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Surgical management of Glioma Grade 4: technical update from the neuro-oncology section of the Italian Society of Neurosurgery (SINch®): a systematic review

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEURO-ONCOLOGY
Volume 162, Issue 2, Pages 267-293

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11060-023-04274-x

Keywords

Glioma; Extent of resection; Intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring; Surgical planning; Navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation (nTMS); Intraoperative imaging

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The aim of this article is to provide an overview of the current trends and technical tools to achieve maximal safe resection in adult patients with Grade 4 Glioma. The results show that the use of Dexamethasone and avoidance of prophylaxis with anti-seizure medications are important in improving overall survival.
PurposeThe extent of resection (EOR) is an independent prognostic factor for overall survival (OS) in adult patients with Glioma Grade 4 (GG4). The aim of the neuro-oncology section of the Italian Society of Neurosurgery (SINch (R)) was to provide a general overview of the current trends and technical tools to reach this goal.MethodsA systematic review was performed. The results were divided and ordered, by an expert team of surgeons, to assess the Class of Evidence (CE) and Strength of Recommendation (SR) of perioperative drugs management, imaging, surgery, intraoperative imaging, estimation of EOR, surgery at tumor progression and surgery in elderly patients.ResultsA total of 352 studies were identified, including 299 retrospective studies and 53 reviews/meta-analysis. The use of Dexamethasone and the avoidance of prophylaxis with anti-seizure medications reached a CE I and SR A. A preoperative imaging standard protocol was defined with CE II and SR B and usefulness of an early postoperative MRI, with CE II and SR B. The EOR was defined the strongest independent risk factor for both OS and tumor recurrence with CE II and SR B. For intraoperative imaging only the use of 5-ALA reached a CE II and SR B. The estimation of EOR was established to be fundamental in planning postoperative adjuvant treatments with CE II and SR B and the stereotactic image-guided brain biopsy to be the procedure of choice when an extensive surgical resection is not feasible (CE II and SR B).ConclusionsA growing number of evidences evidence support the role of maximal safe resection as primary OS predictor in GG4 patients. The ongoing development of intraoperative techniques for a precise real-time identification of peritumoral functional pathways enables surgeons to maximize EOR minimizing the post-operative morbidity.

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