2020
DOI: 10.1007/s11060-020-03609-2
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The ability to return to work: a patient-centered outcome parameter following glioma surgery

Abstract: Background With refinements in diagnosis and therapy of gliomas, the importance of survival time as the sole outcome parameter has decreased, and patient-centered outcome parameters have gained interest. Pursuing a profession is an indispensable component of human happiness. The aim of this study was to analyze the professional outcomes besides their neuro-oncological and functional evaluation after surgery for gliomas in eloquent areas. Methods We assessed neuro-oncological and functional outcomes of patien… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(26 citation statements)
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References 43 publications
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“…This result is similar to those of other studies in which the percentage varies from 43 to 86% although it is calculated after a longer period from surgery (Kalkanis et al, 2000;Akagami et al, 2002;Krupp et al, 2009;Schepers et al, 2018;Thurin et al, 2019). In the glioma group, 31% of patients returned to work, and this percentage is lower than in studies on low-grade glioma or mixed diagnosis (Mandonnet et al, 2015;Muto et al, 2018;Ng et al, 2019;Senft et al, 2020;Yoshida et al, 2020) but very similar to other studies on patients with glioblastoma (Gzell et al, 2014;Starnoni et al, 2018), and this result could be explained by the higher rate of high-grade glioma in our sample (75.9%). Among people returning to work, most patients with glioma and fewer than half of patients with meningioma changed their working tasks and reduced working time.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
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“…This result is similar to those of other studies in which the percentage varies from 43 to 86% although it is calculated after a longer period from surgery (Kalkanis et al, 2000;Akagami et al, 2002;Krupp et al, 2009;Schepers et al, 2018;Thurin et al, 2019). In the glioma group, 31% of patients returned to work, and this percentage is lower than in studies on low-grade glioma or mixed diagnosis (Mandonnet et al, 2015;Muto et al, 2018;Ng et al, 2019;Senft et al, 2020;Yoshida et al, 2020) but very similar to other studies on patients with glioblastoma (Gzell et al, 2014;Starnoni et al, 2018), and this result could be explained by the higher rate of high-grade glioma in our sample (75.9%). Among people returning to work, most patients with glioma and fewer than half of patients with meningioma changed their working tasks and reduced working time.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…Differently from our study, Starnoni et al report a lower preoperative KPS scores in patients with glioblastoma not returning to work at a follow-up of 6 months (78.5 vs. 85.1) (Starnoni et al, 2018 ); Muto et al find a lower median postoperative KPS in patients with low-grade glioma unable to work at a follow-up of 6.9 months (90 vs. 100) (Muto et al, 2018 ); and Yoshida et al report high preoperative general memory scores among the predictive factors of the return to work at 1 year after surgery (Yoshida et al, 2020 ). In our study, the professional category was not associated with return to work, but conflicting results exist in the literature on the influence of these variables (Starnoni et al, 2018 ; Ng et al, 2019 ; Senft et al, 2020 ; Yoshida et al, 2020 ). Emotional distress was also not significantly associated with going back to work even if we can observe worse scores in patients with glioma who did not return to work.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 65%
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“…Contrasting the subjective reporting of HrQoL and FD, return to work (RTW) seems more pragmatic, has been used for several neurosurgical pathologies 50‐53 and could be an indicator of the long‐term functional recovery in meningioma patients 26 . However, socioeconomic factors may induce bias 54,55 and heterogeneous social system and financial compensations among countries may cause disparities and decrease the validity of RTW as an objective assessment of HrQoL and FD.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%