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Original Article

Brain stem glioma: The role of a biopsy

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Pages 265-273 | Published online: 06 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

A retrospective review of the clincial and histopathological features of 31 patients with brain stem gliomas treated between 1965 and 1990 at Kyushu University Hospital was performed to determine the role of biopsy on these lesions. These 16 male and 15 female patients ranged in age from 3 to 50 years at diagnosis (average: 18.1 years). The primary site of the tumour was the pons in 20 patients, followed by the medulla oblongata and midbrain, and the final histological diagnoses of the lesions based on either the biopsy or autopsy materials were grade I astrocytomas in five patiaents, grade II in nine, grade III in 10, grade IV in five, and ependymoma in two patients. No consistent correlation could be obtained between the CT findings and histological diagnoses. Open surgical posterior fossa exploration was performed on 17 patients (diagnostic biopsy: 10, volume reduction by tumour removal with or without cyst evacuation: 7) and stereotaxic biopsy on three patients, without any mortality related to these procedures. In our biopsy series, half of the patients with grade II astrocytoma died within 12 months after diagnosis, whereas three out of four patients with grade I astrocytoma survived more than 10 years after diagnosis. Because of the relative safety of the tissue sampling technique, and the importance of an accurate diagnosis in order to select appropriate treatment modalities, histological verification of the lesion should be considered for all patients harbouring a brain stem mass lesion.

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