Neurosurgery

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Neurosurgery:
June 2006 - Volume 58 - Issue 6 - pp 1090-1098
doi: 10.1227/01.NEU.0000215892.65663.54
Clinical Studies: Cranial Base: Radiation Therapy: Radiosurgery: Special Article: Tumor

Patient Outcome at Long-term Follow-up after Aggressive Microsurgical Resection of Cranial Base Chondrosarcomas

Tzortzidis, Fotios M.D.; Elahi, Foad M.D.; Wright, Donald C. M.D.; Temkin, Nancy Ph.D.; Natarajan, Sabareesh K. M.S., M.D.; Sekhar, Laligam N. M.D., F.A.C.S.

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Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate patient clinical outcome and survival at long-term follow-up after aggressive microsurgical resection of chondrosarcomas of the cranial base.

METHODS: Over a 20-year period, 47 patients underwent 72 operative procedures for resection of cranial base chondrosarcomas. Thirty-three patients were previously untreated, whereas 14 patients previously had undergone surgery or radiation. Twenty-three patients had a single operation and 24 underwent staged (more than one) operations because of extensive disease. Patients who underwent subtotal resection also underwent radiotherapy or radiosurgery. Patients were evaluated at follow-up clinically and by imaging studies.

RESULTS: Gross total resection was accomplished in 29 (61.7%) patients, and subtotal resection was accomplished in 18 patients (38.3%). The resection was better in patients who underwent a primary operation (gross total resection, 68.8 versus 46.7%) rather than a reoperation. Patients who underwent incomplete resection underwent postoperative radiotherapy, which included proton beam radiotherapy (15.6%), radiosurgery (68%), and fractionated radiation (15.6%). There were no operative deaths. Postoperative complications (cerebrospinal fluid leakage, quadriparesis, infections, cranial nerve palsies, etc.) were observed in 10 patients (18%). The follow-up ranged from 2 to 255 months, with an average of 86 months. At the conclusion of study, 36 (76.6%) patients were alive, and 21 (44.7%) patients were alive without disease. Recurrence-free survival was 32% at 10 years in all patients, 42.3% in primary patients and 13.8% in those who underwent reoperation. The Karnofsky performance score was 82.4 ± 9.8 before surgery, 85 ± 12.5 at 1 year after surgery, and 85.3 ± 5.8 at the latest follow-up. Two patients died as a result of radiotherapy complications (malignancy, radiation necrosis).

CONCLUSION: Cranial base chondrosarcomas can be managed well by complete surgical resection or by a combination of surgery and radiotherapy. The study cannot comment about the efficacy of radiotherapy. Approximately half of the patients survived without recurrence at long-term follow-up (>132 mo). The functional status of the surviving patients was excellent at follow-up.

Copyright © by the Congress of Neurological Surgeons

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