Spinal meningiomas: Management and outcomes.

Spinal meningiomas are relatively rare, benign, intradural, extramedullary tumours, that are typically slow-growing and well-defined. Surgery is always the first line for treating spinal meningiomas. Here, we have discussed the existing literature on spinal meningiomas and the role of surgery in determining the outcomes.

[1]  Lee A. Tan,et al.  Posterior-based resection of spinal meningiomas: an institutional experience of 141 patients with an average of 28 months of follow-up. , 2022, Journal of neurosurgery. Spine.

[2]  Adrian Elmi-Terander,et al.  Health-Related Quality of Life and Return to Work after Surgery for Spinal Meningioma: A Population-Based Cohort Study , 2021, Cancers.

[3]  J. Bartek,et al.  Long-Term Follow-Up and Predictors of Functional Outcome after Surgery for Spinal Meningiomas: A Population-Based Cohort Study , 2021, Cancers.

[4]  Y. Sakai,et al.  Clinical features and prognostic factors in spinal meningioma surgery from a multicenter study , 2021, Scientific Reports.

[5]  Yubo Wang,et al.  Epidemiology and survival of patients with spinal meningiomas: A SEER analysis. , 2021, European journal of surgical oncology : the journal of the European Society of Surgical Oncology and the British Association of Surgical Oncology.

[6]  J. Kros,et al.  Spinal meningiomas: Treatment outcome and long-term follow-up , 2020, Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery.

[7]  H. Wakimoto,et al.  Clinical and prognostic features of spinal meningioma: a thorough analysis from a single neurosurgical center , 2018, Journal of Neuro-Oncology.

[8]  F. Ferracci,et al.  Spinal meningioma and factors predictive of post-operative deterioration , 2018, Journal of Neuro-Oncology.

[9]  E. Kasper,et al.  Proposal of a new radiological classification system for spinal meningiomas as a descriptive tool and surgical guide , 2017, Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery.