Clinical, molecular, and genetic features of spinal meningiomas

Abstract Spinal meningiomas comprise 25%–46% of all primary spinal tumors. While the majority are benign and slow-growing, when left untreated, they can result in significant neurological decline. Emerging clinical, imaging, and molecular data have begun to reveal spinal meningiomas as distinct tumo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuro-oncology advances 2024-10, Vol.6 (Supplement_3), p.iii73-iii82
Hauptverfasser: Deska-Gauthier, Dylan, Hachem, Laureen D, Wang, Justin Z, Landry, Alex P, Yefet, Leeor, Gui, Chloe, Ellengbogen, Yosef, Badhiwala, Jetan, Zadeh, Gelareh, Nassiri, Farshad
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Spinal meningiomas comprise 25%–46% of all primary spinal tumors. While the majority are benign and slow-growing, when left untreated, they can result in significant neurological decline. Emerging clinical, imaging, and molecular data have begun to reveal spinal meningiomas as distinct tumor subtypes compared to their intracranial counterparts. Moreover, recent studies indicate molecular and genetic subtype heterogeneity of spinal meningiomas both within and across the classically defined WHO grades. In the current review, we focus on recent advances highlighting the epidemiological, pathological, molecular/genetic, and clinical characteristics of spinal meningiomas. Furthermore, we explore patient and tumor-specific factors that predict prognosis and postoperative outcomes. We highlight areas that require further investigation, specifically efforts aimed at linking unique molecular, genetic, and imaging characteristics to distinct clinical presentations to better predict and manage patient outcomes.
ISSN:2632-2498
2632-2498
DOI:10.1093/noajnl/vdae123