The management of chordomas and chondrosarcomas involving the cranial base remains controversial. The options for therapy include biopsy, partial resection, radical resection, and various forms of radiotherapy. In this article, we analyze the outcome of 60 patients with cranial base chordoma or chondrosarcoma treated with extensive surgical resection between 1984 and 1993. Forty-six patients had chordomas, and 14 had low-grade chondrosarcomas; 50% of these patients had been treated previously. Preoperative studies included computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, cerebral angiography, and balloon occlusion test of the internal carotid artery, as indicated. Magnetic resonance imaging was performed on all patients during follow-up. The surgical approaches used for tumor resection were predominantly the following: subtemporal, transzygomatic, transcavernous, and transpetrous apex; subtemporal and infratemporal; extended frontal; and extreme lateral transcondylar. Staged operations with a combination of approaches were used when necessary (52% of cases) to remove a tumor more completely. Statistical analysis was done by the chi 2 test and correlation matrix. Sixty-seven percent of the patients had total or near-total resection. Twenty percent of the patients received postoperative radiotherapy. Eleven patients died during the postoperative follow-up period, nine with chordomas and two with chondrosarcomas. Three patients died because of systemic complications within 3 months after surgery, five died because of tumor recurrence, one died from unrelated causes, and two died from late complications of radiotherapy. The recurrence-free survival rate for all tumors was 80% at 3 years and 76% at 5 years. Chondrosarcomas had a better prognosis than chordomas (recurrence-free survival rates, 90% at 5 years and 65% at 5 years, respectively; P = 0.09). Patients who had undergone previous surgery had a greater risk of recurrence (5-year recurrence-free survival rate, 64%) than did patients who had not undergone previous surgery (5-year recurrence-free survival rate, 93%; P < 0.05). Patients with total or near-total resection had a better 5-year recurrence-free survival rate (84%) than did patients with partial or subtotal resection (64%) (P < 0.05). Postoperative leakage of cerebrospinal fluid was the most frequent complication (30% of patients) and was found to increase the risk of permanent disability. Patients who had undergone previous radiotherapy had a greater risk of death in the postoperative period (within 3 months of their operations) and during follow-up. However, total or near-total resection did not increase the rate of postoperative disability.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Sphenoorbital meningiomas are a distinct category of tumors complicated by potentially extensive hyperostosis of the skull base. Successful resection requires extensive intra- and extradural surgery, necessitating drilling of the optic canal and an orbital osteotomy within anatomical limitations. The bone resection requires reconstruction with autograft, allografts, or alloplast for improved orbital function. All aspects of the clinical triad improved. A radical resection can be achieved with low morbidity, providing a significantly improved clinical outcome in the long-term period.
Chordomas are rare, malignant bone tumors of the skull-base and axial skeleton. Until recently, there was no consensus among experts regarding appropriate clinical management of chordoma, resulting in inconsistent care and suboptimal outcomes for many patients. To address this shortcoming, the European Society of Medical Oncology (ESMO) and the Chordoma Foundation, the global chordoma patient advocacy group, convened a multi-disciplinary group of chordoma specialists to define by consensus evidence-based best practices for the optimal approach to chordoma. In January 2015, the first recommendations of this group were published, covering the management of primary and metastatic chordomas. Additional evidence and further discussion were needed to develop recommendations about the management of local-regional failures. Thus, ESMO and CF convened a second consensus group meeting in November 2015 to address the treatment of locally relapsed chordoma. This meeting involved over 60 specialists from Europe, the United States and Japan with expertise in treatment of patients with chordoma. The consensus achieved during that meeting is the subject of the present publication and complements the recommendations of the first position paper.
Radical excision is the ideal surgical goal in the treatment of clival chordomas and can be achieved with reasonable risks. Several different surgical approaches may be necessary to accomplish this.
PURPOSE Meningiomas are the most frequent primary intracranial tumors. Patient outcome varies widely from benign to highly aggressive, ultimately fatal courses. Reliable identification of risk of progression for individual patients is of pivotal importance. However, only biomarkers for highly aggressive tumors are established ( CDKN2A/B and TERT), whereas no molecularly based stratification exists for the broad spectrum of patients with low- and intermediate-risk meningioma. METHODS DNA methylation data and copy-number information were generated for 3,031 meningiomas (2,868 patients), and mutation data for 858 samples. DNA methylation subgroups, copy-number variations (CNVs), mutations, and WHO grading were analyzed. Prediction power for outcome was assessed in a retrospective cohort of 514 patients, validated on a retrospective cohort of 184, and on a prospective cohort of 287 multicenter cases. RESULTS Both CNV- and methylation family–based subgrouping independently resulted in increased prediction accuracy of risk of recurrence compared with the WHO classification (c-indexes WHO 2016, CNV, and methylation family 0.699, 0.706, and 0.721, respectively). Merging all risk stratification approaches into an integrated molecular-morphologic score resulted in further substantial increase in accuracy (c-index 0.744). This integrated score consistently provided superior accuracy in all three cohorts, significantly outperforming WHO grading (c-index difference P = .005). Besides the overall stratification advantage, the integrated score separates more precisely for risk of progression at the diagnostically challenging interface of WHO grade 1 and grade 2 tumors (hazard ratio 4.34 [2.48-7.57] and 3.34 [1.28-8.72] retrospective and prospective validation cohorts, respectively). CONCLUSION Merging these layers of histologic and molecular data into an integrated, three-tiered score significantly improves the precision in meningioma stratification. Implementation into diagnostic routine informs clinical decision making for patients with meningioma on the basis of robust outcome prediction.
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