Strictly third ventricle craniopharyngiomas: pathological verification, anatomo-clinical characterization and surgical results from a comprehensive overview of 245 cases

This study thoroughly analyzes the largest series of strictly 3V CPs ever collected. From 5346 CP reports published between 1887 and 2021, we selected 245 cases with reliable pathological, surgical, and/or neuroradiological ve rification of an intact 3VF beneath the tumor. This specific topography occurs predominantly in adult (92.6%), male (64.4%) patients presenting with headache (69.2%), and psychiatric disturbances (59.2%). Neuroradiological features defining strictly 3V CPs are a tumor-free chiasmatic cistern (95.9%) , an entirely visible pituitary stalk (86.4%), and the hypothalamus positioned around the tumor’s lower pole (92.6%). Most are squamous papillary (82%), showing low-risk severity adhesions to the hypothalamus (74.2%). The adamantinomatous variant, however, associates a higher risk of severe hypoth alamic adhesion (p <  .001). High-risk attachments are also associated with psychiatric symptoms (p = .013), which represented the major predictor for unfavorable prognoses (83.3% correctly predicted) among cases operated from 2006 onwards. CP recurrence is associated with infundibulo-tuberal symptoms (p = .036) and incomplete surgical removal (p = .02). The exclusive demographic, clinico-pathological and neuroradiological characteristics of strictly 3V CPs make them a separate, unique topographical category. Accurately distinguishing strictly 3V CPs preoperatively from those tumors replacing the infundibulum and/or tuber cinereum (infu ndibulo...
Source: Neurosurgical Review - Category: Neurosurgery Source Type: research