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Original Article

The management of patients with an intrinsic supratentorial brain tumour

, , , , , , , & show all
Pages 299-312 | Published online: 06 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

The management of patients presenting with supratentorial glioma between 1978 and 1986 is reviewed. Complete follow-up in 517 cases was obtained. One hundred and fifty eight patients were not submitted to any form of surgery, 299 patients were biopsied and 60 patients underwent craniotomy and internal decompression. The no surgery group contained a higher proportion of patients with poor prognostic indicators than either the biopsy or craniotorny groups. The craniotomy group consisted of patients with better prognostic indicators than the biopsy group, in particular, younger age and more favourable site, type and grade of tumour. This was reflected in the difference in outcome between the groups. Median survival was 14 months in the craniotomy group, four months in the biopsy group and 2.2 months in the no surgery group. The outcome in patients with histologically proven malignant gliomas was best in those patients who received radiotherapy. The craniotorny group had a median survival of 18.5 months, a two year survival of 48% and a five year survival of 9%. The median survival following radiotherapy of those patients with proven malignant gliomas who had a biopsy was 9.5 months with a two year survival of 16% and a five year survival of 2%. These results compare favourably with studies which have adopted a more aggressive approach, suggesting that outcome is determined as much by patient selection using favourable prognostic indicators as by the treatment itself. The need for prospective trials of the management of unselected consecutive glioma patients randomizing them to conservative and radical treatment groups in order to define the role of both conventional therapy and radical therapy is discussed.

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