Moliterno Jennifer, Cope William P, Vartanian Emma D, Reiner Anne S, Kellen Roselyn, Ogilvie Shahiba Q, Huse Jason T, Gutin Philip H
Department of Neurosurgery, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut; and
Departments of 2 Neurosurgery.
J Neurosurg. 2015 Jul;123(1):23-30. doi: 10.3171/2014.10.JNS14502. Epub 2015 Apr 10.
While most meningiomas are benign, 1%-3% display anaplastic features, with little current understanding regarding the molecular mechanisms underlying their formation. In a large single-center cohort, the authors tested the hypothesis that two distinct subtypes of anaplastic meningiomas, those that arise de novo and those that progress from lower grade tumors, exist and exhibit different clinical behavior.
Pathology reports and clinical data of 37 patients treated between 1999 and 2012 for anaplastic meningioma at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC) were retrospectively reviewed. Patients were divided into those whose tumors arose de novo and those whose tumors progressed from previously documented benign or atypical meningiomas.
Overall, the median age at diagnosis was 59 years and 57% of patients were female. Most patients (38%) underwent 2 craniotomies (range 1-5 surgeries) aimed at gross-total resection (GTR; 59%), which afforded better survival when compared with subtotal resection according to Kaplan-Meier estimates (median overall survival [OS] 3.2 vs 1.3 years, respectively; p = 0.04, log-rank test). Twenty-three patients (62%) presented with apparently de novo anaplastic meningiomas. Compared with patients whose tumors had progressed from a lower grade, those patients with de novo tumors were significantly more likely to be female (70% vs 36%, respectively; p = 0.04), experience better survival (median OS 3.0 vs 2.4 years, respectively; p = 0.03, log-rank test), and harbor cerebral hemispheric as opposed to skull base tumors (91% vs 43%, respectively; p = 0.002).
Based on this single-center experience at MSKCC, anaplastic meningiomas, similar to glial tumors, can arise de novo or progress from lower grade tumors. These tumor groups appear to have distinct clinical behavior. De novo tumors may well be molecularly distinct, which is under further investigation. Aggressive GTR appears to confer an OS advantage in patients with anaplastic meningioma, and this is likely independent of tumor progression status. Similarly, those patients with de novo tumors experience a survival advantage likely independent of extent of resection.
虽然大多数脑膜瘤是良性的,但1%-3%具有间变性特征,目前对其形成的分子机制了解甚少。在一个大型单中心队列中,作者检验了以下假设:存在两种不同亚型的间变性脑膜瘤,即原发性间变性脑膜瘤和由低级别肿瘤进展而来的间变性脑膜瘤,且它们表现出不同的临床行为。
对1999年至2012年期间在纪念斯隆凯特琳癌症中心(MSKCC)接受治疗的37例间变性脑膜瘤患者的病理报告和临床数据进行回顾性分析。患者被分为肿瘤原发性发生组和肿瘤由先前记录的良性或非典型脑膜瘤进展而来组。
总体而言,诊断时的中位年龄为59岁,57%的患者为女性。大多数患者(38%)接受了2次开颅手术(手术范围为1-5次),目标是全切(GTR;59%),根据Kaplan-Meier估计,与次全切相比,全切可提供更好的生存率(中位总生存期[OS]分别为3.2年和1.3年;p = 0.04,对数秩检验)。23例患者(62%)表现为原发性间变性脑膜瘤。与肿瘤由低级别进展而来的患者相比,原发性肿瘤患者更可能为女性(分别为70%和36%;p = 0.04),生存期更好(中位OS分别为3.0年和2.4年;p = 0.03,对数秩检验),且肿瘤位于脑半球而非颅底(分别为91%和43%;p = 0.002)。
基于MSKCC的这一单中心经验,间变性脑膜瘤与胶质瘤相似,可原发性发生或由低级别肿瘤进展而来。这些肿瘤组似乎具有不同的临床行为。原发性肿瘤在分子层面可能存在差异,这正在进一步研究中。积极的全切似乎能使间变性脑膜瘤患者获得生存优势,且这可能与肿瘤进展状态无关。同样,原发性肿瘤患者的生存优势可能与切除范围无关。