Prognostic implications of the proliferative potential of low-grade astrocytomas

1988 ◽  
Vol 69 (6) ◽  
pp. 839-842 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takao Hoshino ◽  
Luis A. Rodriguez ◽  
Kyung G. Cho ◽  
Kyu S. Lee ◽  
Charles B. Wilson ◽  
...  

✓ The proliferative potential of low-grade astrocytomas was estimated in 47 patients. Each patient received an intravenous infusion of bromodeoxyuridine (BUdR), 150 to 200 mg/sq m, at the time of craniotomy to label cells in deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) synthesis; the percentage of S-phase cells, or BUdR labeling index (LI), of each tumor was determined immunohistochemically. In 29 patients (60%), the tumors had BUdR LI's of less than 1%, indicating a slow growth rate; only three (10%) of these patients died of recurrent tumor during a follow-up period of up to 3½ years. In contrast, of the 18 patients (40%) whose tumors had BUdR LI's of 1% or more, 12 (67%) had a recurrence and nine died during the same follow-up period. These results show that the proliferative potential, as reflected by the BUdR LI, is an important prognostic factor that separates low-grade astrocytomas into two groups and provides a more scientific rationale for selecting treatment for individual patients.

1984 ◽  
Vol 61 (4) ◽  
pp. 665-673 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward R. Laws ◽  
William F. Taylor ◽  
Marvin B. Clifton ◽  
Haruo Okazaki

✓ The authors conducted a retrospective review of surgically treated, histologically proven cases of low-grade (Grade 1 or 2) astrocytomas. Follow-up analysis, with survival time as the end-point, was completed using multivariant statistical analysis. In the 461 cases of supratentorial low-grade astrocytoma in this study, age of the patient at the time of surgery was by far the most important variable in predicting length of survival. Other variables correlating with increasing survival times were: gross total surgical removal, lack of major preoperative neurological deficit, long duration of symptoms prior to surgery, seizures as a presenting symptom, lack of major postoperative neurological deficit, and surgery performed in recent decades. The multi-variant regression analysis showed that radiation therapy was of clear benefit, primarily in older patients with incompletely removed tumors. For purposes of establishing prognosis and testing the results, a “score” was developed to predict survival times, based on the most important variables. The data in this study provide a basis for the analysis of future modes of management of low-grade gliomas.


2019 ◽  
Vol 63 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Charlotte L. Hendon-Dunn ◽  
Henry Pertinez ◽  
Alice A. N. Marriott ◽  
Kim A. Hatch ◽  
Jon C. Allnutt ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Modulation of the growth rate in Mycobacterium tuberculosis is key to its survival in the host, particularly with regard to its adaptation during chronic infection, when the growth rate is very slow. The resulting physiological changes influence the way in which this pathogen interacts with the host and responds to antibiotics. Therefore, it is important that we understand how the growth rate impacts antibiotic efficacy, particularly with respect to recovery/relapse. This is the first study that has asked how growth rates influence the mycobacterial responses to combinations of the frontline antimycobacterials, isoniazid (INH), rifampin (RIF), and pyrazinamide (PZA), using continuous cultures. The time course profiles of log-transformed total viable counts for cultures, controlled at either a fast growth rate (mean generation time [MGT], 23.1 h) or a slow growth rate (MGT, 69.3 h), were analyzed by the fitting of a mathematical model by nonlinear regression that accounted for the dilution rate in the chemostat and profiled the kill rates and recovery in culture. Using this approach, we show that populations growing more slowly were generally less susceptible to all treatments. We observed a faster kill rate associated with INH than with RIF or PZA and the appearance of regrowth. In line with this observation, regrowth was not observed with RIF exposure, which provided a slower bactericidal response. The sequential additions of RIF and PZA did not eliminate regrowth. We consider here that faster, early bactericidal activity is not what is required for the successful sterilization of M. tuberculosis, but instead, slower elimination of the bacilli followed by reduced recovery of the bacterial population is required.


