Skull base chordoma and chondrosarcoma: neuroradiologist's guide to diagnosis, surgical management, and proton beam therapy
Authors
Potter, G. M.Siripurapu, R.
Herwadkar, A.
Abdulla, S.
Ikotun, O.
Broadhurst, P.
Woodward, M.
Bhalla, R. K.
Glancz, L. J.
Hammerbeck-Ward, C. L.
Rutherford, S. A.
Pathmanaban, O. N.
Roncaroli, Federico
Colaco, Rovel J
Pan, Shermaine
Whitfield, Gillian A
Affiliation
Division of Neuroscience and Division of Cancer Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom; and Department of Clinical Oncology, Christie Hospital, Manchester, United KingdomIssue Date
2024
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Skull base chordomas and chondrosarcomas are distinct types of rare, locally aggressive mesenchymal tumors that share key principles of imaging investigation and multidisciplinary care. Maximal safe surgical resection is the treatment choice for each, often via an expanded endoscopic endonasal approach, with or without multilayer skull base repair. Postoperative adjuvant radiation therapy is frequently administered, usually with particle therapy such as proton beam therapy (PBT). Compared with photon therapy, PBT enables dose escalation while limiting damage to dose-limiting neurologic structures, particularly the brainstem and optic apparatus, due to energy deposition being delivered at a high maximum with a rapid decrease at the end of the penetration range (Bragg peak phenomenon). Essential requirements for PBT following gross total or maximal safe resection are tissue diagnosis, minimal residual tumor after resection, and adequate clearance from PBT dose-limiting structures. The radiologist should understand surgical approaches and surgical techniques, including multilayer skull base repair, and be aware of evolution of postsurgical imaging appearances over time. Accurate radiologic review of all relevant preoperative imaging examinations and of intraoperative and postoperative MRI examinations plays a key role in management. The radiology report should reflect what the skull base surgeon and radiation oncologist need to know, including distance between the tumor and PBT dose-limiting structures, tumor sites that may be difficult to access via the endoscopic endonasal route, the relationship between intradural tumor and neurovascular structures, and tumor sites with implications for postresection stability. (©)RSNA, 2024 Supplemental material is available for this article.Citation
Potter GM, Siripurapu R, Herwadkar A, Abdulla S, Ikotun O, Broadhurst P, et al. Skull Base Chordoma and Chondrosarcoma: Neuroradiologist's Guide to Diagnosis, Surgical Management, and Proton Beam Therapy. Radiographics. 2024 Oct;44(10):e240036. PubMed PMID: 39298353. Epub 2024/09/20. eng.Journal
RadiographicsDOI
10.1148/rg.240036PubMed ID
39298353Additional Links
https://dx.doi.org/10.1148/rg.240036Type
ArticleLanguage
enae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1148/rg.240036