Abstract

BackgroundWe present our 9-year consecutive case series of skull base chordomas and chondrosarcomas from a UK tertiary referral centre, discussing treatments offered and outcomes. This was carried out to improve understanding around current treatment and to better inform the management of future patients.MethodsConsecutive case series over a 9-year period (2007–2016). Retrospective data analysis from the electronic skull base multidisciplinary team database and the digital patient records at a UK tertiary referral centreResultsTwenty-four patients were identified (11 chordomas, 13 chondrosarcomas, mean age 52). Nineteen had proton beam therapy (PBT) postoperatively; two had intensity-modulated radiotherapy; two had no further treatment. One patient was lost to follow-up. All chordomas were resected via a transnasal endoscopic approach. Of the 19 patients undergoing resection with PBT, 13 were disease free at latest follow-up, and six patients had local recurrence, of which two died (mean follow up 7.4 years). Of the three patients treated with surgery then IMRT/TomoTherapy, one died 4 years post-treatment, and the other two are alive after 4 and 5 years of follow-up respectively. Of the two patients treated with surgery alone, one was lost to follow-up, and the other is alive after more than 8 years. Chondrosarcoma 5-year survival was 91.6%, and chordoma 4-year survival was 75%.ConclusionSkull base chordomas and chondrosarcomas can be challenging to resect, and most cases require adjuvant therapy to achieve control. Where complete resection is not possible, it is critical to undertake sufficient resection to permit high-dose radiation.

Highlights

  • We present our 9-year consecutive case series of skull base chordomas and chondrosarcomas from a UK tertiary referral centre, discussing treatments offered and outcomes

  • Prognosis is reasonable with 5-year survival of 65% for chordomas and 81.8% for chondrosarcomas [8]

  • As far as we are aware, our case series includes the largest number of UK skull base chordomas and chondrosarcomas managed surgically via a transnasal endoscopic approach

Read more

Summary

Introduction

We present our 9-year consecutive case series of skull base chordomas and chondrosarcomas from a UK tertiary referral centre, discussing treatments offered and outcomes. This was carried out to improve understanding around current treatment and to better inform the management of future patients. Diffusion-weighted MRI may aid diagnosis [7] Both tumours tend to be locally invasive, and, given their proximity to the important structures of the skull base, they can present a serious management challenge. Due to their rarity and the limitations of the published literature to case series, detailed risk stratification and prognostic data are not available. This may take the form of fractionated high-dose photon therapy [12], proton beam therapy (PBT) [13] or hypofractionated stereotactic [14] modalities

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call