1994 ◽  
Vol 80 (4) ◽  
pp. 732-735 ◽  
Author(s):  
Spyros S. Kollias ◽  
Kerry R. Crone ◽  
William S. Ball ◽  
Erin C. Prenger ◽  
Edgar T. Ballard

✓ The case is reported of meningioangiomatosis of the brain stem in a 3½-year-old girl who suffered from vomiting, left facial weakness, difficulty in swallowing, and ataxia. This is believed to be the first reported case of meningioangiomatosis in the brain stem. Computerized tomography showed an intensely enhancing hyperdense mass in the left restiform body. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed that the lesion was isointense to gray matter on the T1-weighted image and hypointense on the T2-weighted image, with a surrounding zone of high T2 signal and intense enhancement. Angiography was normal. Surgical exploration demonstrated an intramedullary firm mass that was partially resected. Histologically, the mass consisted of a low-grade lesion of meningeal origin with spindle cells in a whorling pattern that were occasionally focused around small vessels. On 2-year follow-up imaging, the lesion remains unchanged in size. Certain particularities of this lesion are discussed in the context of the literature.


Neurosurgery ◽  
1985 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 166-170 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. O'Neill ◽  
B.A. Bell ◽  
J.D. Miller ◽  
I. Jacobson ◽  
W. Guthrie

Abstract We report the clinical presentation and management of 34 patients with a histologically proven chordoma, treated in the neurosurgical departments in Edinburgh and Dundee, over the past 50 years. Although these tumors are commonly regarded as being locally invasive with a variable, but generally slow growth rate, they can metastasize, and this may precede surgical intervention, as in one of our patients. Our cases are compared to those in previously published series, and a comprehensive review of the treatment modalities for tumors at various sites is presented. The optimal treatment to be recommended from our own experience, and that of others, is aggressive operation and radiotherapy. A combination of hyperthermia and chemotherapy has shown some promise, but remains untested, and highlights the need for a multicenter trial with long follow-up to allow the evaluation of new therapeutic approaches.


1991 ◽  
Vol 75 (5) ◽  
pp. 740-746 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fritz Mundinger ◽  
Dieter F. Braus ◽  
Joachim K. Krauss ◽  
Walter Birg

✓ Between 1974 and 1985, 89 patients suffering from histologically confirmed, nonresectable low-grade astrocytomas located in the brain stem were entered into a retrospective study. Iodine-125 (125I) was implanted in 29 patients and iridium-192 (192Ir) in 26 patients. Computerized tomography revealed that 78% of the tumors in these patients were located chiefly in the mesencephalic region, 70% were circumscribed, and 78% were contrast-enhanced. Thirty-four patients underwent biopsy without prior aggressive tumor-specific therapy such as chemotherapy or external beam irradiation. Among these, 70% of the tumors were located predominantly in the pons, 74% were diffuse, and 59% were hypodense or isodense after contrast enhancement. Long-term follow-up investigations indicated that life expectancy after interstitial radiation therapy with 125I implanted directly by catheter either permanently or temporarily showed a more favorable trend than that after treatment with 192Ir. Interstitial radiation therapy with 125I appears to be an effective treatment for slowly proliferating, differentiated, well-delineated, nonresectable brain-stem gliomas. This technique makes it possible to achieve radio-surgical tumor control and, when carefully applied, represents the least traumatic treatment. Reduction of the tumor mass brings about improvement of the clinical symptoms. Further investigations on the biological behavior of brain-stem gliomas and prospective randomized long-term follow-up studies are necessary to evaluate the different kinds of treatment available for these patients.


