Abstract
Simple SummaryMeningioma is still the most common adult tumor of the CNS, most of which are slow-growing, benign tumors and could even be accidentally diagnosed; nonetheless, they sometimes show more aggressive behavior with higher recurrence rates and relatively reduced overall survival. Assuming this, in recent years, scientific research has been accelerated, looking for new insights and applications that could improve preoperative investigation, tailor surgical planning, and strongly impact meningioma patients’ prognosis. Many fields have been developed, and the detection of brain invasion has firmly gained its potential role, leading to the revised version of WHO for CNS tumors in 2016 as a further criterion for defining atypia. Further studies are still ongoing to assess a widely accepted application of BI evaluation in intracranial meningioma management.Several recent studies are providing increasing insights into reliable markers to improve the diagnostic and prognostic assessment of meningioma patients. The evidence of brain invasion (BI) signs and its associated variables has been focused on, and currently, scientific research is investing in the study of key aspects, different methods, and approaches to recognize and evaluate BI. This paradigm shift may have significant repercussions for the diagnostic, prognostic, and therapeutic approach to higher-grade meningioma, as long as the evidence of BI may influence patients’ prognosis and inclusion in clinical trials and indirectly impact adjuvant therapy. We intended to review the current knowledge about the impact of BI in meningioma in the most updated literature and explore the most recent implications on both clinical practice and trials and future directions. According to the PRISMA guidelines, systematic research in the most updated platform was performed in order to provide a complete overview of characteristics, preoperative applications, and potential implications of BI in meningiomas. Nineteen articles were included in the present paper and analyzed according to specific research areas. The detection of brain invasion could represent a crucial factor in meningioma patients’ management, and research is flourishing and promising.
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