Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3094122 | Surgical Neurology | 2006 | 5 Pages |
BackgroundCraniopharyngioma is histologically a benign epithelial tumor located in the supersellar cistern that often presents aggressive growth and repeated recurrence. The authors hypothesized that craniopharyngioma recurrence and invasive growth are angiogenesis dependent and evaluated the significance of vascularization in the prognosis of craniopharyngioma by a prospective cohort study.MethodsThe cohorts consisted of 32 patients with AE and 31 patients with SP tumor. The primary and recurrence removal specimens of the cohort patients were gathered. Microvascular density and VEGF protein in the recurrence group and recurrence-free group were detected by the immunohistochemistry avidin-biotin-peroxidase method and analyzed quantitatively through computer-assisted microscopy to evaluate the correlation of MVD and VEGF with prognosis of craniopharyngiomas.ResultsThe average follow-up phase was 63.34 months; 14 of 32 patients with AE and 6 of 31 patients with SP had recurrence and underwent operation again. Although MVD and VEGF have significant difference between AE and SP (P = .000, P = .018, respectively), MVD and VEGF have no statistical difference between the recurrence group and recurrence-free group (P > .05).ConclusionsMicrovascular density and VEGF in craniopharyngioma tissue have no correlation with prognosis of the tumor, which may be explained by the minimal blood circulation in the craniopharyngioma. Adamantine epithelioma showed more tendency to recur than SP.