To address the question of whether radiation therapy is beneficial in the management of partially resected meningiomas, we reviewed the records of all patients admitted to the University of California, San Francisco, between 1968 and 1978 who had a diagnosis of intracranial meningioma. The patients were divided into three groups: 51 patients had gross total resection and did not receive radiation therapy, 30 patients had subtotal resection and no radiation therapy, and 54 patients had subtotal resection followed by radiation therapy. The subtotal resection groups were similar in average age, male:female ratio, and tumor location, which allowed a valid comparison of the effects of irradiation. The recurrence rate in the total resection group was 4% (2 of 51 patients). Among patients in the subtotal resection groups, 60% of nonirradiated patients had a recurrence, compared with only 32% of the irradiated patients. The median time to recurrence was significantly longer in the irradiated group than in the nonirradiated group (125 vs. 66 months, P less than 0.05). There was no complication related to irradiation. These results provide convincing evidence that radiation therapy is beneficial in the treatment of partially resected meningiomas.
One hundred forty-seven patients with astrocytoma were treated between 1942 and 1967. There were 25 postoperative deaths. The 14 patients in whom the tumor was thought tohave been completely removed were not irradiated and all survived 5 years or longer. Seventy-one of the 108 patients with imcompletely excised lesions received radiation therapy. The 5-year survival rate for those with imcomplete resection alone was 19%, compared to 46% when irradiation was given. Based on observations up to 20 years, after incomplete removal postoperative irradiation significally prolonged useful life and may have lead to permanent control in some. There was no evidence of radiation damage. Most of these tumors were fibrillary astrocytomas, and the results apply particularly to this histologic type. Only 1 of 11 patients with gemistocytic astrocytoma survivied 5 years. The survival rate for Grade i tumors was appreciably greater than for Grade iilesions; in both grades, it was improved by irradiation.
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