Journal of Clinical Medicine (Apr 2021)

Meningioma Surgery in Patients ≥70 Years of Age: Clinical Outcome and Validation of the SKALE Score

  • Daniel Monden,
  • Florian J. Raimann,
  • Vanessa Neef,
  • Daniel Dubinski,
  • Florian Gessler,
  • Fee Keil,
  • Marie-Thérèse Forster,
  • Michael W. Ronellenfitsch,
  • Patrick N. Harter,
  • Thomas M. Freiman,
  • Elke Hattingen,
  • Volker Seifert,
  • Christian Senft,
  • Peter Baumgarten

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10091820
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 9
p. 1820

Abstract

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Along with increasing average life expectancy, the number of elderly meningioma patients has grown proportionally. Our aim was to evaluate whether these specific patients benefit from surgery and to investigate a previously published score for decision-making in meningioma patients (SKALE). Of 421 patients who underwent primary intracranial meningioma resection between 2009 and 2015, 71 patients were ≥70 years of age. We compared clinical data including World Health Organization (WHO) grade, MIB-1 proliferation index, Karnofsky Performance Status Scale (KPS), progression free survival (PFS) and mortality rate between elderly and all other meningioma patients. Preoperative SKALE scores (Sex, KPS, ASA score, location and edema) were determined for elderly patients. SKALE ≥8 was set for dichotomization to determine any association with outcome parameters. In 71 elderly patients (male/female 37/34) all data were available. Postoperative KPS was significantly lower in elderly patients (p p = 0.0202) and pulmonary embolism (12.7% vs. 6%; p = 0.0209) occurred more frequently in our elderly cohort. Analyses of the Kaplan Meier curves revealed differences in three-month (5.6% vs. 0.3%; p = 0.0033), six-month (7% vs. 0.3%; p = 0.0006) and one-year mortality (8.5% vs. 0.3%; p p = 0.0479). According to our data, elderly meningioma patients face higher postoperative morbidity and mortality than younger patients. However, resection is reasonable for selected patients, particularly when reaching a SKALE score ≥ 8.

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