2005 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 289-297 ◽  
Author(s):  
Markus Wenger ◽  
Nicola Sapio ◽  
Thomas-Marc Markwalder

Object. The authors assessed the late outcome of patients with Meyerding Grade I and II isthmic spondylolisthesis (IS) who underwent posterior instrumentation and posterolateral fusion (PLF). Decompression and posterior internal fixation with PLF is the classic surgical treatment for painful low-grade IS. Nevertheless, outcome data are scarce and of limited value mainly because they represent small numbers of patients, short follow-up periods, or both. Methods. The authors obtained data in the cases of 132 consecutive adult patients (mean age 40.6 years, range 15.2–69.9 years) with IS who underwent treatment between 1984 and 2003. Assessment involved analysis of responses to mailed questionnaires, clinical charts and, in cases in which unsatisfactory results were suspected, results of clinical reevaluations. Spondylolisthesis was present at L3–4 in three patients, L4–5 in 14, L3–4 in one, L3–5 in one, L5—S1 in 113, and S1–2 in one. Signs and symptoms included back and leg pain (65.3%), leg pain alone (26.3%), back pain alone (8.4%), and neurological dysfunction (18%). At a mean follow-up duration of 9.9 years (range 0.5–19.4 years), favorable results were reported for back and leg pain in 91.7 and 87.1% of patients, respectively. The mean visual analog scale scores were 2.13 for back and 1.59 for leg pain. Eighty-four patients resumed full- or part-time work, and 56.8% were capable of performing housework more easily. In 45.5% of the patients analgesic medications were not required, and 43.9% required them sporadically. The majority (63.6%) of patients reported they would undergo surgery again and recommended it to others. Thirteen (9.9%) suffered adjacent-segment morbidity, and in seven (5.3%) pseudarthrosis was documented. There were two deep and one superficial infections (2.3%). Conclusions. Posterior instrumentation and PLF, with possible neurodecompression, yielded favorable long-term results in this retrospective study of 132 patients with low-grade IS.


1995 ◽  
Vol 83 (4) ◽  
pp. 583-589 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leslie N. Sutton ◽  
Patricia T. Molloy ◽  
Heidi Sernyak ◽  
Joel Goldwein ◽  
Peter L. Phillips ◽  
...  

✓ The feasibility of radical surgery for astrocytomas of the optic chiasm/hypothalamus has been reported by several groups. Such surgery carries significant risks, however, including permanent damage to the pituitary gland, optic apparatus, hypothalamic structures, and carotid arteries. The benefits of radical surgery, both in terms of efficacy and toxicity, should, therefore, be evaluated against standard therapy, as is usually done for new chemotherapeutic protocols. To this end, a retrospective review was performed of 33 patients treated at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia between 1976 and 1991 who met criteria that would have made them eligible for radical surgery in many centers today, but were treated with either no surgery or conservative surgery (< 50% resection) or biopsy followed by adjuvant therapy with local radiation therapy (29 patients) and/or chemotherapy with actinomycin-D and vincristine (18 patients). The review encompassed all children with a globular enhancing mass of at least 2 cm in the hypothalamic/chiasmatic region, no evidence of optic nerve involvement or involvement of the optic radiations by computerized tomography or magnetic resonance imaging, and follow up of at least 3 years. All but one patient had tissue confirmation of a low-grade or pilocytic astrocytoma. Thirteen of the patients were 2 years of age or younger at diagnosis. Five individuals died: three of tumor progression, one of acute shunt malfunction, and one of intercurrent infection. The remaining 28 were alive at last follow up, a mean of 10.9 years from diagnosis. Twenty-three surviving patients have functional vision in at least one eye, 12 require no endocrine replacement, and 16 are in or have completed schooling with regular academic requirements. If radical surgery is to become standard care for children with low-grade astrocytomas of the hypothalamic/chiasmatic region, long-term survival and functional outcome will have to equal or surpass those of historical controls who were treated conservatively.


