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Published in: Acta Neurochirurgica 6/2020

01-06-2020 | Pathology | Original Article - Peripheral Nerves

Image-guided percutaneous biopsy of peripheral nerve tumors of indeterminate nature: risks and benefits

Authors: Courtney Pendleton, Robert J. Spinner

Published in: Acta Neurochirurgica | Issue 6/2020

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Abstract

Background

Usual management of peripheral nerve tumors is to avoid biopsy in those that are likely benign; the risk of biopsy outweighs the benefit of definitive tissue diagnosis. Biopsy of presumed malignant lesions is performed widely. There is a subset of peripheral nerve tumors that are not easily categorized as benign or malignant based on the clinical and/or radiological features alone. The role of biopsy in peripheral nerve tumors of uncertain character remains controversial and the risk of biopsy (and the potential risk/benefit ratio) for these lesions is not known.

Methods

Following approval by our institutional review board, we reviewed all notes of a single peripheral nerve surgeon from 2000 to 2018 with respect to image-guided percutaneous biopsy of nerve tumors. We divided these patients into 3 groups based on clinicoradiologic features. We determined the risk of complications and the “hit rate” for patients with peripheral nerve tumors of uncertain behavior, defined as the percentage of patients sent for percutaneous biopsy who had a malignancy on their final pathology.

Results

Of 82 patients with tumors of uncertain behavior, 9 had complications, and 23 had malignant final pathology (a “hit rate” of 27.7%). Neurosurgical referral for biopsy of tumors of uncertain behavior was made in 60 patients. Twenty-two had malignant final pathology (“hit rate”= 36.7%). Non-neurosurgical referral for biopsy was made in 22 patients with tumors of uncertain behavior. Two had malignant final pathology (“hit rate”= 4.55%). There was a statistically significant difference between the “hit rate” for the two groups (p = 0.021).

Conclusions

The decision to biopsy a peripheral nerve tumor is largely based on the presumed behavior and prognosis, determined via clinicoradiologic characteristics. Patient care might be improved by delaying percutaneous biopsy of peripheral nerve lesions until after a neurosurgical evaluation.
Literature
5.
go back to reference Roberto J Perez-Roman, S Shelby Burks, Luca Debs, Iahn Cajigas, Allan D Levi, (2020) The Risk of Peripheral Nerve Tumor Biopsy in Suspected Benign Etiologies. Neurosurgery Roberto J Perez-Roman, S Shelby Burks, Luca Debs, Iahn Cajigas, Allan D Levi, (2020) The Risk of Peripheral Nerve Tumor Biopsy in Suspected Benign Etiologies. Neurosurgery
Metadata
Title
Image-guided percutaneous biopsy of peripheral nerve tumors of indeterminate nature: risks and benefits
Authors
Courtney Pendleton
Robert J. Spinner
Publication date
01-06-2020
Publisher
Springer Vienna
Keyword
Pathology
Published in
Acta Neurochirurgica / Issue 6/2020
Print ISSN: 0001-6268
Electronic ISSN: 0942-0940
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00701-020-04257-1

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