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Abstract Details

Emergent Neurosurgical Intervention for Intracranial Tumors at a Tertiary Referral Center: A 20-year Descriptive Cohort (2004–2024)
Neuro-oncology
P11 - Poster Session 11 (11:45 AM-12:45 PM)
6-005
To describe the clinical indications, tumor profiles, surgical approaches, timeliness of care, and short-term outcomes among patients who underwent emergent neurosurgical intervention for brain tumors at Mayo Clinic between 2004 and 2024.

While most intracranial tumors are managed electively, a subset present with time-critical deterioration necessitating emergent surgery. Evidence characterizing this population is limited and often restricted to single-pathology series. A comprehensive description across tumor types and indications can inform triage, operative planning, and counseling.


We conducted a retrospective descriptive study of patients who received emergent neurosurgical intervention for tumor-related indications. Cases were identified via operative logs, ICD and CPT codes, and cross-validated by manual chart review. Exclusions include elective procedures. Collected variables included demographics, presentation (e.g., vision changes, decreased consciousness, focal deficits, seizures), imaging features (e.g. degree of herniation); tumor category (e.g. sellar, primary vs metastatic); operative approach (e.g., endoscopic endonasal, craniotomy, CSF diversion), ICU utilization, complications and other outcomes for 30-day and 90-day interval.

There were fewer than 100 emergent cases: the most common indications are rapidly progressive visual loss from sellar/suprasellar masses, mass effect with neurologic decline from intra-axial tumors (high-grade glioma or metastasis), intratumoral hemorrhage (often metastatic or high-grade primary), and obstructive hydrocephalus from posterior fossa or ventricular lesions. ICU stays are two days or less, and in-hospital mortality was less than 5%.


Emergent tumor-related neurosurgical interventions at a high-volume tertiary center are infrequent yet heterogeneous, spanning sellar apoplexy to hemorrhagic intra-axial lesions. Patterns observed—rapid operative timelines, short ICU courses, low in-hospital mortality, and favorable early visual outcomes in sellar emergencies—support streamlined triage pathways and pathology-specific operative strategies. This descriptive cohort provides benchmark data for counseling, resource planning, and the design of future comparative effectiveness studies focused on timing of intervention and approach-specific outcomes in tumor-related emergencies.


Authors/Disclosures
Hyo Bin You
PRESENTER
Mr. You has received personal compensation for serving as an employee of Dasion.AI. Mr. You has received personal compensation for serving as an employee of IXL Learning.