Therapy of meningeal melanocytomas
β Scribed by Dirk Rades; Steven E. Schild; Marcos Tatagiba; Hugo A. Molina; Winfried Alberti
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 80 KB
- Volume
- 100
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0008-543X
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Meningeal melanocytomas are rare, benign central nervous system lesions with a high probability of recurrence. To the authors' knowledge, approximately 100 cases have been reported since 1972, when the entity first was described. In the current study, four therapies were compared with regard to local control and survival to identify which is best.
METHODS
All reported cases were reviewed with regard to extent of resection, radiotherapy, local control, and survival. If published data were incomplete, the authors were contacted for additional data. Patients were categorized by therapy: complete resection (CTR), complete resection followed by radiotherapy (CTRβRT), incomplete resection (ITR), and incomplete resection followed by radiotherapy (ITRβRT). Local control and survival were calculated using the KaplanβMeier method. A multivariate analysis was performed including age, gender, tumor location, confirmation of extent of resection, and treatment schedule.
RESULTS
A total of 89 patients were included: 46 with CTR, 3 with CTRβRT, 23 with ITR, and 17 with ITRβRT. The 5βyear local control rate was 80% after CTR, 100% after CTRβRT, and 72% after ITRβRT versus 18% after ITR (P < 0.001). The 5βyear survival rate was 100% after CTR, CTRβRT, and ITRβRT, respectively, versus 46% after ITR (P < 0.001). Multivariate analysis demonstrated that therapy was the only variable that affected local control and survival significantly. In 14 patients treated with ITRβRT, RT was restricted to the tumor region. The radiation dose was 30β40 grays (Gy) in 6 patients, 45β55 Gy in 7 patients, and unknown in 1 patient. The 5βyear local control rate was 86% after a dose of 45β55 Gy versus 27% after a dose of 30β40 Gy (P = 0.1).
CONCLUSIONS
CTR was found to be significantly superior to ITR with regard to both local control and survival. Outcome was significantly improved by RT after ITR. Doses of 45β55 Gy appeared to be more beneficial than doses of β€ 40 Gy. Cancer 2004. Β© 2004 American Cancer Society.
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