Clinical and descriptive characteristics associated with high-grade meningioma in a large clinical series Journal Article


Authors: Mokhtari, S.; Peeri, N. C.; Beer-Furlan, A.; Anderson, M. D.; Chowdhary, S.; LaRocca, R. V.; Mammoser, A. G.; Nabors, L. B.; Olson, J. J.; Thompson, R. C.; Thompson, Z. J.; Martinez, Y. C.; Egan, K. M.
Article Title: Clinical and descriptive characteristics associated with high-grade meningioma in a large clinical series
Abstract: PurposeWe studied 571 patients with intracranial meningioma for clinical characteristics and tumor location associated with high grade meningioma (WHO II/III).Materials and methodsPatients were participants in a multicentre epidemiologic study of risk factors for primary brain tumors including meningioma recruited from September 2005 to November 2019. We included patients 18 or older with a recent diagnosis of a primary intracranial meningioma of any subtype (ICD9/10: 9530-0, 9531-0, 9532-0, 9537-0, 9533-0, 9534-0, 9530-0, 9538-1, 9538-3) who were enrolled at neuro-oncology and neuro-surgery clinics in the southeastern U.S.ResultsThe median patient age was 58 years (IQR: 48-68) and the majority of patients were female (n = 415; 72.7%) and Caucasian (n = 516; 90.4%). Most patients were symptomatic (n = 460; 80.6%) and their tumours more commonly occurred in a non-skull base location (n = 298; 52.2%). A total of 86 patients (15.0%) had a WHO grade II/III meningioma. Compared to patients with WHO grade I tumours, patients with WHO II/III meningiomas were over 3-times more likely to be male (odds ratio (OR): 3.25; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.98, 5.35) adjusting for age, race, symptomatic presentation, and skull-based location. Moreover, a WHO grade II/III meningioma was substantially less likely to be observed in asymptomatic patients (OR: 0.15, 95% CI: 0.04, 0.42), and in patients with a skull-based tumour (OR: 0.40, 95% CI: 0.24, 0.66), adjusting for other factors. Male gender, symptomatic tumour, and a non-skull base location were independently associated with WHO grade II/III meningioma.ConclusionThese findings may shed additional light on the underlying pathogenesis of meningioma.
Keywords: risk; tumors; meningioma; system; progesterone; high-grade; estrogen-receptors; clinical series; skull-based
Journal Title: British Journal of Neurosurgery
Volume: 39
Issue: 2
ISSN: 0268-8697
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Group  
Date Published: 2025-01-01
Start Page: 224
End Page: 227
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:001002525200001
DOI: 10.1080/02688697.2023.2219759
PROVIDER: wos
PUBMED: 37287223
PMCID: PMC12142684
Notes: Article -- Source: Wos
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  1. Noah Charles Peeri
    9 Peeri