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- Andrew T Hale, Li Wang, Megan K Strother, and Lola B Chambless.
- Department of Neurosurgery, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, USA; Medical Scientist Training Program, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN, USA. Electronic address: Andrew.hale@vanderbilt.edu.
- J Clin Neurosci. 2018 Feb 1; 48: 71-75.
AbstractAtypical meningioma has an aggressive clinical course. Distinguishing atypical from benign meningioma preoperatively could affect surgical planning and improve treatment outcomes. In this study, we examined whether pre-operative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) features could distinguish between benign and atypical meningioma. Imaging factors analyzed included peritumoral edema, the presence of a draining vein, tumor necrosis, tumor location and tumor volume. Using univariate analysis, the most striking predictor of grade was tumor volume (p < .001). When adjusting for the degree of peritumoral edema, volume remained a positive predictor of higher histological grade meningioma (p = .042) and was the strongest single predictor of higher-grade meningioma in this study. Additional imaging features associated with increased risk for atypical pathology in univariate analysis included the presence of tumor necrosis (p = .012), peritumoral edema (p = .022) and location along the falx and convexity (p = .026). Despite statistically significant associations using univariate analysis, in multivariate analysis, we found that only presence of peritumoral edema was predictive of a higher-grade meningioma. Further multivariate analyses suggests that edema, draining vein and necrosis are all positive predictors of tumor volume (p < .0001). Overall, these data suggest that radiographic features including presence of tumor necrosis, and tumor location along the falx or convexity may be predictive of higher-grade meningioma when considered alone. However, most strikingly, our data point to tumor volume as the most robust pre-operative indicator of higher-grade meningioma.Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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