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Journal Article

Citation

Adam Y, Benezech J, Blanquet A, Fuentes JM, Bousigue JY, Debono B, Duplessis E, Espagno C, Plas JY, Lescure JP, Destandau J, Hladky JP, Grunewald P, Mahla K, Remond J, Louis E. Neurochirurgie (Paris) 2010; 56(4): 344-349.

Vernacular Title

Les tumeurs intramedullaires. Resultat d'une enquete nationale en neurochirurgie

Affiliation

Clinique Saint-Martin, 14050 Caen, France.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.neuchi.2009.11.003

PMID

20097390

Abstract

UNLABELLED: The frequency of intramedullary tumors is 0.5 cases per year for 100,000 inhabitants. The study reported herein was a retrospective study conducted from January 1985 to September 2007. MATERIAL: Seventy-nine cases were distributed in the following manner: ependymomas, 38; astrocytomas, 22; oligodendrogliomas, four; gangliogliomas, two; hemangioblastomas, 10 (nine sporadic cases and one case of Von Hippel-Lindau disease); primitive melanoma, one; and intramedullary neurinomas, two. Three patients were lost to follow-up and 10 patients died. METHOD: All patients were explored using MRI and were operated using a microsurgical technique. Tumor removal was complete in the cases of ependymoma and hemangioblastoma and subtotal in the cases of astrocytoma. RESULTS: Ependymoma: 38 cases with three cases of ependymoblastoma. Mean age: 47 years (range, 17-74 years); 17 males and 21 females. Diagnostic delay: less than one year, 11; one year, 15 cases; two years, nine cases; three years, three cases. Seven recurrences with one 35 years after a prior removal. Localizations: cervical and cervicodorsal, 19; dorsal, ten; dorsolumbar, seven; holomedullary, one. Number of levels concerned: 5-12 (with the cysts associated). Mean follow-up was 10 years (range, two months to 35 years). Patients stabilized, 19; worse, six; improved, nine. Patients deceased: four, one by suicide, three cases of ependymoblastoma (survival, seven months). Astrocytomas: 22 cases, with 14 cases of astrocytoma, two pilocytic astrocytoma, four malignant astrocytoma, and two glioblastoma. Mean age: 44 years (range, 22-73 years); 14 males and eight females. Diagnostic delay: malignant tumors, one to nine months; low grades; three to six years (range, eight months to 25 years). Number of levels concerned: two to eight. Mean follow-up: seven years (range, six months to 10 years). Stabilized patients: 13; worse, five; deaths, four. Oligodendroglioma: four cases. Mean age: 58 years; two males and two females. Diagnostic delay: 10months. Localization: cervical, three; dorsal, one. Oligodendroglioma A, two; B, two. Results: two cases stabilized, one case with recurrence, and one patient deceased. Ganglioglioma: two. Both cases were associated with scoliosis. Recurrence in the eighth month and two years for the second case. One patient died. Hemangioblastoma: 10 cases, nine sporadic and one case of Von Hippel-Lindau disease. Nine cervical localizations, one on the medulla cone. Mean age: 45 years (range, 11-54 years); eight males and two females. Total removal in nine cases. One case of recurrence seven years after a prior surgery and operated a second time with no recurrence after 10 years of follow-up. Intramedullary neurinomas: two cases with a total removal and 15 years of follow-up. Primitive melanoma: one case with mediothoracic location. Treatment with surgery plus radiotherapy. Follow-up, seven years without recurrence. CONCLUSION: Total removal of the intramedullary tumors is a challenge. In cases of removal, the risk of worsening status is 18-19.5%. Subtotal or incomplete removal 27-40% risk of recurrence.


Language: fr

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