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Role of surgery in treating epstein-barr virus-associated smooth muscle tumor (EBV-SMT) with central nervous system invasion: A systemic review from 1997 to 2019.

Ka-Wei LauYu-Wei HsuYin-Ting LinKo-Ting Chen
Published in: Cancer medicine (2021)
Epstein-Barr virus-associated smooth muscle tumor (EBV-SMT) is a rare mesenchymal tumor occurred almost exclusively in immunocompromised hosts. This article provides a systematic review of literature under PRISMA guideline on clinical features, treatment modalities, roles of surgical intervention, and outcomes of all 65 reported EBV-SMTs with central nervous system (CNS) invasion. Over 95% of reported cases were immunocompromised, while human immunodeficiency virus infection and post-organ transplantation were the most commonly associated underlying causes (near 90%). Despite a heterogeneous follow-up period, a 1-year survival rate of 76.0% and 5-year survival rate of 59.6% may support the indolent and non-deadly nature of EBV-SMT even with CNS invasion. Immune survey and reconstruction should be conducted for every patient with CNS EBV-SMT. Surgical resection is mostly adopted as primary treatment to obtain diagnosis and relieve compressive effect. A total resection of tumor may be beneficial if tumor was symptomatic and had intracranial invasion.
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