Neurocognitive changes after awake surgery in glioma patients: a retrospective cohort study
Male
Cancer Research
Determinants of neurocognitive functioning
Clinical Neurology
neuropsychology
Neurocognitive Disorders
Neuropsychological Tests
Executive Function
03 medical and health sciences
Postoperative Complications
0302 clinical medicine
Neuropsychology
glioma
Journal Article
Humans
Wakefulness
Retrospective Studies
Brain Neoplasms
Glioma
Prognosis
neurocognitive functioning changes
3. Good health
Brain tumor
Neurology
Oncology
Neurocognitive functioning changes
Clinical Study
determinants of neurocognitive functioning
Female
brain tumor
Craniotomy
Follow-Up Studies
DOI:
10.1007/s11060-019-03341-6
Publication Date:
2019-12-04T13:02:33Z
AUTHORS (8)
ABSTRACT
Abstract
Purpose
Deficits in neurocognitive functioning (NCF) frequently occur in glioma patients. Both treatment and the tumor itself contribute to these deficits. In order to minimize the harmful effects of surgery, an increasing number of patients undergo awake craniotomy. To investigate whether we can indeed preserve cognitive functioning after state-of-the art awake surgery and to identify factors determining postoperative NCF, we performed a retrospective cohort study.
Methods
In diffuse glioma (WHO grade 2–4) patients undergoing awake craniotomy, we studied neurocognitive functioning both pre-operatively and 3–6 months postoperatively. Evaluation covered five neurocognitive domains. We performed analysis of data on group and individual level and evaluated the value of patient-, tumor- and treatment-related factors for predicting change in NCF, using linear and logistic regression analysis.
Results
We included 168 consecutive patients. Mean NCF-scores of psychomotor speed and visuospatial functioning significantly deteriorated after surgery. The percentage of serious neurocognitive impairments (− 2 standard deviations) increased significantly for psychomotor speed only. Tumor involvement in the left thalamus predicted a postoperative decline in NCF for the domains overall-NCF, executive functioning and psychomotor speed. An IDH-wildtype status predicted decline for overall-NCF and executive functioning.
Conclusions
In all cognitive domains, except for psychomotor speed, cognitive functioning can be preserved after awake surgery. The domain of psychomotor speed seems to be most vulnerable to the effects of surgery and early postoperative therapies. Cognitive performance after glioma surgery is associated with a combination of structural and biomolecular effects from the tumor, including IDH-status and left thalamic involvement.
SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL
Coming soon ....
REFERENCES (25)
CITATIONS (31)
EXTERNAL LINKS
PlumX Metrics
RECOMMENDATIONS
FAIR ASSESSMENT
Coming soon ....
JUPYTER LAB
Coming soon ....