Cancers (Mar 2024)

Predictors of Progression in a Series of 81 Adult Patients Surgically Managed for an Intracranial Hemangioblastoma: Implications for the Postoperative Follow-Up

  • Elisabeth Garrido,
  • Huy Le Ngoc,
  • Jacques Guyotat,
  • Isabelle Pelissou-Guyotat,
  • Timothée Jacquesson,
  • Violaine Delabar,
  • Romain Manet,
  • Clémentine Gallet,
  • Tanguy Fenouil,
  • Nathalie Streichenberger,
  • Alexandre Vasiljevic,
  • David Meyronet,
  • Emmanuel Jouanneau,
  • François Ducray,
  • Chloe Dumot,
  • Thiebaud Picart

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16071261
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 7
p. 1261

Abstract

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The aim was to identify predictors of progression in a series of patients managed for an intracranial hemangioblastoma, in order to guide the postoperative follow-up modalities. The characteristics of 81 patients managed for an intracranial hemangioblastoma between January 2000 and October 2022 were retrospectively analyzed. The mean age at diagnosis was of 48 ± 16 years. Eleven (14%) patients had von Hippel–Lindau disease. The most frequent tumor location was the cerebellar hemispheres (n = 51, 65%) and 11 (14%) patients had multicentric hemangioblastomas. A gross total resection was achieved in 75 (93%) patients. Eighteen (22%) patients had a local progression, with a median progression-free survival of 56 months 95% CI [1;240]. Eleven (14%) patients had a distant progression (new hemangioblastoma and/or growth of an already known hemangioblastoma). Local progression was more frequent in younger patients (39 ± 14 years vs. 51 ± 16 years; p = 0.005), and those with von Hippel–Lindau disease (n = 8, 44% vs. n = 3, 5%, p n = 3, 17% vs. n = 2, 3%, p = 0.02), and partial tumoral resection (n = 4, 18% vs. n = 1, 2%, p = 0.0006). Therefore, it is advisable to propose a postoperative follow-up for at least 10 years, and longer if at least one predictor of progression is present.

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