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  • Title: Dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumors: an MRI-based scheme for epilepsy surgery.
    Author: Chassoux F, Rodrigo S, Mellerio C, Landré E, Miquel C, Turak B, Laschet J, Meder JF, Roux FX, Daumas-Duport C, Devaux B.
    Journal: Neurology; 2012 Oct 16; 79(16):1699-707. PubMed ID: 23035071.
    Abstract:
    OBJECTIVE: To determine optimal resections in the 3 dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumor (DNT) histologic subtypes (simple, complex, and nonspecific) based on MRI features. METHODS: In 78 consecutive epilepsy patients operated for DNT, MRI features were classified as follows: type 1 (cystic/polycystic-like, well-delineated, strongly hypointense T1), type 2 (nodular-like, heterogeneous), or type 3 (dysplastic-like, iso/hyposignal T1, poor delineation, gray-white matter blurring). Correlations between histology, neurophysiologic findings, and surgical outcome were established for each MRI subtype. RESULTS: Type 1 MRI (25 cases, in temporal and extratemporal areas) always corresponded to simple or complex DNTs. Type 2 MRI (25 cases, predominantly in neocortical areas) and type 3 MRI (28 cases, mainly in the mesial temporal lobe) corresponded to nonspecific forms. The epileptogenic zone (EZ) differed significantly according to the MRI subtype (p = 0.0029). It colocalized with the tumor in type 1 MRI, included perilesional cortex in type 2 MRI, and involved extensive areas in type 3 MRI. Cortical dysplasia was predominantly found in type 3 MRI (p < 0.0001). The main prognostic factors for seizure-free outcome (83%) were complete tumor (p < 0.0001) and EZ (p = 0.0115) removal. Other factors favorably influencing the outcome were a short epilepsy duration (p = 0.013) and absence of cortical-subcortical damage at the resection site (p = 0.053). Age at surgery was not related to outcome; however, cortical-subcortical damage was correlated with old age (p = 0.021). Treatment discontinuation was correlated with young age at surgery (p = 0.004) and short epilepsy duration (p = 0.001). CONCLUSION: We propose that resection might be restricted to the tumor in type 1 MRI and be more extensive in other MRI subtypes, especially in type 3 MRI. Early surgery and clean surgical margins are crucial for curing epilepsy.
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