학술논문

Predictive factors of post‐operative apathy in patients with diffuse frontal gliomas undergoing awake brain mapping.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Neuropsychology. Mar2024 Supplement 1, Vol. 18, p73-84. 12p.
Subject
*BRAIN mapping
*GLIOMAS
*APATHY
*CINGULATE cortex
*FRONTAL lobe
*BODY surface mapping
Language
ISSN
1748-6645
Abstract
Patients with diffuse frontal gliomas often present with post‐operative apathy after tumour removal. However, the association between apathy and tumour removal of gliomas from the frontal lobe remains unknown. This study aimed to investigate the factors influencing post‐operative apathy after tumour removal in patients with diffuse frontal gliomas. We compared the demographics and clinical characteristics of patients with and without post‐operative apathy in a cohort of 54 patients who underwent awake brain mapping for frontal gliomas. The frequency of clinical parameters such as left‐sided involvement, high‐grade tumour types (WHO grades III, IV), main tumour location in the anterior cingulate gyrus (ACC) and/or dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) and orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) was significantly greater in the apathetic group compared to the non‐apathetic group. The apathetic group scored significantly lower on neuropsychological assessments such as the Letter Fluency Test among the Word Fluency Tests than the non‐pathetic group (p =.000). Moreover, the scores of Parts 3, and 3–1 of the Stroop test were significantly lower in the apathetic group than those in the non‐apathetic group (p =.023,.027, respectively). Multivariate model analysis revealed that the appearance of post‐operative apathy was significantly related to side of the of lesion [left vs. right, hazard ratio (HR) = 8.00, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.36–46.96, p =.021], location of the main tumour in the frontal lobe (ACC/DLPFC/OFC vs. others, HR = 7.99, 95% CI = 2.16–29.59, p =.002), and the Letter Fluency Test (HR =.37, 95% CI =.15–.90, p =.028). Post‐operative apathy is significantly associated with ACC and/or DLPFC and OFC in the left hemisphere of diffuse frontal gliomas. Apathy in frontal gliomas is correlated with a decline in the Letter Fluency Test scores. Therefore, this instrument is a potential predictor of post‐operative apathy in patients with diffuse frontal gliomas undergoing awake brain mapping. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]