Background
Incidental discovery accounts for 30% of newly-diagnosed intracranial meningiomas. There is no consensus on their optimal management. This review aimed to evaluate the outcomes of ...different management strategies for these tumors.
Methods
Using established systematic review methods, six databases were scanned up to September 2017. Pooled event proportions were estimated using a random effects model. Meta-regression of prognostic factors was performed using individual patient data.
Results
Twenty studies (2130 patients) were included. Initial management strategies at diagnosis were: surgery (27.3%), stereotactic radiosurgery (22.0%) and active monitoring (50.7%) with a weighted mean follow-up of 49.5 months (SD = 29.3). The definition of meningioma growth and monitoring regimens varied widely impeding relevant meta-analysis. The pooled risk of symptom development in patients actively monitored was 8.1% (95% CI 2.7–16.1). Associated factors were peritumoral edema (OR 8.72 95% CI 0.35–14.90) and meningioma diameter ≥ 3 cm (OR 34.90 95% CI 5.17–160.40). The pooled proportion of intervention after a duration of active monitoring was 24.8% (95% CI 7.5–48.0). Weighted mean time-to-intervention was 24.8 months (SD = 18.2). The pooled risks of morbidity following surgery and radiosurgery, accounting for cross-over, were 11.8% (95% CI 3.7–23.5) and 32.0% (95% CI 10.6–70.5) respectively. The pooled proportion of operated meningioma being WHO grade I was 94.0% (95% CI 88.2–97.9).
Conclusion
The management of incidental meningioma varies widely. Most patients who clinically or radiologically progressed did so within 5 years of diagnosis. Intervention at diagnosis may lead to unnecessary overtreatment. Prospective data is needed to develop a risk calculator to better inform management strategies.
There have been more than 425 million COVID-19 infections worldwide. Post-COVID illness has become a common, disabling complication of this infection. Therefore, it presents a significant challenge ...to global public health and economic activity.
Comprehensive clinical assessment (symptoms, WHO performance status, cognitive testing, CPET, lung function, high-resolution CT chest, CT pulmonary angiogram and cardiac MRI) of previously well, working-age adults in full-time employment was conducted to identify physical and neurocognitive deficits in those with severe or prolonged COVID-19 illness.
205 consecutive patients, age 39 (IQR30.0-46.7) years, 84% male, were assessed 24 (IQR17.1-34.0) weeks after acute illness. 69% reported ≥3 ongoing symptoms. Shortness of breath (61%), fatigue (54%) and cognitive problems (47%) were the most frequent symptoms, 17% met criteria for anxiety and 24% depression. 67% remained below pre-COVID performance status at 24 weeks. One third of lung function tests were abnormal, (reduced lung volume and transfer factor, and obstructive spirometry). HRCT lung was clinically indicated in <50% of patients, with COVID-associated pathology found in 25% of these. In all but three HRCTs, changes were graded 'mild'. There was an extremely low incidence of pulmonary thromboembolic disease or significant cardiac pathology. A specific, focal cognitive deficit was identified in those with ongoing symptoms of fatigue, poor concentration, poor memory, low mood, and anxiety. This was notably more common in patients managed in the community during their acute illness.
Despite low rates of residual cardiopulmonary pathology, in this cohort, with low rates of premorbid illness, there is a high burden of symptoms and failure to regain pre-COVID performance 6-months after acute illness. Cognitive assessment identified a specific deficit of the same magnitude as intoxication at the UK drink driving limit or the deterioration expected with 10 years ageing, which appears to contribute significantly to the symptomatology of long-COVID.
