Procedures adverse effects, Neurosurgical Procedures methods, Treatment Outcome, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Postoperative Complications etiology, Postoperative Complications surgery, Meningioma surgery, Meningioma pathology, Skull Base Neoplasms surgery, Skull Base Neoplasms pathology, Meningeal Neoplasms surgery, Meningeal Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Background: Surgical management of meningiomas involving the petroclival junction remains a challenge because of nearby critical neurovascular structures., Objective: To describe surgical approach selection, outcomes, and factors associated with postoperative complications and neurological deficits in a series of patients undergoing resection of petroclival region meningiomas., Methods: Retrospective review of patients undergoing symptomatic petroclival region meningioma resection was performed. Logistic regression was performed to identify variables associated with postoperative complications and new neurological deficits., Results: Sixty-five patients underwent 54 one-stage and 11 two-stage resections with median follow-up of 51 months. Most tumors were World Health Organization grade 1 (90.8%), and the median volume was 23.9 cm 3 . Posterior petrosectomy and anterior petrosectomy were performed in 67.1% and 6.6% of operations, respectively. The gross or near total resection rate was 15.4%, and 8 patients (12.3%) progressed on follow-up. The surgical complication rate was 26.2% with no perioperative mortalities. Postoperatively, 45.8% of patients had new, persistent neurological deficits, with cranial nerves VII palsy being most common. On multivariate analysis, higher body mass index (odds ratio [OR]: 1.1, P = .04) was associated with risk of surgical complications. Longer operative time (OR: 1.4, P = .004) and staged procedures (OR: 4.9, P = .04) were associated with risk of new neurological deficit on follow-up, likely reflecting more challenging tumors. Comparing early vs later career surgeries performed by the senior author, rates of severe complications and neurological deficits decreased 23.1% and 22.3%, respectively., Conclusion: Petroclival region meningiomas remain surgically challenging, but improved outcomes are seen with surgeon experience. These data help inform patients on perioperative morbidity risk and provide a guide for surgical approach selection., (Copyright © Congress of Neurological Surgeons 2023. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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45. Neurosurgeon's Ode to Meningiomas.
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McDermott MW and Ozair A
- Published
- 2023
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46. Analysis of upfront resection or stereotactic radiosurgery for local control of solid and cystic cerebellar hemangioblastomas.
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Carrete LR, Morshed RA, Young JS, Avalos LN, Sneed PK, Aghi MK, McDermott MW, and Theodosopoulos PV
- Subjects
- Humans, Treatment Outcome, Retrospective Studies, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local surgery, Follow-Up Studies, Radiosurgery, Hemangioblastoma surgery, Cerebellar Neoplasms radiotherapy, Cerebellar Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Objective: The purpose of this study was to identify rates of and risk factors for local tumor progression in patients who had undergone surgery or radiosurgery for the management of cerebellar hemangioblastoma and to describe treatments pursued following tumor progression., Methods: The authors conducted a retrospective single-center review of patients who had undergone treatment of a cerebellar hemangioblastoma with either surgery or stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) between 1996 and 2019. Univariate and multivariate regression analyses were performed to examine factors associated with local tumor control., Results: One hundred nine patients met the study inclusion criteria. Overall, these patients had a total of 577 hemangioblastomas, 229 of which were located in the cerebellum. The surgical and SRS cohorts consisted of 106 and 123 cerebellar hemangioblastomas, respectively. For patients undergoing surgery, tumors were treated with subtotal resection and gross-total resection in 5.7% and 94.3% of cases, respectively. For patients receiving SRS, the mean target volume was 0.71 cm3 and the mean margin dose was 18.0 Gy. Five-year freedom from lesion progression for the surgical and SRS groups was 99% and 82%, respectively. The surgical and SRS cohorts contained 32% versus 97% von Hippel-Lindau tumors, 78% versus 7% cystic hemangioblastomas, and 12.8- versus 0.56-cm3 mean tumor volumes, respectively. On multivariate analysis, factors associated with local tumor progression in the SRS group included older patient age (HR 1.06, 95% CI 1.03-1.09, p < 0.001) and a cystic component (HR 9.0, 95% CI 2.03-32.0, p = 0.001). Repeat SRS as salvage therapy was used more often for smaller tumor recurrences, and no tumor recurrences of < 1.0 cm3 required additional salvage surgery following repeat SRS., Conclusions: Both surgery and SRS achieve high rates of local control of hemangioblastomas. Age and cystic features are associated with local progression after SRS treatment for cerebellar hemangioblastomas. In cases of local tumor recurrence, salvage surgery and repeat SRS are valid forms of treatment to achieve local tumor control, although resection may be preferable for larger recurrences.
- Published
- 2023
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47. Genomic alterations associated with rapid progression of brain metastases.
