H. Sefo, B. Rovčanin, D. Jesenković, Melika Džeko, Amra Avdić, A. Ahmetspahić, I. Omerhodžić, Ermin Hadžić, Hadžan Konjo
{"title":"世界卫生组织 I 级和 II 级脑膜瘤患者的临床和放射学特征","authors":"H. Sefo, B. Rovčanin, D. Jesenković, Melika Džeko, Amra Avdić, A. Ahmetspahić, I. Omerhodžić, Ermin Hadžić, Hadžan Konjo","doi":"10.17532/jhs.2024.2564","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Introduction: Meningiomas are the most common benign tumor of the central nervous system, accounting for 53.3% and 37.6% of all central nervous system tumors (1). The World Health Organization (WHO) Grade I meningiomas account for 80.5% of all meningiomas and are considered benign meningiomas; the WHO Grade II meningiomas account for 17.7% of all meningiomas and exhibit more aggressive behavior.\nMethods: In the period 2015-2022, a retrospective single-center study at the clinic of neurosurgery at the Clinical Center University of Sarajevo was conducted, which included patients with a pathohistological finding of WHO Grade I or II meningioma. Depending on the pathohistological grade of the tumor, patients were divided into two groups: Grade I and Grade II patients. Patients were examined clinically and radiologically. Clinical data collected included in the study: Gender, age, number of symptoms before surgery, whether patients were symptomatic or asymptomatic, pre-operative Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group,and Karnopsky performance scale. Pre-operative contrast magnetic resonance imaging of the head measured tumor volume, temporal muscle thickness (TMT), sagittal midline shift, and surrounding cerebral edema.\nResults: A total of 80 patients were enrolled in the study, 68 with WHO Grade I and 12 with WHO Grade II meningiomas. We found that patients with Grade I meningioma were younger and that the mean thickness of the temporal muscle was statistically thicker than in patients with Grade II. Increasing TMT was significantly and positively associated with Grade I tumors and negatively associated with Grade II tumors (p = 0.032).\nConclusion: This study demonstrates that TMT can serve as a radiologic pre-operative indicator of meningioma grade and provide valuable guidance to neurosurgeons in surgical planning. Further studies are needed to validate these results.","PeriodicalId":15927,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Health Sciences","volume":"5 9","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-05-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Clinical and radiologic features in patients with the WHO grade I and II meningiomas\",\"authors\":\"H. Sefo, B. Rovčanin, D. Jesenković, Melika Džeko, Amra Avdić, A. Ahmetspahić, I. Omerhodžić, Ermin Hadžić, Hadžan Konjo\",\"doi\":\"10.17532/jhs.2024.2564\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Introduction: Meningiomas are the most common benign tumor of the central nervous system, accounting for 53.3% and 37.6% of all central nervous system tumors (1). The World Health Organization (WHO) Grade I meningiomas account for 80.5% of all meningiomas and are considered benign meningiomas; the WHO Grade II meningiomas account for 17.7% of all meningiomas and exhibit more aggressive behavior.\\nMethods: In the period 2015-2022, a retrospective single-center study at the clinic of neurosurgery at the Clinical Center University of Sarajevo was conducted, which included patients with a pathohistological finding of WHO Grade I or II meningioma. Depending on the pathohistological grade of the tumor, patients were divided into two groups: Grade I and Grade II patients. Patients were examined clinically and radiologically. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
简介脑膜瘤是中枢神经系统最常见的良性肿瘤,分别占所有中枢神经系统肿瘤的53.3%和37.6%(1)。世界卫生组织(WHO)Ⅰ级脑膜瘤占所有脑膜瘤的80.5%,被认为是良性脑膜瘤;WHOⅡ级脑膜瘤占所有脑膜瘤的17.7%,表现出更强的侵袭性:2015-2022年期间,萨拉热窝大学临床中心神经外科诊所开展了一项回顾性单中心研究,研究对象包括病理组织学发现为WHO I级或II级脑膜瘤的患者。根据肿瘤的病理组织学分级,患者被分为两组:I 级和 II 级患者。对患者进行临床和放射学检查。研究收集的临床数据包括性别、年龄、术前症状次数、无症状或无症状患者、术前东部合作肿瘤学组(Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group)和 Karnopsky 评分。术前头部对比磁共振成像测量了肿瘤体积、颞肌厚度(TMT)、矢状中线移位和周围脑水肿:共有80名患者参加了研究,其中68名患者为WHO I级脑膜瘤,12名患者为WHO II级脑膜瘤。我们发现 I 级脑膜瘤患者更年轻,颞肌的平均厚度在统计学上比 II 级患者更厚。TMT的增加与I级肿瘤呈显著正相关,与II级肿瘤呈负相关(p = 0.032):本研究表明,TMT 可作为脑膜瘤分级的术前放射学指标,为神经外科医生制定手术计划提供有价值的指导。还需要进一步的研究来验证这些结果。
Clinical and radiologic features in patients with the WHO grade I and II meningiomas
Introduction: Meningiomas are the most common benign tumor of the central nervous system, accounting for 53.3% and 37.6% of all central nervous system tumors (1). The World Health Organization (WHO) Grade I meningiomas account for 80.5% of all meningiomas and are considered benign meningiomas; the WHO Grade II meningiomas account for 17.7% of all meningiomas and exhibit more aggressive behavior.
Methods: In the period 2015-2022, a retrospective single-center study at the clinic of neurosurgery at the Clinical Center University of Sarajevo was conducted, which included patients with a pathohistological finding of WHO Grade I or II meningioma. Depending on the pathohistological grade of the tumor, patients were divided into two groups: Grade I and Grade II patients. Patients were examined clinically and radiologically. Clinical data collected included in the study: Gender, age, number of symptoms before surgery, whether patients were symptomatic or asymptomatic, pre-operative Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group,and Karnopsky performance scale. Pre-operative contrast magnetic resonance imaging of the head measured tumor volume, temporal muscle thickness (TMT), sagittal midline shift, and surrounding cerebral edema.
Results: A total of 80 patients were enrolled in the study, 68 with WHO Grade I and 12 with WHO Grade II meningiomas. We found that patients with Grade I meningioma were younger and that the mean thickness of the temporal muscle was statistically thicker than in patients with Grade II. Increasing TMT was significantly and positively associated with Grade I tumors and negatively associated with Grade II tumors (p = 0.032).
Conclusion: This study demonstrates that TMT can serve as a radiologic pre-operative indicator of meningioma grade and provide valuable guidance to neurosurgeons in surgical planning. Further studies are needed to validate these results.