“…Surgical resection has been particularly effective at controlling medically refractory seizures, resulting in near-seizure-free status, or a substantial reduction in seizure frequency and intensity, in nearly all patients. 32,33 Although large preoperative tumor size (diameter >5-6 cm) is consistently identified as a poor prognostic factor for survival, 3,6 the effect on clinical outcome of reduced tumor size remains controversial, and several studies have produced inconsistent results (Table 1) www.nature.com/clinicalpractice/neuro resection on outcomes in low-grade glioma and found that a preponderance of modern studies support extensive resection over biopsy alone. 19 Leighton and co-workers, who retrospectively studied 167 consecutive patients treated at the London Regional Cancer Centre, ON, Canada, for low-grade glioma over a period of 16 years found, on both univariate and multivariate analysis, that minimal postoperative residual tumor was associated with significantly improved 5-year OS (82% vs 64%; P = 0.008 on univariate analysis, P = 0.006 on multivariate analysis).…”