4.3 Article

Characterization of volumetric growth of intracranial meningiomas in Maori and Pasifika populations in New Zealand

Journal

ANZ JOURNAL OF SURGERY
Volume 92, Issue 4, Pages 848-855

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ans.17564

Keywords

ethnicity; growth rate; Maori; meningioma; Pasifika

Categories

Funding

  1. CBR Neurosurgical Research Unit from The Freemason's Foundation of New Zealand
  2. Douglas Charitable Trust

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Maori and Pasifika populations in New Zealand have a higher incidence and volumetric growth rate of intracranial meningioma compared to the control population, highlighting the need for further clinical, histopathological, and genomic analysis.
Background Maori and Pasifika populations in New Zealand have a higher incidence and prevalence of intracranial meningioma (IM). We sought to evaluate the volumetric growth rate of meningiomas under surveillance in these populations. Methods From July 2002 to October 2020, 336 patients with a total of 408 IM underwent conservative management with serial radiological surveillance at Auckland City Hospital and met the criteria for the study. Inclusion criteria included: age >16 at diagnosis, >= 2 appropriate scans one or more years apart. Exclusion criteria included previous cranial irradiation, a diagnosis of Neurofibromatosis and prior treatment of meningioma. Demographic and clinical data were obtained from the electronic medical records. Imaging data were recorded from the first and last scans. We utilized open-source image processing software (3D Slicer) for semi-automated segmentation and volume calculation. Consistent with previous literature, we calculated the relative growth rate (RGR, %/year) and annual volume change (AVC, cm(3)/year) over time. Results Four hundred and eight meningiomas were volumetrically characterized for a mean duration of 6.2 years. The Maori and Pasifika populations (n = 134/393) demonstrated a higher RGR (31.41 versus 14.33%/year) (P = 0.026) and AVC (2.05 versus 0.95 cm(3)) (P = 0.025) compared to the control population. They also presented at a younger age and had a higher rate of tumour multiplicity. Males represented only 17.6% of the cohort but exhibited a higher growth rate (AVC = 2.52 cm(3)/year) than females (AVC = 0.99 cm(3)/year) (P = 0034). Conclusions Maori and Pasifika populations in New Zealand have a higher incidence and volumetric growth rate of IM compared to a control population. This warrants further clinical, histopathological and genomic analysis.

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