Abstract

This study proposes a topographical classification of spheno-orbital meningiomas. Its aim was to define whether the different intraorbital localizations require different surgical approaches and have different recurrence rates and outcomes. Sixty patients with spheno-orbital meningiomas operated upon between 1983 and 2003 were reviewed. Four types were identified according to the extent of intraorbital tumor invasion: I: lateral or superolateral (15 cases); II: medial and inferomedial (8 cases); III: orbital apex (25 cases); IV: diffuse (12 cases). Three surgical approaches were used: lateral orbitotomy (15 cases with lateral or superolateral tumors), supraorbital-pterional approach (42 cases, including all 8 inferomedial cases, all 25 orbital apex cases, and 9 of 12 diffuse tumors), and a fronto-temporal-orbitozygomatic approach (only 3 cases with diffuse meningiomas and large-scale tumor invasion in the infratemporal fossa and cavernous sinus). Tumor removal was complete (Simpson grades I and II) in 40 cases, and incomplete in 20 (33.3%). There were two postoperative deaths (3.3%). A sufficient clinical follow-up was obtained in 52 cases. The clinical outcome was excellent in 26 patients (50%), good in 16 (30.8%), moderate in 6 (11.5%), and poor in 4 (7.7%). Twenty-two of 52 patients (42.3%) had tumor recurrence; however, 44 (84.6%) achieved tumor control after surgery alone through two or more operations. The recurrence rate was correlated with the Simpson grade of resection and the intraorbital tumor location. Significantly higher rates of recurrence were recorded for the orbital apex type (50%) and diffuse forms (60%), than for the inferomedial (28.5%) and superolateral forms (23%). Spheno-orbital meningiomas may be classified according to the location and extent of the intraorbital tumor invasion. The different localizations may require different surgical approaches, with different chances of complete removal. The location and extent of the intraorbital tumor results in different recurrence rates, lower for superolateral and inferomedial forms than for orbital apex and diffuse forms.

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