Abstract

Postoperative MRI is the conventional method for assessing the radicalness of hemispherical tumors excision, but the method has limitations on sensitivity in the assessment of tumor infiltration of the peritumoral zone. The 'gold standard' for detecting tumor cells is the microscopic visualisation. To study the possibilities of a cytological study of the excision margins of glial and metastatic tumors for an objective assessment of the radical nature of the operation. The study included 35 patients with intracerebral tumors who underwent open surgery at a university clinic of Volga Research Medical University in 2018-2019: 15 patients with metastasis, 13 patients with MRI-contrasting gliomas Grade III-IV and 7 patnents with non-MRI-contrasting gliomas Grade II-III. During the surgery, samples for cytological examination were taken from the following sites: from the tumor, from the nearest perifocal zone, and at a distance of 5-7 mm, along the border of the extended resection. 154 samples were examined: from 2 to 5 for each patient. The data on the radicalness of the operation, obtained by methods of cytological analysis of the resection margins and postoperative MRI, are not only consistent (p=0.001), but also complement each other, in particular, in some cases, tumor cells were found even in those areas where the tumor tissue was not detected with MRI. In cases of cerebral metastases excision, tumor cells in the nearest perifocal zone were found in 8 out of 28 samples (28.6%), at the extended resection margins - in 3 out of 29 (10.3%). In cases of resection of MRI-contrasting gliomas Grade III-IV, tumor cells in the nearest perifocal zone were found in 22 out of 32 samples (68.8%), at the extended resection margins - in 14 out of 20 (70%). In cases of excision of diffuse gliomas Grade II-III, tumor cells in the nearest perifocal zone were found in 10 out of 17 samples (58.9%), at the extended resection margins - in 4 out of 11 (36.4%). The first data obtained demonstrated sufficient informativeness of the cytologic examination of the peritumoral zone as an additional tool for assessing the radicalness of glioma and metastasis surgery. Cytologic analysis of the perifocal zone shows that the extension of the borders of the removal of Grade III-IV gliomas has no advantages, because tumor cells were found both in the nearest perifocal zone and at the extended resection margins with with approximately the same frequency.

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

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.