Celotno besedilo
Dostopno za:
DOBA, IZUM, KILJ, NUK, PILJ, PNG, SAZU, SIK, UILJ, UKNU, UL, UM, UPUK
ObjectivesTo determine the potential costs and health benefits of a serum-based spectroscopic triage tool for brain tumours, which could be developed to reduce diagnostic delays in the current ...clinical pathway.DesignA model-based health pre-trial economic assessment. Decision tree models were constructed based on simplified diagnostic pathways. Models were populated with parameters identified from rapid reviews of the literature and clinical expert opinion.SettingExplored as a test in both primary and secondary care (neuroimaging) in the UK health service, as well as application to the USA.ParticipantsCalculations based on an initial cohort of 10 000 patients. In primary care, it is estimated that the volume of tests would approach 75 000 per annum. The volume of tests in secondary care is estimated at 53 000 per annum.Main outcome measuresThe primary outcome measure was quality-adjusted life-years (QALY), which were employed to derive incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICER) in a cost-effectiveness analysis.ResultsResults indicate that using a blood-based spectroscopic test in both scenarios has the potential to be highly cost-effective in a health technology assessment agency decision-making process, as ICERs were well below standard threshold values of £20 000–£30 000 per QALY. This test may be cost-effective in both scenarios with test sensitivities and specificities as low as 80%; however, the price of the test would need to be lower (less than approximately £40).ConclusionUse of this test as triage tool in primary care has the potential to be both more effective and cost saving for the health service. In secondary care, this test would also be deemed more effective than the current diagnostic pathway.
Firearm Availability and Parricide Mills, Samantha J.; Kivisto, Aaron J.
Journal of family violence,
01/2023, Letnik:
38, Številka:
1
Journal Article
Recenzirano
The association between firearm ownership and homicide has been shown to be specifically related to homicides involving intimate partners and other domestic relations. Prior research has shown that ...firearms are commonly used in parricide, and in particular parricides perpetrated by youth. This study examined whether higher levels of firearm ownership are associated with increased rates of parricide, and whether this association was stronger among youthful offenders. We used a longitudinal design and negative binomial regression to model parricide as a function of household firearm ownership at the state level using data from the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Supplementary Homicide Reports from 1981 through 2018. There were 8,916 parricide perpetrators in the study sample, and nearly half used a firearm (47.7%). Whereas parricides committed by adults involved firearms in 43.5% of cases, almost two-thirds (64.8%) of parricides committed by youth involved firearms. Each 1-percentage point increase in state-level household firearm ownership was associated with a 1.5% increased incidence of parricide (95% CI = 0.6%, 2.4%,
p
= .001). Moderation analyses revealed that the association between state-level firearm ownership and parricide was between 2.6- and 3.6-fold stronger for incidents perpetrated by youth relative to adults. Reducing youth access to firearms in the context of conflictual parent–child relations represents one strategy for reducing parricide.
Background
Epilepsy is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in meningioma patients. The aims of this study were to determine which factors predispose meningioma patients to developing ...perioperative seizures and to understand the impact of antiepileptic drugs.
Methods
Patients treated for a histologically-confirmed intracranial meningioma at the authors’ institution between 2010 and 2015 were retrospectively examined. Clinical and imaging data were assessed. Multivariate analysis was performed using binary logistic regression. The effect of antiepileptic treatment was assessed using survival analysis.
Results
Two hundred and eighty-three patients met the selection criteria; seizures were present in 68 preoperatively (24%) and in 48 patients (17%) following surgery. Of the 68 with preoperative seizures, 19 continued to have them, whereas de-novo seizures arose postoperatively in 29 seizure-naïve patients. Risk factors of postoperative seizures were convexity location (OR 2.05 95% CI 1.07–3.98, p = 0.030), fronto-parietal location (OR 4.42 95% CI 1.49–13.16, p = 0.007) and preoperative seizures (OR 2.65 95% CI 1.37–5.24, p = 0.005). The two locations, in addition to the presence of midline shift on preoperative imaging (OR 4.15 95% CI 1.54–11.24, p = 0.005), were significantly correlated with postoperative seizures in seizure-naïve patients. Antiepileptic treatment in patients with those risk factors reduced the possibility of seizures at any time point within the 1st year postoperatively by approximately 40%, although this did not meet statistical significance.
Conclusion
Prophylactic antiepileptic treatment might be warranted in seizure-naïve meningioma patients with ≥ 1 risk factor. High-quality randomised controlled trials are required to verify those factors and to define the role of antiepileptics in meningioma practice.
Abstract
Background
Asymptomatic meningioma is a common incidental finding with no consensus on the optimal management strategy. We aimed to develop a prognostic model to guide personalized ...monitoring of incidental meningioma patients.
