Cancers (Aug 2023)

Intraoperative Neuromonitoring of the Visual Pathway in Asleep Neuro-Oncology Surgery

  • Christos Soumpasis,
  • Alba Díaz-Baamonde,
  • Prajwal Ghimire,
  • Asfand Baig Mirza,
  • Marco Borri,
  • Josef Jarosz,
  • Richard Gullan,
  • Keyoumars Ashkan,
  • Ranjeev Bhangoo,
  • Francesco Vergani,
  • Jose Pedro Lavrador,
  • Ana Mirallave Pescador

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15153943
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 15
p. 3943

Abstract

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Brain tumour surgery in visual eloquent areas poses significant challenges to neurosurgeons and has reported inconsistent results. This is a single-centre prospective cohort study of patients admitted for asleep surgery of intra-axial lesions in visual eloquent areas. Demographic and clinical information, data from tractography and visual evoked potentials (VEPs) monitoring were recorded and correlated with visual outcomes. Thirty-nine patients were included (20 females, 19 males; mean age 52.51 ± 14.08 years). Diffuse intrinsic glioma was noted in 61.54% of patients. There was even distribution between the temporal, occipital and parietal lobes, while 55.26% were right hemispheric lesions. Postoperatively, 74.4% remained stable in terms of visual function, 23.1% deteriorated and 2.6% improved. The tumour infiltration of the optic radiation on tractography was significantly related to the visual field deficit after surgery (p = 0.016). Higher N75 (p = 0.036) and P100 (p = 0.023) amplitudes at closure on direct cortical VEP recordings were associated with no new postoperative visual deficit. A threshold of 40% deterioration of the N75 (p = 0.035) and P100 (p = 0.020) amplitudes correlated with a risk of visual field deterioration. To conclude, direct cortical VEP recordings demonstrated a strong correlation with visual outcomes, contrary to transcranial recordings. Invasion of the optic radiation is related to worse visual field outcomes.

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