Performance of intraoperative neurocognitive tests during awake surgery for patients with diffuse low-grade glioma

Despite great advancements and the diffusion of awake surgery for brain tumors, the literature shows that the tests applied during the procedure are heterogeneous and non-standardized. This prospective, observational, descriptive study collected data on intraoperative brain mapping and the performan...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neurosurgical review 2024-03, Vol.47 (1), p.129-129, Article 129
Hauptverfasser: Albuquerque, Lucas Alverne F., de Macêdo Filho, Leonardo José Monteiro, Borges, Felipe Silva, Diógenes, Gabryella S., Pessoa, Fátima C., Rocha, Cicera Jairlly Veras, Almeida, João Paulo, Ghizoni, Enrico, Joaquim, Andrei F.
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container_start_page 129
container_title Neurosurgical review
container_volume 47
creator Albuquerque, Lucas Alverne F.
de Macêdo Filho, Leonardo José Monteiro
Borges, Felipe Silva
Diógenes, Gabryella S.
Pessoa, Fátima C.
Rocha, Cicera Jairlly Veras
Almeida, João Paulo
Ghizoni, Enrico
Joaquim, Andrei F.
description Despite great advancements and the diffusion of awake surgery for brain tumors, the literature shows that the tests applied during the procedure are heterogeneous and non-standardized. This prospective, observational, descriptive study collected data on intraoperative brain mapping and the performance of multiple neurocognitive tests in 51 awake surgeries for diffuse low-grade glioma. Frequency of use and rate of intraoperative findings of different neurocognitive tests were analyzed. Patients mean age at the time of surgery was 35.1 (20–57) years. We performed 26 (51.0%) surgeries on the left hemisphere (LH) and 25 (49.0%) on the right hemisphere (RH). Significant differences were observed between the total number of functional findings (cortical and subcortical) identified in the LH and RH ( p  = 0.004). In subcortical findings alone, the differences remained significant ( p  = 0.0004). The RH subcortical region showed the lowest number of intraoperative findings, and this was correlated with functional outcome: Karnofsky performance scale at five days ( p  = 0.022), three months ( p  = 0.002) and one year ( p  = 0.002) post-surgery. On average, more tests were used to map the RH, with a lower frequency of both cortical and subcortical functional findings. Even though subcortical findings were less frequent than cortical findings, they were crucial to defining the resection margins. Based on the intraoperative findings, frequency of use, and rate of findings per use of the tests analyzed, the most relevant tests for each hemisphere for awake brain mapping were identified.
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Medicine & Public Health
Neurosurgery
title Performance of intraoperative neurocognitive tests during awake surgery for patients with diffuse low-grade glioma
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