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Uggerly ASV, Cummins DD, Nguyen MP, Saggi S, Goldschmidt E, Chang EF, McDermott MW, Berger MS, Theodosopoulos PV, Hervey-Jumper SL, Daras M, Aghi MK, and Morshed RA
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local genetics, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local surgery, Brain surgery, Radiotherapy, Adjuvant, Brain Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Brain Neoplasms genetics, Brain Neoplasms surgery, Radiosurgery methods
- Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to investigate associations between genomic alterations in resected brain metastases and rapid local and distant CNS recurrence identified at the time of postoperative adjuvant radiosurgery., Methods: This was a retrospective study on patients who underwent resection of intracranial brain metastases. Next-generation sequencing of more than 500 coding genes was performed on brain metastasis specimens. Postoperative and preradiosurgery MR images were compared to identify rapid recurrence. Genomic data were associated with rapid local and distant CNS recurrence of brain metastases using nominal regression analyses., Results: The cohort contained 92 patients with 92 brain metastases. Thirteen (14.1%) patients had a rapid local recurrence, and 64 (69.6%) patients had rapid distant CNS progression by the time of postoperative adjuvant radiosurgery, which occurred in a median time of 25 days (range 3-85 days) from surgery. RB1 and CTNNB1 mutations were seen in 8.7% and 9.8% of the cohort, respectively, and were associated with a significantly higher risk of rapid local recurrence (RB1: OR 13.6, 95% CI 2.0-92.39, p = 0.008; and CTNNB1: OR 11.97, 95% CI 2.25-63.78, p = 0.004) on multivariate analysis. No genes were found to be associated with rapid distant CNS progression. However, the presence of extracranial disease was significantly associated with a higher risk of rapid distant recurrence on multivariate analysis (OR 4.06, 95% CI 1.08-15.34, p = 0.039)., Conclusions: Genomic alterations in RB1 or CTNNB1 were associated with a significantly higher risk of rapid recurrence at the resection site. Although no genomic alterations were associated with rapid distant recurrence, having active extracranial disease was a risk factor for new lesions by the time of adjuvant radiotherapy after resection.
- Published
- 2023
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48. Genomic alterations associated with postoperative nodular leptomeningeal disease after resection of brain metastases.
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Morshed RA, Cummins DD, Nguyen MP, Saggi S, Vasudevan HN, Braunstein SE, Goldschmidt E, Chang EF, McDermott MW, Berger MS, Theodosopoulos PV, Daras M, Hervey-Jumper SL, and Aghi MK
- Subjects
- Humans, Treatment Outcome, Retrospective Studies, Genomics, Brain Neoplasms genetics, Brain Neoplasms surgery, Brain Neoplasms secondary, Radiosurgery
- Abstract
Objective: The relationship between brain metastasis resection and risk of nodular leptomeningeal disease (nLMD) is unclear. This study examined genomic alterations found in brain metastases with the aim of identifying alterations associated with postoperative nLMD in the context of clinical and treatment factors., Methods: A retrospective, single-center study was conducted on patients who underwent resection of brain metastases between 2014 and 2022 and had clinical and genomic data available. Postoperative nLMD was the primary endpoint of interest. Targeted next-generation sequencing of > 500 oncogenes was performed in brain metastases. Cox proportional hazards analyses were performed to identify clinical features and genomic alterations associated with nLMD., Results: The cohort comprised 101 patients with tumors originating from multiple cancer types. There were 15 patients with nLMD (14.9% of the cohort) with a median time from surgery to nLMD diagnosis of 8.2 months. Two supervised machine learning algorithms consistently identified CDKN2A/B codeletion and ERBB2 amplification as the top predictors associated with postoperative nLMD across all cancer types. In a multivariate Cox proportional hazards analysis including clinical factors and genomic alterations observed in the cohort, tumor volume (× 10 cm3; HR 1.2, 95% CI 1.01-1.5; p = 0.04), CDKN2A/B codeletion (HR 5.3, 95% CI 1.7-16.9; p = 0.004), and ERBB2 amplification (HR 3.9, 95% CI 1.1-14.4; p = 0.04) were associated with a decreased time to postoperative nLMD., Conclusions: In addition to increased resected tumor volume, ERBB2 amplification and CDKN2A/B deletion were independently associated with an increased risk of postoperative nLMD across multiple cancer types. Additional work is needed to determine if targeted therapy decreases this risk in the postoperative setting.
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- 2023
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49. Formal Closure of Endoscopic Endonasal Skull Base Defects With a "Bow Tie" Tri-Layer Graft.
