Radiochemotherapy (RT) with concomitant followed by monthly temozolomide (TMZ) chemotherapy is the gold standard for the treatment of glioblastoma (GBM) patients. GBM patients can experience transient radiological deterioration after concurrent RT/TMZ that stabilizes or even resolves after additional cycles of adjuvant TMZ, a phenomenon defined as radiological pseudoprogression. The aim of this retrospective study was to identify a reliable marker associated with pseudoprogression processes. Patients with histologically proven newly diagnosed GBM were identified from a retrospective database between 2005 and 2009. Predictive factors for pseudoprogression were analyzed from clinical, radiological and biological data. Of the 130 analyzed patients, 63 underwent RT/TMZ treatment followed by cycles of TMZ and were evaluated for radiological responses every two months by magnetic resonance imaging. Early progression was confirmed in 52% (33/63) of the patients, and, within this group, 21% (7/33) displayed evidence of pseudo-progression. The predictive factors were evidenced in terms of clinical or radiological findings. In GBM patients, the level of cellular proliferation (Ki67 indices) emerged as a statistically significant prognostic marker for distinguishing pseudoprogression from actual progression. Our observation, suggesting that GBM associated with a high level of cellular proliferation may differentiate tumor progression from pseudoprogression, warrants further investigation in a large multi-center prospective study.
Simultaneous skull tumor resection and prosthetic reconstruction are possible when a virtual preoperative tumor resection is performed, and a corresponding customized prosthesis subsequently is manufactured and used.
Background: Thermic rhizolysis is a reliable therapy for pharmaco-resistant trigeminal neuralgia (TN). Temperature, duration of electrocautery and needle location can influence the efficacy and complications of the therapy.
Methods:We performed experimental thermocautery on egg white with increasing parameters of time (30-120 s) and temperature (60-95°C); we analysed the shape, size and volume of the thermic lesions produced. We developed a surgical procedure to assess peroperatively the probable thermocoagulation field and its geometric relations with the trigeminal roots and other anatomical structures of Meckel's cave, and we individually adapted the parameters of rhizolysis to optimize the results. This procedure was applied on 22 patients with TN.
Results:The volume of the lesions produced by rhizolysis on egg white had a spheroidal shape and increased linearly with the level of temperature and the time of electrocautery from 1.595 mm 3 (SD 0.38) to 54.454 mm 3 (SD 10.41); higher temperatures induced larger thermocoagulation fields than longer time periods.The calculated volumes measured at all levels of temperature and time were applied in vivo on the patient stereotactic planning during the thermocoagulation procedure in order to select the optimal parameters for rhizolysis. The median values used were 75°C (range 70-85°C) and 60 s (range 45-60 s). At 6-month follow-up, pain outcome was Barrow-Neurological-Institute class-I for 72.7%, IIIa for 22.7% and IIIb for 4.6%; the only complication due to rhizolysis was mild facial numbness in 13 subjects (59%) at 6-month follow-up.
Conclusion: We conclude that geometric analysis of the position of the electrode before trigeminal thermocoagulation with morphometric-related individual adaptation of treatment parameters could avoid serious injuries and optimize pain control. Significance: We have adapted the technique of radiofrequency rhizolysis for TN. Our procedure allows individual peroperative adaptation of the parameters of thermocoagulation, according to the specific position of the electrode during rhizolysis. Preliminary results on a series of 22 patients have shown promising results.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.