Methods
A prognostic model of disease progression was developed in a retrospective cohort (2007–2015), defined as: symptom development, meningioma-specific mortality, meningioma growth or loss of window of curability. Secondary endpoints included non-meningioma-specific mortality and intervention.
Results
Included were 441 patients (459 meningiomas). Over a median of 55 months (interquartile range, 37–80), 44 patients had meningioma progression and 57 died (non-meningioma-specific). Forty-four had intervention (at presentation, n = 6; progression, n = 20; nonprogression, n = 18). Model parameters were based on statistical and clinical considerations and included: increasing meningioma volume (hazard ratio HR 2.17; 95% CI: 1.53–3.09), meningioma hyperintensity (HR 10.6; 95% CI: 5.39–21.0), peritumoral signal change (HR 1.58; 95% CI: 0.65–3.85), and proximity to critical neurovascular structures (HR 1.38; 95% CI: 0.74–2.56). Patients were stratified based on these imaging parameters into low-, medium- and high-risk groups and 5-year disease progression rates were 3%, 28%, and 75%, respectively. After 5 years of follow-up, the risk of disease progression plateaued in all groups. Patients with an age-adjusted Charlson comorbidity index ≥6 (eg, an 80-year-old with chronic kidney disease) were 15 times more likely to die of other causes than to receive intervention at 5 years following diagnosis, regardless of risk group.
Conclusions
The model shows that there is little benefit to rigorous monitoring in low-risk and older patients with comorbidities. Risk-stratified follow-up has the potential to reduce patient anxiety and associated health care costs.
Abstract Objective To examine whether Simpson grade and pathology location are still predictors of recurrence/progression free survival (RPFS) in WHO grade 1 cranial meningiomas. Methods A ...retrospective case series of all WHO grade 1 cranial meningiomas undergoing surgical resection at our institution between 2002 to 2007 was performed. Demographic and outcome data included: Simpson grade, extent of resection gross total (Simpson 1–3) and sub total (Simpson 4–5), tumour location, timing of post-operative imaging and outpatient review, time to recurrence and subsequent management. Statistical analysis was by Kaplan–Meier survival curves. Results 145 cases were included of which 75% were female, with an overall median age of 55 years. 24% had parasagittal, 23% convexity and 53% skull base meningioma. 21% had a grade 1 Simpson resection, 43% grade 2, 35% grade 4 and 1% grade 5. The median follow up period was 60 months with a median 5.5 outpatient appointments and 5 post-operative imaging studies. 10 cases (6.9%) had recurrence/progression at a median period of 42 months. Of these, 4 remained under active surveillance, 3 received stereotactic radiosurgery and 3 were treated with fractionated radiotherapy. 5 year recurrence/progression free survival (RPFS) for Simpson grade 1 was 96.8%, 2: 100%, 4: 82.4% and 5: 0%. Simpson grade ( p = 0.01) and gross total/sub total resection ( p = 0.001) were significant predictors of RPFS. Meningioma location was not a significant predictor of RPFS ( p -value 0.836). Conclusion Simpson grade remains a significant predictor of RPFS in WHO grade 1 meningioma surgery. However, tumour location was not significant in this series. We advocate different post-operative imaging surveillance protocols depending on gross total or sub total surgical resection.
Incidental findings such as meningioma are becoming increasingly prevalent. There is no consensus on the optimal management of these patients. The aim of this study was to examine the outcomes of ...patients diagnosed with an incidental meningioma who were treated with surgery or radiotherapy.
Single-center retrospective cohort study of adult patients diagnosed with an incidental intracranial meningioma (2007–2015). Outcomes recorded were postintervention morbidity, histopathologic diagnosis, and treatment response.
