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

Author:

Soumpasis Christos1,Díaz-Baamonde Alba2,Ghimire Prajwal1,Baig Mirza Asfand1ORCID,Borri Marco3,Jarosz Josef3,Gullan Richard1,Ashkan Keyoumars1,Bhangoo Ranjeev1,Vergani Francesco1,Lavrador Jose Pedro1ORCID,Mirallave Pescador Ana2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Neurosurgical Department, King’s College Hospital Foundation Trust, London SE5 9RS, UK

2. Department of Neurophysiology, King’s College Hospital Foundation Trust, London SE5 9RS, UK

3. Department of Neuroradiology, King’s College Hospital Foundation Trust, London SE5 9RS, UK

Abstract

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.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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