Progression of the Residual Lesion in Cavernous Sinus Extra-Axial Cavernous Hemangioma After Surgery.

IF 3.8 2区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Translational Stroke Research Pub Date : 2025-01-31 DOI:10.1007/s12975-025-01333-5
Ran Huo, Qifeng Yu, Hongyuan Xu, Jie Wang, Shaozhi Zhao, Jiancong Weng, Xiudan Bai, Yuming Jiao, Wenqian Zhang, Qiheng He, Zhiyou Wu, Shaowen Liu, Yingfan Sun, Yang Ni, Jinyi Tang, Shuo Wang, Yong Cao
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Our study aimed to investigate the factors associated with residual cavernous sinus extra-axial cavernous hemangiomas (ECHs) progression after surgery. This retrospective study consecutively included patients of cavernous sinus ECHs with incomplete lesion resection from February 2012 to January 2024. The progression of the lesions was defined as new lesions or a growth of residual lesion (≥ 10% increase in volume). Cox regression analysis was used to determine factors associated with residual lesion progression. Kaplan-Meier analysis was conducted to estimate the cumulative incidence of residual lesion progression. Sixty patients were included in this study. During the follow-up, there were 31 (51.7%) residual lesions underwent progression, whereas 29 (48.3%) patients were nonprogressive. Multivariate Cox analysis showed that the homogeneous enhancement lesion was correlated with the residual lesion progression (HR, 8.17 [95% CI, 1.03-64.58]; p = 0.046). Kaplan-Meier survival analysis indicated that the rate of homogeneous enhancement lesion progression (3.7 per 10 person-years) was significantly higher than that of the heterogeneous enhancement group (0.5 per 10 person-years; p = 0.019). Fourteen of the 31 patients with lesion progression underwent radiotherapy, and all of them experienced control over the progression of their lesions. This study found that end-of-treatment residual lesions are not rare in patients with cavernous sinus ECHs and the MRI feature is helpful to predict the progression of residual lesions.

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来源期刊
Translational Stroke Research
Translational Stroke Research CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-NEUROSCIENCES
CiteScore
13.80
自引率
4.30%
发文量
130
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Translational Stroke Research covers basic, translational, and clinical studies. The Journal emphasizes novel approaches to help both to understand clinical phenomenon through basic science tools, and to translate basic science discoveries into the development of new strategies for the prevention, assessment, treatment, and enhancement of central nervous system repair after stroke and other forms of neurotrauma. Translational Stroke Research focuses on translational research and is relevant to both basic scientists and physicians, including but not restricted to neuroscientists, vascular biologists, neurologists, neuroimagers, and neurosurgeons.
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