|
|
Radical
excision of intramedullary spinal cord tumors: surgical morbidity and long-term
follow-up evaluation in 164 children and young adults
Constantini S, Miller DC, Allen JC, Rorke LB, Freed D, Epstein FJ
Institute for Neurology and Neurosurgery, Beth Israel Medical
Center, New York, New York, USA.
sconsts@netvision.net.il
Object.The majority of intramedullary spinal cord tumors (IMSCT) in
children and young adults are low-grade gliomas.
Radical resection of similar tumors in the cerebral hemisphere or cerebellum is
usually curative; however, the conventional management for IMSCTs remains
partial resection followed by radiotherapy because of the concern for surgical
morbidity.
Nevertheless, radical resection of IMSCTs without routine adjuvant treatment has
been the rule at our institution since 1980.
In an attempt to resolve this controversy, the long-term morbidity and survival
in a large series of children have been retrospectively reviewed.
Methods.
The database records and current status of 164 patients 21 years of age and
younger in whom an IMSCT was resected were reviewed.
A gross-total resection (>95%) was achieved in 76.8% of the surgical
procedures.
Subtotal resections (80-95%) were performed in 20.1%.
The majority of patients (79.3%) had histologically low-grade lesions.
There were no deaths due to surgery.
When comparing the preoperative and 3-month postoperative functional grades,
60.4% stayed the same, 15.8% improved, and 23.8% deteriorated.
Only 13 patients deteriorated by more than one functional grade.
Patients with either no deficits or only mild deficits before surgery were
rarely injured by the procedure, reinforcing the importance of early diagnosis
and treatment.
The major determinant of long-term patient survival was histological composition
of the tumor.
The 5-year progression-free survival rate was 78% for patients with low-grade
gliomas and 30% for those with high-grade gliomas.
Patients in whom an IMSCT was only partially resected (<80%) fared
significantly worse.
Conclusions.
The long-term survival and quality of life for patients with low-grade gliomas
treated by radical resection alone is comparable or superior to minimal
resection and radiotherapy.
The optimum therapy for patients with high-grade gliomas is yet to be
determined.
PMID: 11012047 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Source: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=11012047&dopt=Abstract
|