Impact of Laterality on Surgical Outcome of Glioblastoma Patients: A Retrospective Single-Center Study

被引:15
作者
Coluccia, Daniel [1 ,2 ]
Roth, Tabitha [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Marbacher, Serge [1 ,2 ]
Fandino, Javier [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Kantonsspital Aarau, Dept Neurosurg, Aarau, Switzerland
[2] Kantonsspital Aarau, Brain Tumor Ctr, Aarau, Switzerland
[3] Dept Hlth Sci & Technol, Zurich, Switzerland
关键词
Dominant hemisphere; Extent of resection; Glioblastoma; Laterality; HIGH-GRADE GLIOMAS; RESECTION; SURVIVAL;
D O I
10.1016/j.wneu.2018.02.084
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
BACKGROUND: Resection of left hemisphere (LH) tumors is often complicated by the risks of causing language dysfunction. Although neurosurgeons' concerns when operating on the presumed dominant hemisphere are well known, literature evaluating laterality as a predictive surgical parameter in glioblastoma (GB) patients is sparse. We evaluated whether tumor laterality correlated with surgical performance, functional outcome, and survival, METHODS: AU patients with GB treated at our institution between 2006 and 2016 were reviewed. Analysis comprised clinical characteristics, extent of resection (EOR), neurologic outcome, and survival in relation to tumor lateralization. RESULTS: Two hundred thirty-five patients were included. Right hemisphere (RH) tumors were larger and more frequently extended into the frontal lobe. Preoperatively, limb paresis was more frequent in RH, whereas language deficits were more frequent in LH tumors (P = 0.0009 and P < 0.0001, respectively). At 6 months after resection, LH patients presented Lower Karnofsky Performance Status (KPS) score (P 0.036). More patients with LH tumors experienced dysphasia (P < 0.0001), and no difference was seen for paresis. Average FOR was comparable, but complete resection wag achieved less often in LH tumors (37.7 vs. 64.8%; P = 0.0028). Although overall survival did not differ between groups, progression-free survival was shorter in LH tumors (7.4 vs. 10.1 months; P = 0.0225). CONCLUSIONS: Patients with LH tumors had a pronounced KPS score decline and shorter progression-free survival without effects on overall survival. This observation might partially be attributed to a more conservative surgical resection. Further investigation is needed to assess whether systematic use of awake surgery and intraoperative mapping results in increased FOR and improved quality survival of patients with GB.
引用
收藏
页码:E121 / E128
页数:8
相关论文
共 18 条
[1]   Establishing percent resection and residual volume thresholds affecting survival and recurrence for patients with newly diagnosed intracranial glioblastoma [J].
Chaichana, Kaisorn L. ;
Jusue-Torres, Ignacio ;
Navarro-Ramirez, Rodrigo ;
Raza, Shaan M. ;
Pascual-Gallego, Maria ;
Ibrahim, Aly ;
Hernandez-Hermann, Marta ;
Gomez, Luis ;
Ye, Xiaobu ;
Weingart, Jon D. ;
Olivi, Alessandro ;
Blakeley, Jaishri ;
Gallia, Gary L. ;
Lim, Michael ;
Brem, Henry ;
Quinones-Hinojosa, Alfredo .
NEURO-ONCOLOGY, 2014, 16 (01) :113-122
[2]   Awake craniotomy to maximize glioma resection: methods and technical nuances over a 27-year period [J].
Hervey-Jumper, Shawn L. ;
Li, Jing ;
Lau, Darryl ;
Molinaro, Annette M. ;
Perry, David W. ;
Meng, Lingzhong ;
Berger, Mitchel S. .
JOURNAL OF NEUROSURGERY, 2015, 123 (02) :325-339
[3]   Sharpening Wald-type inference in robust regression for small samples [J].
Koller, Manuel ;
Stahel, Werner A. .
COMPUTATIONAL STATISTICS & DATA ANALYSIS, 2011, 55 (08) :2504-2515
[4]   Gross total but not incomplete resection of glioblastoma prolongs survival in the era of radiochemotherapy [J].
Kreth, F. -W. ;
Thon, N. ;
Simon, M. ;
Westphal, M. ;
Schackert, G. ;
Nikkhah, G. ;
Hentschel, B. ;
Reifenberger, G. ;
Pietsch, T. ;
Weller, M. ;
Tonn, J. -C. .
ANNALS OF ONCOLOGY, 2013, 24 (12) :3117-3123
[5]   The influence of maximum safe resection of glioblastoma on survival in 1229 patients: Can we do better than gross-total resection? [J].
Li, Yan Michael ;
Suki, Dima ;
Hess, Kenneth ;
Sawaya, Raymond .
JOURNAL OF NEUROSURGERY, 2016, 124 (04) :977-988
[6]   Extent of Resection of Glioblastoma Revisited: Personalized Survival Modeling Facilitates More Accurate Survival Prediction and Supports a Maximum-Safe-Resection Approach to Surgery [J].
Marko, Nicholas F. ;
Weil, Robert J. ;
Schroeder, Jason L. ;
Lang, Frederick F. ;
Suki, Dima ;
Sawaya, Raymond E. .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2014, 32 (08) :774-782
[7]   Gaussian Mixture Modeling of Hemispheric Lateralization for Language in a Large Sample of Healthy Individuals Balanced for Handedness [J].
Mazoyer, Bernard ;
Zago, Laure ;
Jobard, Gael ;
Crivello, Fabrice ;
Joliot, Marc ;
Perchey, Guy ;
Mellet, Emmanuel ;
Petit, Laurent ;
Tzourio-Mazoyer, Nathalie .
PLOS ONE, 2014, 9 (06)
[8]   ASSOCIATION OF SURGICALLY ACQUIRED MOTOR AND LANGUAGE DEFICITS ON OVERALL SURVIVAL AFTER RESECTION OF GLIOBLASTOMA MULTIFORME [J].
McGirt, Matthew J. ;
Mukherjee, Debraj ;
Chaichana, Kaisorn L. ;
Than, Khoi D. ;
Weingart, Jon D. ;
Quinones-Hinojosa, Alfredo .
NEUROSURGERY, 2009, 65 (03) :463-470
[9]   DESTINY-S: Attitudes of Physicians Toward Disability and Treatment in Malignant MCA Infarction [J].
Neugebauer, Hermann ;
Creutzfeldt, Claire J. ;
Hemphill, J. Claude, III ;
Heuschmann, Peter U. ;
Juettler, Eric .
NEUROCRITICAL CARE, 2014, 21 (01) :27-34
[10]   The patients' view: impact of the extent of resection, intraoperative imaging, and awake surgery on health-related quality of life in high-grade glioma patients-results of a multicenter cross-sectional study [J].
Nickel, Katrin ;
Renovanz, Mirjam ;
Koenig, Jochem ;
Stoeckelmaier, Linda ;
Hickmann, Anne-Katrin ;
Nadji-Ohl, Minou ;
Engelke, Jens ;
Weimann, Elke ;
Freudenstein, Dirk ;
Ganslandt, Oliver ;
Bullinger, Lars ;
Wirtz, Christian Rainer ;
Coburger, Jan .
NEUROSURGICAL REVIEW, 2018, 41 (01) :207-219