Sergey Gorelyshev, Alexander N Savateev, Nadezhda Mazerkina, Olga Medvedeva, Alexander N Konovalov
{"title":"颅咽管瘤:手术和放疗。","authors":"Sergey Gorelyshev, Alexander N Savateev, Nadezhda Mazerkina, Olga Medvedeva, Alexander N Konovalov","doi":"10.1007/978-3-030-99166-1_3","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Taking into account the benign nature of craniopharyngiomas, the main method of treatment is the resection of the tumor. However, the tendency of these tumors to invade critical structures (such as optic pathways, the hypothalamic-pituitary system, the Willis circle vessels) often limits the possibility of a radical surgery.Craniopharyngiomas of the third ventricle represent the greatest challenge for surgery. After radical surgery, hypothalamic disorders often occur, including not only obesity but also cognitive, emotional, mental, and metabolic disturbances. Metabolic disorders associated with damage to the hypothalamus progress after surgery and lead to impaired functions of the internal organs. This process is irreversible and, in many cases, becomes the direct cause of mortality. The life expectancy of patients with the surgically affected hypothalamus is significantly shorter than in patients with preserved diencephalic function. The incidence of hypothalamic disorders after surgery can reach 40%.Even with macroscopically total resection, craniopharyngiomas can recur in 10-30% of cases, and in the presence of tumor remnants and with no further radiation treatment, the risk of recurrence significantly increases to up to 50-85% according to various studies. For this reason, the observation of patients with residual tumors after surgery is an incorrect strategy.Radiation therapy significantly improves progression-free survival (PFS), and the use of stereotactic irradiation techniques ensures conformity of irradiation of tumor remnants with a complicated shape and location (Iwata H et al., J Neurooncol 106(3):571-577, 2012; Aggarwal et al., Pituitary 16(1):26-33, 2013; Savateev et al., Zh Vopr Neirokhir Im N N Burdenko 81(3):94-106; 2017), which potentially reduces the risk of undesirable postradiation effects. Therefore, the quality of life in patients with craniopharyngiomas infiltrating the hypothalamus is significantly higher after non-radical operations with subsequent stereotactic radiation than after a total or subtotal removal.</p>","PeriodicalId":72077,"journal":{"name":"Advances and technical standards in neurosurgery","volume":"45 ","pages":"97-137"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Craniopharyngiomas: Surgery and Radiotherapy.\",\"authors\":\"Sergey Gorelyshev, Alexander N Savateev, Nadezhda Mazerkina, Olga Medvedeva, Alexander N Konovalov\",\"doi\":\"10.1007/978-3-030-99166-1_3\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Taking into account the benign nature of craniopharyngiomas, the main method of treatment is the resection of the tumor. However, the tendency of these tumors to invade critical structures (such as optic pathways, the hypothalamic-pituitary system, the Willis circle vessels) often limits the possibility of a radical surgery.Craniopharyngiomas of the third ventricle represent the greatest challenge for surgery. After radical surgery, hypothalamic disorders often occur, including not only obesity but also cognitive, emotional, mental, and metabolic disturbances. Metabolic disorders associated with damage to the hypothalamus progress after surgery and lead to impaired functions of the internal organs. This process is irreversible and, in many cases, becomes the direct cause of mortality. The life expectancy of patients with the surgically affected hypothalamus is significantly shorter than in patients with preserved diencephalic function. The incidence of hypothalamic disorders after surgery can reach 40%.Even with macroscopically total resection, craniopharyngiomas can recur in 10-30% of cases, and in the presence of tumor remnants and with no further radiation treatment, the risk of recurrence significantly increases to up to 50-85% according to various studies. For this reason, the observation of patients with residual tumors after surgery is an incorrect strategy.Radiation therapy significantly improves progression-free survival (PFS), and the use of stereotactic irradiation techniques ensures conformity of irradiation of tumor remnants with a complicated shape and location (Iwata H et al., J Neurooncol 106(3):571-577, 2012; Aggarwal et al., Pituitary 16(1):26-33, 2013; Savateev et al., Zh Vopr Neirokhir Im N N Burdenko 81(3):94-106; 2017), which potentially reduces the risk of undesirable postradiation effects. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
考虑到颅咽管瘤的良性性质,治疗的主要方法是切除肿瘤。然而,这些肿瘤侵袭关键结构(如视神经通路、下丘脑-垂体系统、威利斯血管)的倾向往往限制了根治性手术的可能性。第三脑室颅咽管瘤是手术的最大挑战。根治性手术后经常出现下丘脑紊乱,不仅包括肥胖,还包括认知、情绪、精神和代谢紊乱。与下丘脑损伤相关的代谢紊乱在手术后进展并导致内脏功能受损。这一过程是不可逆转的,在许多情况下,成为死亡的直接原因。手术影响下丘脑的患者的预期寿命明显短于保留间脑功能的患者。手术后下丘脑紊乱的发生率可达40%。即使进行了宏观全切除,颅咽管瘤仍可在10-30%的病例中复发,并且在存在肿瘤残余且未进一步放射治疗的情况下,根据各种研究,复发的风险显著增加,可达50-85%。因此,对术后残留肿瘤患者的观察是一种不正确的策略。放射治疗可显著提高无进展生存期(PFS),使用立体定向放射技术可确保对形状和位置复杂的肿瘤残余物的照射一致性(Iwata et al., J neurooncology, 106(3):571-577, 2012;Aggarwal et al.,垂体16(1):26-33,2013;[2]张建军,张建军,张建军,等。中国生物医学工程学报,31 (3):394 - 396;2017年),这可能会降低不良辐射效应的风险。因此,浸润下丘脑的颅咽管瘤患者在非根治性手术和随后的立体定向放疗后的生活质量明显高于全部或次全切除。
Taking into account the benign nature of craniopharyngiomas, the main method of treatment is the resection of the tumor. However, the tendency of these tumors to invade critical structures (such as optic pathways, the hypothalamic-pituitary system, the Willis circle vessels) often limits the possibility of a radical surgery.Craniopharyngiomas of the third ventricle represent the greatest challenge for surgery. After radical surgery, hypothalamic disorders often occur, including not only obesity but also cognitive, emotional, mental, and metabolic disturbances. Metabolic disorders associated with damage to the hypothalamus progress after surgery and lead to impaired functions of the internal organs. This process is irreversible and, in many cases, becomes the direct cause of mortality. The life expectancy of patients with the surgically affected hypothalamus is significantly shorter than in patients with preserved diencephalic function. The incidence of hypothalamic disorders after surgery can reach 40%.Even with macroscopically total resection, craniopharyngiomas can recur in 10-30% of cases, and in the presence of tumor remnants and with no further radiation treatment, the risk of recurrence significantly increases to up to 50-85% according to various studies. For this reason, the observation of patients with residual tumors after surgery is an incorrect strategy.Radiation therapy significantly improves progression-free survival (PFS), and the use of stereotactic irradiation techniques ensures conformity of irradiation of tumor remnants with a complicated shape and location (Iwata H et al., J Neurooncol 106(3):571-577, 2012; Aggarwal et al., Pituitary 16(1):26-33, 2013; Savateev et al., Zh Vopr Neirokhir Im N N Burdenko 81(3):94-106; 2017), which potentially reduces the risk of undesirable postradiation effects. Therefore, the quality of life in patients with craniopharyngiomas infiltrating the hypothalamus is significantly higher after non-radical operations with subsequent stereotactic radiation than after a total or subtotal removal.