- Author
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El-Sayed IH, Jiam NT, Theodosopoulos PV, McDermott MW, Gurrola JG 2nd, and Aghi MK
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Skull Base surgery, Cerebrospinal Fluid Leak etiology, Cerebrospinal Fluid Leak prevention & control, Plastic Surgery Procedures, Postoperative Complications etiology, Postoperative Complications prevention & control, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Surgical Flaps surgery, Transanal Endoscopic Surgery methods, Skull Base Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Objective: Risk factors for a postoperative cerebrospinal fluid leak (CSF) after surgery include an intraoperative high flow of CSF, elevated body mass index, defect size, and defect site. In our prior series, a high postoperative CSF leak rate for tumors of the central skull base (planum, sella, and clivus) appeared to be due to graft migration. We changed our closure technique from a single layer of collagen +/- fat graft to a novel graft, termed a "Bow tie" (a tri-layer fat graft with two pieces of collagen matrix), and report our results in this study., Methods: Retrospective temporal epoch study of a single otolaryngologist's experience of closing skull base defects in our skull base center from 2005 to 2017., Results: One hundred and forty-nine patients met inclusion criteria in two time periods, pre- and post-introduction of the Bow tie technique. In epoch I, from 2005 to 2013, 79 patients had reconstruction with a single layer of dural graft (25 had additional free fat graft). In epoch II, from 2014 to 2017, 70 patients had reconstruction with the Bow tie., Results: CSF leak rates were 8.7% overall: 15.2% in epoch I and 1.4% in epoch II (p = 0.01). After controlling the procedure, defects with a size greater than 2 cm had a 5.7 greater likelihood of failure. Epoch II had a lower incidence of major complications., Conclusion: Using a single surgeon's experience, the multilayer Bow tie has a significant reduction in postoperative CSF leak and associated major complications for defects of the central skull base., Level of Evidence: 3 Laryngoscope, 133:1568-1575, 2023., (© 2022 The American Laryngological, Rhinological and Otological Society, Inc.)
- Published
- 2023
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50. Does waiting for surgery matter? How time from diagnostic MRI to resection affects outcomes in newly diagnosed glioblastoma.
- Author
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Young JS, Al-Adli NN, Muster R, Chandra A, Morshed RA, Pereira MP, Chalif EJ, Hervey-Jumper SL, Theodosopoulos PV, McDermott MW, Berger MS, and Aghi MK
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Neurosurgical Procedures methods, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Glioblastoma diagnostic imaging, Glioblastoma surgery, Glioblastoma drug therapy, Brain Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Brain Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Objective: Maximal safe resection is the standard of care for patients presenting with lesions concerning for glioblastoma (GBM) on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Currently, there is no consensus on surgical urgency for patients with an excellent performance status, which complicates patient counseling and may increase patient anxiety. This study aims to assess the impact of time to surgery (TTS) on clinical and survival outcomes in patients with GBM., Methods: This is a retrospective study of 145 consecutive patients with newly diagnosed IDH-wild-type GBM who underwent initial resection at the University of California, San Francisco, between 2014 and 2016. Patients were grouped according to the time from diagnostic MRI to surgery (i.e., TTS): ≤ 7, > 7-21, and > 21 days. Contrast-enhancing tumor volumes (CETVs) were measured using software. Initial CETV (CETV1) and preoperative CETV (CETV2) were used to evaluate tumor growth represented as percent change (ΔCETV) and specific growth rate (SPGR; % growth/day). Overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS) were measured from the date of resection and were analyzed using the Kaplan-Meier method and Cox regression analyses., Results: Of the 145 patients (median TTS 10 days), 56 (39%), 53 (37%), and 36 (25%) underwent surgery ≤ 7, > 7-21, and > 21 days from initial imaging, respectively. Median OS and PFS among the study cohort were 15.5 and 10.3 months, respectively, and did not differ among the TTS groups (p = 0.81 and 0.17, respectively). Median CETV1 was 35.9, 15.7, and 10.2 cm3 across the TTS groups, respectively (p < 0.001). Preoperative biopsy and presenting to an outside hospital emergency department were associated with an average 12.79-day increase and 9.09-day decrease in TTS, respectively. Distance from the treating facility (median 57.19 miles) did not affect TTS. In the growth cohort, TTS was associated with an average 2.21% increase in ΔCETV per day; however, there was no effect of TTS on SPGR, Karnofsky Performance Status (KPS), postoperative deficits, survival, discharge location, or hospital length of stay. Subgroup analyses did not identify any high-risk groups for which a shorter TTS may be beneficial., Conclusions: An increased TTS for patients with imaging concerning for GBM did not impact clinical outcomes, and while there was a significant association with ΔCETV, SPGR remained unaffected. However, SPGR was associated with a worse preoperative KPS, which highlights the importance of tumor growth speed over TTS. Therefore, while it is ill advised to wait an unnecessarily long time after initial imaging studies, these patients do not require urgent/emergency surgery and can seek tertiary care opinions and/or arrange for additional preoperative support/resources. Future studies are needed to explore subgroups for whom TTS may impact clinical outcomes.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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