Faculty of Health: Medicine, Dentistry and Human Sciences, The Institute of Translational and Stratified Medicine, University of Plymouth, Plymouth, UK.
South West Neurosurgery Centre, University Hospitals Plymouth NHS Trust, Plymouth, UK.
Br J Neurosurg. 2021 Dec;35(6):696-702. doi: 10.1080/02688697.2021.1940853. Epub 2021 Jun 21.
There are a number of prognostic markers (methylation, CDKN2A/B) described to be useful for the stratification of meningiomas. However, there are currently no clinically validated biomarkers for the preoperative prediction of meningioma grade, which is determined by the histological analysis of tissue obtained from surgery. Accurate preoperative biomarkers would inform the pre-surgical assessment of these tumours, their grade and prognosis and refine the decision-making process for treatment. This review is focused on the more controversial grade II tumours, where debate still surrounds the need for adjuvant therapy, repeat surgery and frequency of follow up.
We evaluated current literature for potential grade II meningioma clinical biomarkers, focusing on radiological, biochemical (blood assays) and immunohistochemical markers for diagnosis and prognosis, and how they can be used to differentiate them from grade I meningiomas using the post-2016 WHO classification. To do this, we conducted a PUBMED, SCOPUS, OVID SP, SciELO, and INFORMA search using the keywords; 'biomarker', 'diagnosis', 'atypical', 'meningioma', 'prognosis', 'grade I', 'grade 1', 'grade II' and 'grade 2'.
We identified 1779 papers, 20 of which were eligible for systematic review according to the defined inclusion and exclusion criteria. From the review, we identified radiological characteristics (irregular tumour shape, tumour growth rate faster than 3cm/year, high peri-tumoural blood flow), blood markers (low serum TIMP1/2, high serum HER2, high plasma Fibulin-2) and histological markers (low H3K27me3, low SMARCE1, low AKAP12, high ARIDB4) that may aid in differentiating grade II from grade I meningiomas.
Being able to predict meningioma grade at presentation using the radiological and blood markers described may influence management as the likely grade II tumours will be followed up or treated more aggressively, while the histological markers may prognosticate progression or post-treatment recurrence. This to an extent offers a more personalised treatment approach for patients.
有许多预后标志物(甲基化、CDKN2A/B)被描述为有助于脑膜瘤的分层。然而,目前尚无经临床验证的生物标志物可用于预测脑膜瘤的分级,而分级则是通过手术获得的组织的组织学分析来确定的。准确的术前生物标志物将为这些肿瘤的术前评估、分级和预后提供信息,并完善治疗决策过程。本综述重点关注更具争议性的 II 级肿瘤,目前仍存在关于辅助治疗、再次手术和随访频率的争论。
我们评估了当前文献中潜在的 II 级脑膜瘤临床生物标志物,重点关注影像学、生化(血液检测)和免疫组织化学标志物的诊断和预后,以及如何根据 2016 年后的 WHO 分类将它们与 I 级脑膜瘤区分开来。为此,我们使用了“biomarker”、“diagnosis”、“atypical”、“meningioma”、“prognosis”、“grade I”、“grade 1”、“grade II”和“grade 2”等关键词在 PUBMED、SCOPUS、OVID SP、SciELO 和 INFORMA 上进行了搜索。
我们共检索到 1779 篇论文,其中 20 篇符合纳入和排除标准,适合进行系统综述。从综述中,我们确定了一些有助于区分 II 级和 I 级脑膜瘤的影像学特征(肿瘤形状不规则、肿瘤生长速度超过 3cm/年、高肿瘤周围血流)、血液标志物(低血清 TIMP1/2、高血清 HER2、高血浆 Fibulin-2)和组织学标志物(低 H3K27me3、低 SMARCE1、低 AKAP12、高 ARIDB4)。
能够使用所描述的影像学和血液标志物在术前预测脑膜瘤的分级,可能会影响管理,因为可能的 II 级肿瘤将得到更密切的随访或更积极的治疗,而组织学标志物可能会预测进展或治疗后复发。在某种程度上,这为患者提供了更个性化的治疗方法。