Abstract

BackgroundThe resection of a motor-eloquent glioma should be guided by intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring (IOM) but its interpretation is often difficult and may (unnecessarily) lead to subtotal resection. Navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation (nTMS) combined with diffusion-tensor-imaging (DTI) is able to stratify patients with motor-eloquent lesion preoperatively into high- and low-risk cases with respect to a new motor deficit.ObjectiveTo analyze to what extent preoperative nTMS motor risk stratification can improve the interpretation of IOM phenomena.MethodsIn this monocentric observational study, nTMS motor mapping with DTI fiber tracking of the corticospinal tract was performed before IOM-guided surgery for motor-eloquent gliomas in a prospectively collected cohort from January 2017 to October 2020. Descriptive analyses were performed considering nTMS data (motor cortex infiltration, resting motor threshold (RMT), motor evoked potential (MEP) amplitude, latency) and IOM data (transcranial MEP monitoring, intensity of monopolar subcortical stimulation (SCS), somatosensory evoked potentials) to examine the association with the postoperative motor outcome (assessed at day of discharge and at 3 months).ResultsThirty-seven (56.1%) of 66 patients (27 female) with a median age of 48 years had tumors located in the right hemisphere, with glioblastoma being the most common diagnosis with 39 cases (59.1%). Three patients (4.9%) had a new motor deficit that recovered partially within 3 months and 6 patients had a persistent deterioration (9.8%). The more risk factors of the nTMS risk stratification model (motor cortex infiltration, tumor-tract distance (TTD) ≤8mm, RMTratio <90%/>110%) were detected, the higher was the risk for developing a new postoperative motor deficit, whereas no patient with a TTD >8mm deteriorated. Irreversible MEP amplitude decrease >50% was associated with worse motor outcome in all patients, while a MEP amplitude decrease ≤50% or lower SCS intensities ≤4mA were particularly correlated with a postoperative worsened motor status in nTMS-stratified high-risk cases. No patient had postoperative deterioration of motor function (except one with partial recovery) when intraoperative MEPs remained stable or showed only reversible alterations.ConclusionsThe preoperative nTMS-based risk assessment can help to interpret ambiguous IOM phenomena (such as irreversible MEP amplitude decrease ≤50%) and adjustment of SCS stimulation intensity.

Highlights

  • When resecting a glioma, a gross total resection (GTR) is always aimed for since the extent of resection (EOR) is positively correlated with survival [1, 2]

  • We developed a risk stratification model based on Navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation (nTMS) and tractography data with which patients with motoreloquent tumor can be used to stratify into low and high-risk cases [14]

  • The motor outcome of patients with an irreversible motor evoked potential (MEP) amplitude decrease ≤50% or used subcortical stimulation (SCS) intensities ≤7mA depends on the nTMS risk stratification

Read more

Summary

Introduction

A gross total resection (GTR) is always aimed for since the extent of resection (EOR) is positively correlated with (progression free) survival [1, 2]. It is important to note that patients with eloquently located brain lesions require careful consideration of tumor resection versus functional preservation, as new functional deficits lead to reduced quality of life and to reduced survival [4]. The gold standard for surgical treatment of motor-eloquent brain lesions is resection guided by intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring (IOM) [5]. The resection of a motor-eloquent glioma should be guided by intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring (IOM) but its interpretation is often difficult and may (unnecessarily) lead to subtotal resection. Navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation (nTMS) combined with diffusion-tensor-imaging (DTI) is able to stratify patients with motor-eloquent lesion preoperatively into high- and low-risk cases with respect to a new motor deficit

Methods
Results
Discussion
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