PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - J.M. Wood AU - B. Kundu AU - A. Utter AU - T.A. Gallagher AU - J. Voss AU - V.A. Nair AU - J.S. Kuo AU - A.S. Field AU - C.H. Moritz AU - M.E. Meyerand AU - V. Prabhakaran TI - Impact of Brain Tumor Location on Morbidity and Mortality: A Retrospective Functional MR Imaging Study AID - 10.3174/ajnr.A2679 DP - 2011 Sep 01 TA - American Journal of Neuroradiology PG - 1420--1425 VI - 32 IP - 8 4099 - http://www.ajnr.org/content/32/8/1420.short 4100 - http://www.ajnr.org/content/32/8/1420.full SO - Am. J. Neuroradiol.2011 Sep 01; 32 AB - BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: fMRI is increasingly used in neurosurgery to preoperatively identify areas of eloquent cortex. Our study evaluated the efficacy of clinical fMRI by analyzing the relationship between the distance from the tumor border to the area of functional activation (LAD) and patient pre- and postoperative morbidity and mortality. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The study included patients with diagnosis of primary or metastatic brain tumor who underwent preoperative fMRI-based motor mapping (n=74) and/or language mapping (n=77). The impact of LAD and other variables collected from patient records was analyzed with respect to functional deficits in terms of morbidity (paresis and aphasia) and mortality. RESULTS: Significant relationships were found between motor and language LAD and the existence of either pre- or postoperative motor (P < .001) and language deficits (P=.009). Increasing age was associated with motor and language deficits (P=.02 and P=.04 respectively). Right-handedness was related to language deficits (P=.05). Survival analysis revealed that pre- and postoperative deficits, grade, tumor location, and LAD predicted mortality. Motor deficits increased linearly as the distance from the tumor to the primary sensorimotor cortex decreased. Language deficits increased exponentially as the distance from the tumor to the language areas decreased below 1 cm. Postoperative mortality analysis showed an interaction effect between motor or language LAD and mortality predictors (grade and tumor location, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: These findings indicate that tumors may affect language and motor function differently depending on tumor LAD. Overall, the data support the use of fMRI as a tool to evaluate patient prognosis and are directly applicable to neurosurgical planning. BOLDblood oxygen level–dependentCIconfidence IntervalEPIecho-planar imagingfMRIfunctional MR imagingHRhazard ratioLADlesion to activation distanceORodds ratioSEstandard errorSMCsensorimotor cortexSSDISocial Security Death IndexWHOWorld Health Organization