AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluated the effectiveness and safety of frameless, MR-guided stereotactic brain biopsies in 113 patients over 51 months, focusing on morbidity and mortality rates, hemorrhage frequency, and histological yield.
  • Out of 114 biopsy procedures, 97.4% provided specific neuropathological diagnoses, with low rates of complications: two cases of postoperative hemorrhage and transient neurological worsening in two patients.
  • The findings suggest that using open intraoperative MR imaging offers advantages over traditional methods, including improved adaptability to anatomical changes and high histological success, with an average procedure time of just 60 minutes.

Article Abstract

Object: The authors undertook a prospective study of frameless, magnetic resonance (MR)-guided stereotactic brain biopsy procedures performed with the aid of an open MR system. Morbidity and mortality rates, frequency of postoperative hemorrhage, and histological yield were evaluated, as well as the size and location of the lesions under investigation.

Methods: During a period of 51 months (July 1996-November 2000), 114 consecutive frameless stereotactic biopsy procedures were performed with the aid of an open intraoperative MR system to investigate supratentorial lesions in 113 patients. The median volume of the lesions was 33.5 cm3, and 31.9% were deep seated. All biopsy samples comprised pathological tissue and in 111 (97.4%) of 114 a specific neuropathological diagnosis was made. A follow-up computerized tomography (CT) scan was obtained on the 1st postoperative day in all patients to evaluate postoperative complications. In two cases (1.8%), a hemorrhage was found on postoperative CT scans, with no neurological worsening of the patients. Morbidity with neurological worsening was seen in three patients; it was transient in two of them (1.8%), and in one (0.9%) subsequent emergency craniotomy was necessary because of increased edema. There were no infections, but there was one death (0.9%)

Conclusions: Open intraoperative MR imaging transforms a blind conventional stereotactic procedure into a visually controlled procedure that is adaptable to dynamic anatomical changes. Routine postprocedural MR imaging makes follow-up CT scanning obsolete. This largest reported series of intraoperative MR-guided biopsy procedures shows results that are at least comparable with those in reports of larger series of conventional stereotactic biopsy sampling. The mean procedure time was 60 minutes including planning, and this method produced low morbidity and complication rates and a high histological yield.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3171/jns.2002.97.2.0354DOI Listing

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