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An international multicenter matched cohort analysis of incidental meningioma progression during active surveillance or after stereotactic radiosurgery: the IMPASSE study
Authors:Jason Sheehan  Stylianos Pikis  Abdurrahman I Islim  Ching-Jen Chen  Adomas Bunevicius  Selcuk Peker  Yavuz Samanci  Ahmed M Nabeel  Wael A Reda  Sameh R Tawadros  Amr M N El-Shehaby  Khaled Abdelkarim  Reem M Emad  Violaine Delabar  David Mathieu  Cheng-Chia Lee  Huai-Che Yang  Roman Liscak  Jaromir Hanuska  Roberto Martinez Alvarez  Dev Patel  Douglas Kondziolka  Nuria Martinez Moreno  Manjul Tripathi  Herwin Speckter  Camilo Albert  Greg N Bowden  Ronald J Benveniste  Lawrence Dade Lunsford  Michael D Jenkinson
Abstract:BackgroundThe optimal management of patients with incidental meningiomas remains unclear. The aim of this study was to characterize the radiologic and neurological outcomes of expectant and stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) management of asymptomatic meningioma patients.MethodsUsing data from 14 centers across 10 countries, the study compares SRS outcomes to active surveillance of asymptomatic meningiomas. Local tumor control of asymptomatic meningiomas and development of new neurological deficits attributable to the tumor were evaluated in the SRS and conservatively managed groups.ResultsIn the unmatched cohorts, 727 meningioma patients underwent SRS and were followed for a mean of 57.2 months. In the conservatively managed cohort, 388 patients were followed for a mean of 43.5 months. Tumor control was 99.0% of SRS and 64.2% of conservatively managed patients (P < .001; OR 56.860 [95% CI 26.253-123.150]). New neurological deficits were 2.5% in the SRS and 2.8% of conservatively managed patients (P = .764; OR 0.890 [95% CI 0.416-1.904]). After 1:1 propensity matching for patient age, tumor volume, location, and imaging follow-up, tumor control in the SRS and conservatively managed cohorts was 99.4% and 62.1%, respectively (P < .001; OR 94.461 [95% CI 23.082-386.568]). In matched cohorts, new neurological deficits were noted in 2.3% of SRS-treated and 3.2% of conservatively managed patients (P = .475; OR 0.700 [95% CI 0.263-1.863]).ConclusionsSRS affords superior radiologic tumor control compared to active surveillance without increasing the risk of neurological deficits in asymptomatic meningioma patients. While SRS and active surveillance are reasonable options, SRS appears to alter the natural history of asymptomatic meningiomas including tumor progression in the majority of patients treated.
Keywords:asymptomatic   meningioma   stereotactic radiosurgery   surveillance
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