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Neuroendoscopic anatomy and surgery in pineal region tumors: role of neuroendoscopic procedure in the 'minimally-invasive preferential' management.

The therapeutic modalities for pineal region tumors in Western countries differ from those in far-eastern countries, that is, Japan and Korea, mainly because of the different patient populations. The majority of pineal region tumors in Japan and Korea are radio sensitive and/or chemosensitive, and adjuvant therapy rather than extensive surgery plays the main part in the treatment of these tumors. The authors have applied minimally-invasive preferential management in pineal region tumors in last 8 years. For the therapeutic regimen, if the tumor markers alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) and human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG) were not detected in serum and there was significant ventricular dilation visualized on neuroimages, neuroendoscopic surgery was first applied for tumor debulking with tissue diagnosis and gross morphological analysis of the tumor and the intraventricular structures, followed by third-ventriculostomy. In the results, our minimally-invasive preferential regimen clarified the precise indication for neuroendoscopic procedures, and the majority of our patients with dilated ventricles and no evidence of tumor markers were treated satisfactorily with effective neuroendoscopic procedures as the initial procedure. Then avoided unnecessary craniotomy and radiotherapy and promised excellent therapeutic outcomes. Neuroendoscopic procedures have a great advantage in the management of chemo- or radiosensitive tumors, such as germinoma, pineoblastoma, or primitive neuroectodermal tumor. The neuroendoscopic anatomy including the lateral and third ventricles with a pineal region tumor with or without tumor dissemination was described in detail, together with the neuroendoscopic surgical technique.

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