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Objective: Meningioma grading is relevant to therapy decisions in complete or partial resection, observation, and radiotherapy because higher grades are associated with tumor growth and recurrence. The differentiation of low and intermediate grades is particularly challenging. This study attempts to apply radiomics-based shape and texture analysis on routine multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) from different scanners and institutions for grading.
Methods: We used MRI data (T1-weighted/T2-weighted, T1-weighted-contrast-enhanced [T1CE], fluid-attenuated inversion recovery [FLAIR], diffusion-weighted imaging [DWI], apparent diffusion coefficient [ADC]) of grade I (n = 46) and grade II (n = 25) nontreated meningiomas with histologic workup. Two experienced radiologists performed manual tumor segmentations on FLAIR, T1CE, and ADC images in consensus. The MRI data were preprocessed through T1CE and T1-subtraction, coregistration, resampling, and normalization. A PyRadiomics package was used to generate 990 shape/texture features. Stepwise dimension reduction and robust radiomics feature selection were performed. Biopsy results were used as standard of reference.
Results: Four statistically independent radiomics features were identified as showing the strongest predictive values for higher tumor grades: roundness-of-FLAIR-shape (area under curve [AUC], 0.80), cluster-shades-of-FLAIR/T1CE-gray-level (AUC, 0.80), DWI/ADC-gray-level-variability (AUC, 0.72), and FLAIR/T1CE-gray-level-energy (AUC, 0.76). In a multivariate logistic regression model, the combination of the features led to an AUC of 0.91 for the differentiation of grade I and grade II meningiomas.
Conclusions: Our results indicate that radiomics-based feature analysis applied on routine MRI is viable for meningioma grading, and a multivariate logistic regression model yielded strong classification performances. More advanced tumor stages are identifiable through certain shape parameters of the lesion, textural patterns in morphologic MRI sequences, and DWI/ADC variability.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.wneu.2019.08.148 | DOI Listing |
J Neurooncol
September 2025
Department of Neurological Surgery, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA.
Purpose: NOTCH3 is increasingly implicated for its oncogenic role in many malignancies, including meningiomas. While prior work has linked NOTCH3 expression to higher-grade meningiomas and treatment resistance, the metabolic phenotype of NOTCH3 activation remains unexplored in meningioma.
Methods: We performed single-cell RNA sequencing on NOTCH3 + human meningioma cell lines.
Neurosurg Rev
September 2025
Department of Neurosurgery, University Hospital of Ioannina, Ioannina, Greece.
Background: The aim of this review is to present the role of intraoperative flow cytometry (IFC) in the intracranial tumor surgery. This scoping review aims to summarize current evidence on the intraoperative use of IFC in patients with intracranial tumors.
Methods: A comprehensive literature search was conducted in the Medline, Cochrane and Scopus databases up to January 21, 2025.
Cureus
August 2025
Radiation Oncology, Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, Philadelphia, USA.
While World Health Organization (WHO) grade I meningiomas are typically slow growing and associated with favorable prognoses, a subset may exhibit unexpectedly aggressive behavior and resistance to conventional treatment approaches. Recurrent grade I meningiomas, in particular, are associated with a poorer prognosis despite their benign histological classification, underscoring the need for advanced genomic and radiomic analyses to refine diagnostic accuracy. We present a case of a 52-year-old female with a grade I parafalcine meningioma initially deemed nonaggressive, but ultimately recurred multiple times over several years despite undergoing repeated craniotomies and several courses of radiosurgery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuro Oncol
September 2025
Department of Neurological Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Background: Preoperative embolization is hypothesized to reduce blood loss and operative time for meningioma resection, but the impact of preoperative embolization on long-term oncological outcomes and molecular features of meningiomas is incompletely understood. Here we investigate how preoperative embolization influences perioperative and long-term outcomes and molecular features of atypical WHO grade 2 meningiomas.
Methods: Patients who underwent resection of WHO grade 2 meningiomas from 1997 to 2021 were retrospectively identified from an institutional database.
J Clin Neurosci
September 2025
Department of Neurosurgery, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark; Department of Clinical Medicine, Copenhagen University, Copenhagen, Denmark; Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden. Electronic address:
Background: Meningiomas exhibit considerable phenotypic variation within each WHO grade, thus additional markers are needed to identify prognostically relevant subgroups and optimize long-term management. Among biomarkers, genetic signatures correlate with prognoses. High Ki-67 proliferation indices and TERT promotor mutations and loss of CDKNA are known prognostic markers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF