TY - JOUR
T1 - Differences in intraoperative sampling during meningioma surgery regarding CNS invasion – Results of a survey on behalf of the EANS skull base section
AU - Behling, Felix
AU - Bruneau, Michaël
AU - Honegger, Jürgen
AU - Berhouma, Moncef
AU - Jouanneau, Emmanuel
AU - Cavallo, Luigi
AU - Cornelius, Jan Frederick
AU - Messerer, Mahmoud
AU - Daniel, Roy Thomas
AU - Froelich, Sébastien
AU - Mazzatenta, Diego
AU - Meling, Torstein
AU - Paraskevopoulos, Dimitrios
AU - Roche, Pierre Hugues
AU - Schroeder, Henry W.S.
AU - Zazpe, Idoya
AU - Voormolen, Eduard
AU - Visocchi, Massimiliano
AU - Kasper, Ekkehard
AU - Schittenhelm, Jens
AU - Tatagiba, Marcos
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors
PY - 2023/1
Y1 - 2023/1
N2 - Introduction: and Research Question: Invasive growth of meningiomas into CNS tissue is rare but of prognostic significance. While it has entered the WHO classification as a stand-alone criterion for atypia, its true prognostic impact remains controversial. Retrospective analyses, on which the current evidence is based, show conflicting results. Discordant findings might be explained by different intraoperative sampling methodologies. Material and methods: To assess the applied sampling methods in the light of the novel prognostic impact of CNS invasion, an anonymous survey was designed and distributed via the EANS website and newsletter. The survey was open from June 5th until July 15th, 2022. Results: After exclusion of 13 incomplete responses, 142 (91.6%) datasets were used for statistical analysis. Only 47.2% of participants’ institutions utilize a standardized sampling method, and 54.9% pursue a complete sampling of the area of contact between the meningioma surface and CNS tissue. Most respondents (77.5%) did not change their sampling practice after introduction of the new grading criteria to the WHO classification of 2016. Intraoperative suspicion of CNS invasion changes the sampling for half of the participants (49.3%). Additional sampling of suspicious areas of interest is reported in 53.5%. Dural attachment and adjacent bone are more readily sampled separately if tumor invasion is suspected (72.5% and 74.6%, respectively), compared to meningioma tissue with signs of CNS invasion (59.9%). Discussion and conclusions: Intraoperative sampling methods during meningioma resection vary among neurosurgical departments. There is need for a structured sampling to optimize the diagnostic yield of CNS invasion.
AB - Introduction: and Research Question: Invasive growth of meningiomas into CNS tissue is rare but of prognostic significance. While it has entered the WHO classification as a stand-alone criterion for atypia, its true prognostic impact remains controversial. Retrospective analyses, on which the current evidence is based, show conflicting results. Discordant findings might be explained by different intraoperative sampling methodologies. Material and methods: To assess the applied sampling methods in the light of the novel prognostic impact of CNS invasion, an anonymous survey was designed and distributed via the EANS website and newsletter. The survey was open from June 5th until July 15th, 2022. Results: After exclusion of 13 incomplete responses, 142 (91.6%) datasets were used for statistical analysis. Only 47.2% of participants’ institutions utilize a standardized sampling method, and 54.9% pursue a complete sampling of the area of contact between the meningioma surface and CNS tissue. Most respondents (77.5%) did not change their sampling practice after introduction of the new grading criteria to the WHO classification of 2016. Intraoperative suspicion of CNS invasion changes the sampling for half of the participants (49.3%). Additional sampling of suspicious areas of interest is reported in 53.5%. Dural attachment and adjacent bone are more readily sampled separately if tumor invasion is suspected (72.5% and 74.6%, respectively), compared to meningioma tissue with signs of CNS invasion (59.9%). Discussion and conclusions: Intraoperative sampling methods during meningioma resection vary among neurosurgical departments. There is need for a structured sampling to optimize the diagnostic yield of CNS invasion.
KW - Brain invasion
KW - CNS invasion
KW - EANS
KW - Intraoperative sampling
KW - Meningioma
KW - Survey
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85153075015&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.bas.2023.101740
DO - 10.1016/j.bas.2023.101740
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85153075015
SN - 2772-5294
VL - 3
JO - Brain and Spine
JF - Brain and Spine
M1 - 101740
ER -