-
Multicenter Study
Meningiomas in pregnancy: a clinicopathologic study of 17 cases.
- Eriks A Lusis, Bernd W Scheithauer, Anthony T Yachnis, Bernhard R Fischer, Michael R Chicoine, Werner Paulus, and Arie Perry.
- Department of Neurosurgery, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
- Neurosurgery. 2012 Nov 1; 71 (5): 951-61.
BackgroundDramatic growth of meningiomas is occasionally encountered during pregnancy. While cell proliferation is often assumed, hemodynamic changes have also been touted as a cause.ObjectiveWe identified 17 meningiomas resected during pregnancy or within 3 weeks post-partum and characterized them to determine the cause of occasional rapid growth in pregnancy.MethodsSeventeen tumors were identified from searches at 4 university centers. All available clinical records, radiology images, and tissue specimens were reviewed, with immunohistochemical studies performed as needed.ResultsSixteen patients underwent tumor resection and 1 died of complications prior to surgery. Average patient age was 32 years. Nine experienced onset of symptoms in the third trimester or within 8 days post-partum. Principle physical findings included visual complaints (59%) and cranial nerve palsies (29%). Ten tumors (59%) were located in the skull base region. The Ki-67 labeling index was low (0.5-3.6%) in 11 of 13 benign (grade I) tumors and elevated (11-23.2%) in 3 of 4 atypical (grade II) meningiomas. Eight (50%) tumors featured hypervascularity with at least focal CD34-positive hemangioma-like microvasculature. Fourteen (82%) showed evidence of intra- and/or extracellular edema, 1 so extensive that its meningothelial nature was not apparent. Five tumors (29%) exhibited intratumoral hemorrhage and/or necrosis.ConclusionOur series suggests that pregnancy-associated meningiomas located in the skull base are likely to require surgical intervention for visual complaints and cranial nerve palsies. The rapid tumor growth is more often due to potentially reversible hemodynamic changes rather than hormone-induced cellular proliferation.
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