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  • Title: Correspondence of tumor localization with tumor recurrence and cytogenetic progression in meningiomas.
    Author: Ketter R, Rahnenführer J, Henn W, Kim YJ, Feiden W, Steudel WI, Zang KD, Urbschat S.
    Journal: Neurosurgery; 2008 Jan; 62(1):61-9; discussion 69-70. PubMed ID: 18300892.
    Abstract:
    OBJECTIVE: Meningiomas are mostly benign tumors that originate from the coverings of the brain and spinal cord. Cytogenetically, they reveal a normal karyotype or, typically, monosomy of chromosome 22. Progression of meningiomas is associated with a non-random pattern of secondary losses of other autosomes. Deletion of the short arm of one chromosome 1 is a decisive step to anaplastic growth in meningiomas. METHODS: Statistical analyses were performed for the karyotypes of 661 meningiomas with respect to localization, progression, and recurrence of the tumor. A mathematical mixture model estimates typical pathogenetic routes in terms of the accumulation of somatic chromosome changes in tumor cells. The model generates a genetic progression score (GPS) that estimates the prognosis as related to the cytogenetic properties of a given tumor. RESULTS: In 53 patients, one or several recurrences were documented over the period of observation. This corresponds to a total rate of recurrence of 8.0% after macroscopically complete tumor extirpation. Higher GPS values were shown to be strongly correlated with tumor recurrence (P = 2.9 x 10(-7)). High-risk tumors, both in terms of histology and cytogenetics, are localized much more frequently at the brain surface than at the cranial base (P = 1.2 x 10(-5) for World Health Organization grade and P = 3.3 x 10(-12) for GPS categorization). CONCLUSION: The tendency of cranial base meningiomas to recur seems to depend on surgical rather than biological reasons. As a quantitative measure, the GPS allows for a more precise assessment of the prognosis of meningiomas than the established categorical cytogenetic markers.
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