Surgery for intracranial meningiomas in the elderly: a clinical-radiological grading system as a predictor of outcome
- PMID: 15739557
- DOI: 10.3171/jns.2005.102.2.0290
Surgery for intracranial meningiomas in the elderly: a clinical-radiological grading system as a predictor of outcome
Abstract
Object: A grading system, called the Clinical-Radiological Grading System (CRGS), has been developed to standardize surgical indications in elderly patients harboring intracranial meningiomas. Patients with a score lower than 10 had a bad prognosis regardless of surgical treatment, those with a score between 10 and 12 had a prognosis positively influenced by surgery, and those with a score higher than 12 had a good prognosis regardless of surgical treatment. The authors performed a prospective cross-sectional study to validate further the use of the CRGS as a clinical tool to orientate surgical decision making in elderly patients and to explore prognostic factors of survival.
Methods: From 1990 to 2000 the authors consecutively recruited and surgically treated 90 patients 70 years of age or older with neuroimaging findings of intracranial meningiomas and a preoperative evaluation based on the CRGS. The surgical mortality rate, which covers deaths within 3 months after surgical intervention, was 7.8%, and the 1-year mortality rate was 15.6%. Female sex and a higher CRGS score were associated with a higher probability of survival. Among the different subset items of the CRGS score, no peritumoral edema for surgical survival and no concomitant diseases for 1-year survival provide the strongest predictive contribution, even if not at a statistically significant level.
Conclusions: The CRGS score is a useful and practical tool for the selection of elderly patients affected by intracranial meningiomas as surgical candidates. A CRGS score higher than 10 and female sex are good prognostic factors of survival. whereas age is not a contraindication to surgery.
Comment in
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Surgery for meningioma in the elderly and long-term survival: comparison with an age- and sex-matched general population and with younger patients.J Neurosurg. 2017 Apr;126(4):1201-1211. doi: 10.3171/2016.2.JNS152611. Epub 2016 Jun 3. J Neurosurg. 2017. PMID: 27257838
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