4.5 Article

Predicting the Extent of Resection of Motor-Eloquent Gliomas Based on TMS-Guided Fiber Tracking

Journal

BRAIN SCIENCES
Volume 11, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/brainsci11111517

Keywords

nTMS; fiber tracking; glioma; extent of resection; outcome

Categories

Funding

  1. Italian Society of Neurosurgery-Premio Melitta Grasso Tomasello
  2. Beretta Foundation for Cancer Study-European Scholarship on Oncology
  3. Cluster of Excellence Matters of Activity
  4. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (German Research Foundation, DFG) under Germany's Excellence Strategy [EXC 2025-390648296]

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The study showed that TTD and TRD are closely related and significantly correlated with motor outcomes. TRD had a slightly stronger correlation with surgical outcomes compared to TTD, indicating the importance of surgeon experience and observation of motor evoked potentials in predicting surgical success.
Background: Surgical planning with nTMS-based tractography is proven to increase safety during surgery. A preoperative risk stratification model has been published based on the M1 infiltration, RMT ratio, and tumor to corticospinal tract distance (TTD). The correlation of TTD with corticospinal tract to resection cavity distance (TRD) and outcome is needed to further evaluate the validity of the model. Aim of the study: To use the postop MRI-derived resection cavity to measure how closely the resection cavity approximated the preoperatively calculated corticospinal tract (CST) and how this correlates with the risk model and the outcome. Methods: We included 183 patients who underwent nTMS-based DTI and surgical resection for presumed motor-eloquent gliomas. TTD, TRD, and motor outcome were recorded and tested for correlations. The intraoperative monitoring documentation was available for a subgroup of 48 patients, whose responses were correlated to TTD and TRD. Results: As expected, TTD and TRD showed a good correlation (Spearman's rho = 0.67, p < 0.001). Both the TTD and the TRD correlated significantly with the motor outcome at three months (Kendall's Tau-b 0.24 for TTD, 0.31 for TRD, p < 0.001). Interestingly, the TTD and TRD correlated only slightly with residual tumor volume, and only after correction for outliers related to termination of resection due to intraoperative monitoring events or the proximity of other eloquent structures (TTD rho = 0.32, p < 0.001; TRD rho = 0.19, p = 0.01). This reflects the fact that intraoperative monitoring (IOM) phenomena do not always correlate with preoperative structural analysis, and that additional factors influence the intraoperative decision to abort resection, such as the adjacency of other vulnerable structures. The TTD was also significantly correlated with variations in motor evoked potential (MEP) responses (no/reversible decrease vs. irreversible decrease; p = 0.03). Conclusions: The TTD approximates the TRD well, confirming the best predictive parameter and giving strength to the nTMS-based risk stratification model. Our analysis of TRD supports the use of the nTMS-based TTD measurement to estimate the resection preoperatively, also confirming the 8 mm cutoff. Nevertheless, the TRD proved to have a slightly stronger correlation with the outcome as the surgeon's experience, anatomofunctional knowledge, and MEP observations influence the expected EOR.

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