Chotai Silky, Schwartz Theodore H
Department of Neurosurgery, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN 37232, USA.
Department of Neurosurgery, Otolaryngology and Neuroscience, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York-Presbyterian Hospital, New York, NY 10065, USA.
Cancers (Basel). 2022 Apr 15;14(8):2007. doi: 10.3390/cancers14082007.
The Simpson Grade was introduced in the era of limited resources, outdated techniques, and rudimentary surgical and imaging technologies. With the advent of modern techniques including pre- and post-operative imaging, microsurgical and endoscopic techniques, advanced histopathology and molecular analysis and adjuvant radiotherapy, the utility of the Simpson Grade scale for prognostication of recurrence after meningioma resection has become less useful. While the extent of resection remains an important factor in reducing recurrence, a subjective naked-eye criteria to Grade extent of resection cannot be generalized to all meningiomas regardless of their location or biology. Achieving the highest Simpson Grade resection should not always be the goal of surgery. It is prudent to take advantage of all the tools in the neurosurgeons’ armamentarium to aim for maximal safe resection of meningiomas. The primary goal of this study was to review the literature highlighting the Simpson Grade and its association with recurrence in modern meningioma practice. A PubMed search was conducted using terms “Simpson”, “Grade”, “meningioma”, “recurrence”, “gross total resection”, “extent of resection” “human”. A separate search using the terms “intraoperative imaging”, “intraoperative MRI” and “meningioma” were conducted. All studies reporting prognostic value of Simpson Grades were retrospective in nature. Simpson Grade I, II and III can be defined as gross total resection and were associated with lower recurrence compared to Simpson Grade IV or subtotal resection. The volume of residual tumor, a factor not considered in the Simpson Grade, is also a useful predictor of recurrence. Subtotal resection followed by stereotactic radiosurgery has similar recurrence-free survival as gross total resection. In current modern meningioma surgery, the Simpson Grade is no longer relevant and should be replaced with a grading scale that relies on post-operative MRI imaging that assess GTR versus STR and then divides STR into > or <4−5 cm3, in combination with modern molecular-based techniques for recurrence risk stratification.
辛普森分级是在资源有限、技术过时以及外科手术和成像技术简陋的时代引入的。随着包括术前和术后成像、显微外科和内镜技术、先进的组织病理学和分子分析以及辅助放疗等现代技术的出现,辛普森分级量表在预测脑膜瘤切除术后复发方面的实用性已变得不那么有用。虽然切除范围仍然是降低复发的一个重要因素,但用主观的肉眼标准来分级切除范围,不能一概而论地应用于所有脑膜瘤,无论其位置或生物学特性如何。实现最高的辛普森分级切除并不总是手术的目标。明智的做法是利用神经外科医生的所有工具,以实现脑膜瘤的最大安全切除。本研究的主要目的是回顾强调辛普森分级及其与现代脑膜瘤治疗中复发相关性的文献。使用“辛普森”“分级”“脑膜瘤”“复发”“全切除”“切除范围”“人类”等术语在PubMed上进行了搜索。另外使用“术中成像”“术中磁共振成像”和“脑膜瘤”等术语进行了搜索。所有报告辛普森分级预后价值的研究本质上都是回顾性的。辛普森I级、II级和III级可定义为全切除,与辛普森IV级或次全切除相比,复发率较低。残留肿瘤体积是辛普森分级中未考虑的一个因素,也是复发的一个有用预测指标。次全切除后进行立体定向放射外科治疗的无复发生存率与全切除相似。在当前的现代脑膜瘤手术中,辛普森分级已不再适用,应该用一种基于术后磁共振成像的分级量表来取代,该量表评估全切除与次全切除,然后将次全切除分为>或<4−5 cm³,并结合基于现代分子的技术进行复发风险分层。