Longitudinal Quality-of-Life Outcomes of Skull Base Chondrosarcoma Patients following Surgical Resection

Author:

Taniguchi Seika1ORCID,Kam Jeremy,Kirszbaum Castle-Mendel2,Akagami Ryojo

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada

2. Department of Neurosurgery, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria Australia

Abstract

Abstract Objective Owing to the rarity of skull base chondrosarcomas (CS), much of its natural history and long-term impact on patient quality of life (QoL) are not well studied. This novel study demonstrates QoL among CS patients following radical treatment constituting surgery and postoperative radiotherapy over 2 decades. Study Design Retrospective review and prospective data collection to obtain patient demographic, tumor characteristics, clinical symptoms, and patient-reported QoL outcomes using the 36-Item Short Form Health Survey (SF-36). Setting/Participants Patients diagnosed with CS who underwent radical intent surgical resection by the senior author and adjuvant early postoperative proton beam therapy. Results Twenty-eight skull base CS patients were identified, with 19 patients completing full treatment course. Mean long-term follow-up was 148.9 months. Diplopia symptom resolution was high. No significant deterioration in SF-36 Physical Health Component (PHC) and Mental Health Component (MHC) scores was observed at postoperative and long-term follow-up. General health was stable initially but deteriorated in long term (Δ −18.88, minimal clinically important difference [MCID]: 9.86, p = 0.04). Compared with age-matched Canadian control patients, CS patients reported similar PHC scores at baseline and follow-up. CS patients reported lower MHC scores (45.8 vs. 50.9, p = 0.13) preoperatively, which persisted at follow-up decreasing by 1.9 (43.9 vs. 53.7, p = 0.03); this difference, however, did not reach MCID threshold of Δ 5.9. Conclusion We present the longest follow-up data on CS demonstrating stable long-term QoL with aggressive surgery. Tumor control was high and preoperative tumor size did not affect long-term QoL. Preoperative QoL was lower among CS compared with Canadian normative data. Postoperatively, only the decline in physical functioning QoL scores exceeded MCID. At long-term follow-up, the decline in physical functioning, social functioning, and general health exceeded MCID. Overall, QoL among CS patients remained lower at long-term follow-up despite absence of tumor progression and resolution of symptoms.

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag KG

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