Out of 441 patients, 44 underwent treatment. Median age at intervention was 56.1 years (interquartile range IQR, 49.6–66.5); patients included 35 women and 9 men. The main indication for imaging was headache (25.9%). Median meningioma volume was 4.55 cm3 (IQR, 1.91–8.61), and the commonest location was convexity (47.7%). Six patients underwent surgery at initial diagnosis. Thirty-eight had intervention (34 with surgery and 4 with radiotherapy) after a median active monitoring duration of 24 months (IQR, 11.8–42.0). Indications for treatment were radiologic progression (n = 26), symptom development (n = 6), and patient preference (n = 12). Pathology revealed World Health Organization (WHO) grade 1 meningioma in 36 patients and WHO grade 2 in 4 patients. The risk of postoperative surgical and medical morbidity requiring treatment was 25%. Early and late moderate adverse events limiting activities of daily living occurred in 28.6% of patients treated with radiotherapy. Recurrence rate after surgery was 2.5%. All meningiomas regressed or remained radiologically stable after radiotherapy.
The morbidity after treatment of incidental intracranial meningioma is not negligible. Considering most operated tumors are WHO grade 1, treatment should be reserved for those manifesting symptoms or demonstrating substantial growth on radiologic surveillance.
Background: To support the early detection and diagnosis of brain tumours we have developed a rapid, cost-effective and easy to use spectroscopic liquid biopsy based on the absorbance of infrared ...radiation. We have previously reported highly sensitive results of our approach which can discriminate patients with a recent brain tumour diagnosis and asymptomatic controls. Other liquid biopsy approaches (e.g., based on tumour genetic material) report a lower classification accuracy for early-stage tumours. In this manuscript we present an investigation into the link between brain tumour volume and liquid biopsy test performance. Methods: In a cohort of 177 patients (90 patients with high-grade glioma (glioblastoma (GBM) or anaplastic astrocytoma), or low-grade glioma (astrocytoma, oligoastrocytoma and oligodendroglioma)) tumour volumes were calculated from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) investigations and patients were split into two groups depending on MRI parameters (T1 with contrast enhancement or T2/FLAIR (fluid-attenuated inversion recovery)). Using attenuated total reflection (ATR)-Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy coupled with supervised learning methods and machine learning algorithms, 90 tumour patients were stratified against 87 control patients who displayed no symptomatic indications of cancer, and were classified as either glioma or non-glioma. Results: Sensitivities, specificities and balanced accuracies were all greater than 88%, the area under the curve (AUC) was 0.98, and cancer patients with tumour volumes as small as 0.2 cm3 were correctly identified. Conclusions: Our spectroscopic liquid biopsy approach can identify gliomas that are both small and low-grade showing great promise for deployment of this technique for early detection and diagnosis.
•Neuroinflammation may herald the development of PCNSL.•The pathophysiology and pertinence of sentinel lesions remains unknown.•Neurospecialists should be aware of atypical presentations of PCNSL.
...Primary central nervous system lymphoma (PCNSL) is a rare and aggressive form of extra-nodal non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. Corticosteroids cause transient regression of PCNSL at the radiological and histological level. A growing number of case reports describe histologically confirmed neuroinflammation (sentinel lesions) heralding the development of PCNSL. We present two further cases of sentinel lesions contextualised by a review of past literature. Our aims are to collate existing knowledge on sentinel lesions in PCNSL and explore their pathophysiological significance. Two cases were identified (n = 2) from a cohort of 104 patients with PCNSL referred to a tertiary neurosurgery centre. A literature search identified previously reported cases (n = 14). Median age was 57.5 (range; 26–72); pre-biopsy corticosteroid administration was reported in 50% of cases (n = 8); mean time between biopsies was 10 months (range; 3–60). Common MRI features were homogenous enhancement (10;71.4%) and T2-hyperintensity (11;100%). Histochemical analysis of sentinel lesion biopsy revealed inflammatory CD3/4/5/8-positive T-cells (14; 100%), demyelination (13; 81.3%), rare/scattered CD20-postive B-cells (11;78.6%) and CD68-positive macrophages (10;71.4%). Repeat biopsy confirmed PCNSL in all cases. Waxing and waning CNS inflammation has been identified in 16 patients ultimately diagnosed with PCNSL. Neuro-specialists should be aware of this atypical presentation and maintain a high index of suspicion for lymphoma despite histopathology negative for lymphoma when clinical or radiological features indicate PCNSL.