1993 ◽  
Vol 78 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter J. Kirkpatrick ◽  
Minal Honavar ◽  
Ivan Janota ◽  
Charles E. Polkey

✓ Thirty-one patients with a mean age of 18.9 years (range 3 to 53 years) who underwent temporal lobe surgery for tumor-related epilepsy over a 14-year period are presented. All had suffered chronic drug-resistant temporal lobe seizures (mean age at onset 6.9 years, range 0 to 30 years; mean duration of condition 11.9 years, range 3 to 39 years). Preoperative interictal scalp electroencephalography tracings indicated unilateral localized epileptic foci in 90% of patients, and computerized tomography scans showed abnormalities within the temporal lobe in 87%. All patients underwent en bloc temporal lobectomy. No patient received adjuvant radiotherapy or chemotherapy. Review of the histological material showed dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumor in 27 (87%) of the specimens and microscopic evidence of incomplete removal of tumor in 22 (71%). At long-term follow-up evaluation (mean duration 5.8 years, range 1 to 14 years), 81% of patients were completely free of seizures (Engel grade I) and 10% were almost seizure free (Engel grade II) with no deaths reported in either early or late follow-up review. Only one patient in the series failed to benefit from the surgery. Four patients suffered permanent neurological deficit causing a mild disability. Psychological assessment showed no significant fall in verbal or performance intelligent quotient for the group, but a mild memory impairment was evident in 32%. Behavioral and social aspects improved in nearly all (94%) cases. Relief of seizures could not be predicted by intraoperative electrocorticography, and outcome was independent of the completeness of tumor resection. Postoperative electroencephalographic findings identified epileptiform potentials in 65% of patients, which were associated with a worse seizure-control outcome grade.


1988 ◽  
Vol 68 (6) ◽  
pp. 880-883 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chung W. Chow ◽  
Geoffrey L. Klug ◽  
Elizabeth A. Lewis

✓ The authors describe five cases of subependymal giant-cell astrocytoma in children in which many clinical, histological, immunohistochemical, and ultrastructural features typical of this tumor were present. However, prominent focal necrosis and mitoses, features usually associated with high-grade tumors, were seen in all cases. Despite the presence of necrosis and mitoses, clinical follow-up studies have revealed a lack of aggressive tumor behavior after surgery alone. The discrepancy between the histological and clinical features in these cases is emphasized so that excessive treatment of a basically low-grade tumor may be avoided. Mast cells were seen in all five cases, often in large numbers.


2004 ◽  
Vol 100 (3) ◽  
pp. 431-437 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hugues Duffau ◽  
Ihab Khalil ◽  
Peggy Gatignol ◽  
Dominique Denvil ◽  
Laurent Capelle

Object. Although still controversial, many authors currently advocate extensive resection in the treatment of low-grade gliomas (LGGs). Because these tumors usually migrate along white matter pathways, the corpus callosum is often invaded. Nevertheless, there is evidently no specific study featuring resection of the corpus callosum infiltrated by glioma, despite abundant literature concerning callosotomy in epilepsy surgery or transcallosal ventricular approaches. The aim of this paper was to analyze functional outcome following removal of corpus callosum invaded by LGG and to analyze the impact of this callosectomy on the quality of resection. Methods. Between 1996 and 2002, a total of 32 patients harboring an LGG involving part of the corpus callosum and having no or only a mild preoperative deficit underwent surgery aided by intraoperative electrical mapping to preserve eloquent structures identified on stimulation and to perform the most extensive resection possible. Preoperatively, no clinical response was elicited on stimulation of the corpus callosum; thus, the part of this structure that was invaded by LGG was removed. Despite immediate postoperative neurological worsening, all patients but one recovered within 3 months and returned to a normal socioprofessional life. The additional callosectomy allowed for nine total resections, 18 subtotal resections, and five partial resections. Furthermore, only two cases of contralateral hemispherical migration occurred during a median follow up of 3 years. Conclusions. Resection of the corpus callosum infiltrated by glioma improves the quality of tumor removal without increasing the risk of sequelae.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document