Department of Neurosurgery, School of Medicine, Klinikum Rechts Der Isar, Technical University Munich, Ismaningerstr. 22, 81675, Munich, Germany.
Department of Neurosurgery, Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Augustenburger Platz 1, 13353, Berlin, Germany.
J Neurooncol. 2021 Jan;151(2):181-191. doi: 10.1007/s11060-020-03647-w. Epub 2020 Oct 22.
Primary malignant spinal astrocytomas present rare oncological entities with limited median survival and rapid neurological deterioration. Evidence on surgical therapy, adjuvant treatment, and neurological outcome is sparse. We aim to describe the treatment algorithm and clinical features on patients with infiltrating intramedullary astrocytomas graded WHO II-IV.
The following is a multicentered retrospective study of patients treated for spinal malignant glioma WHO II-IV in five high-volume neurosurgical departments from 2008 to 2019. Pilocytic astrocytomas were excluded. We assessed data on surgical technique, perioperative neurological status, adjuvant oncological therapy, and clinical outcome.
40 patients were included (diffuse astrocytoma WHO II n = 11, anaplastic astrocytoma WHO III n = 12, WHO IV n = 17). Only 40% were functionally independent before surgery, most patients presented with moderate disability (47.5%). Most patients underwent a biopsy (n = 18, 45%) or subtotal tumor resection (n = 15, 37.5%), and 49% of the patients deteriorated after surgery. Patients with WHO III and IV tumors were treated with combined radiochemotherapy. Median overall survival (OS) was 46.5 months in WHO II, 25.7 months in WHO III, and 7.4 months in WHO IV astrocytomas. Preoperative clinical status and WHO significantly influenced the OS, and the extent of resection did not.
Infiltrating intramedullary astrocytomas WHO II-IV present rare entities with dismal prognosis. Due to the high incidence of surgery-related neurological impairment, the aim of the surgical approach should be limited to obtaining the histological tissue via a biopsy or, tumor debulking in cases with rapidly progressive severe preoperative deficits.
原发性恶性脊髓星形细胞瘤是罕见的肿瘤实体,中位生存期有限,神经功能迅速恶化。关于手术治疗、辅助治疗和神经学结果的证据有限。我们旨在描述治疗方案和浸润性脊髓星形细胞瘤患者的临床特征,这些患者的组织学分级为世界卫生组织(WHO)Ⅱ-Ⅳ级。
这是一项多中心回顾性研究,纳入了 2008 年至 2019 年期间五个高容量神经外科部门治疗的脊髓恶性神经胶质瘤(WHO Ⅱ-IV 级)患者。排除毛细胞星形细胞瘤。我们评估了手术技术、围手术期神经状态、辅助肿瘤治疗和临床结果的数据。
共纳入 40 例患者(弥漫性星形细胞瘤 WHO Ⅱ级 n=11,间变性星形细胞瘤 WHO Ⅲ级 n=12,WHO Ⅳ级 n=17)。只有 40%的患者在手术前具有独立的功能,大多数患者表现为中度残疾(47.5%)。大多数患者接受了活检(n=18,45%)或肿瘤次全切除术(n=15,37.5%),49%的患者在手术后病情恶化。WHO Ⅲ级和Ⅳ级肿瘤患者接受了放化疗联合治疗。WHO Ⅱ级星形细胞瘤的中位总生存期(OS)为 46.5 个月,WHO Ⅲ级为 25.7 个月,WHO Ⅳ级为 7.4 个月。术前临床状态和 WHO 分级显著影响 OS,而切除术范围没有影响。
浸润性脊髓星形细胞瘤 WHO Ⅱ-IV 是罕见的实体瘤,预后极差。由于手术相关神经功能损伤的发生率较高,手术方法的目的应仅限于通过活检获得组织学组织,或在术前严重神经功能缺损迅速进展的情况下进行肿瘤部分切除。