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Glioblastoma (GBM) Surgery in Izmir

Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common and most aggressive primary brain tumor in adults; it is classified as grade 4 in the World Health Organization classification. It grows rapidly and infiltrates the surrounding brain tissue, so treatment is not leisurely but planned quickly. Surgery alone is not enough; the widest possible safe resection is followed by radiotherapy and chemotherapy. On this page we explain honestly how we approach glioblastoma surgery at our clinic in Izmir Konak, why we work as a multidisciplinary team, and what to realistically expect—without making exaggerated promises.

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What Is Glioblastoma?

Glioblastoma is a high-grade tumor arising from the brain's supporting cells, the glial cells (particularly astrocytes). In the 2021 WHO classification of central nervous system tumors it is defined as a grade 4 astrocytic tumor (IDH-wildtype). Microscopically it is characterized by marked cell proliferation, increased blood vessels (microvascular proliferation) and areas of necrosis. Because it infiltrates the surrounding brain with finger-like extensions, even when its border looks well defined on imaging it has spread microscopically; this feature explains why treatment cannot be limited to surgery.

Symptoms and Diagnosis

Symptoms depend on the tumor's location and growth rate and usually progress over weeks. Common features include progressively worsening headache, nausea and vomiting from raised intracranial pressure, seizures, speech or movement disturbances, and personality and cognitive changes. Contrast-enhanced brain MRI is the first-line study; it typically shows a ring-enhancing mass with central necrosis surrounded by extensive edema. Definitive diagnosis is made by pathological and molecular analysis (IDH status, MGMT promoter methylation) of tissue obtained at surgery or biopsy; these molecular markers influence treatment and course.

Surgery Alone Is Not Enough

The standard approach to glioblastoma is the widest possible safe surgical resection followed by concurrent radiotherapy and temozolomide chemotherapy (the Stupp protocol). The aim of surgery is to reduce the tumor burden as much as possible and to provide a tissue diagnosis; however, because the tumor infiltrates microscopically, surgery does not provide a 'cure', and the subsequent treatments are essential. To perform the resection while preserving function, neuronavigation, functional mapping, awake craniotomy when needed and fluorescence-guided (5-ALA) techniques are used. The entire decision is made by a multidisciplinary team in which neurosurgery, radiation oncology and medical oncology work together.

The Surgical Process

During preparation a detailed neurological examination, contrast MRI, and when needed functional MRI and DTI tractography, a multidisciplinary meeting and an anaesthetic assessment are carried out. In surgery the patient is positioned according to the tumor location; tumors close to a functional area are operated awake when required. A narrow shave within the hairline is sufficient, the bone flap is removed, the dura is opened, and the tumor is removed under the microscope with navigation guidance. Afterwards there is usually 24–48 hours of intensive care and a few days in hospital; the extent of resection is assessed with a control MRI, and the radiotherapy-chemotherapy course usually begins within a few weeks.

Honest Expectation Management

Glioblastoma is an aggressive tumor and, despite current treatment, its prognosis remains limited; saying this honestly is our responsibility as physicians. Molecular features such as MGMT promoter methylation can influence treatment response and course. Treatment often aims to control the disease, reduce symptoms and preserve quality of life as much as possible. The risks of surgery (bleeding, infection, a temporary or permanent neurological deficit, edema, seizures) are discussed openly. We do not promise a guaranteed result; each patient's course is different, and expectations are shared clearly before surgery.

Sources

1Greenberg MS. Greenberg's Handbook of Neurosurgery. 10th ed. Thieme; 2023:665.
2Osborn AG, Hedlund GL, Salzman KL. Osborn's Brain: Imaging, Pathology, and Anatomy. 2nd ed. Elsevier; 2018:509.
3Louis DN, et al. The 2021 WHO Classification of Tumors of the Central Nervous System. Neuro Oncol. 2021.
📚 Read our encyclopedia article for a detailed, fully-referenced medical explanation

よくある質問

Can glioblastoma be completely cured with surgery?

Because glioblastoma infiltrates the surrounding brain microscopically, surgery alone does not provide a 'cure'; for this reason radiotherapy and chemotherapy (the Stupp protocol) follow the operation. The aim of treatment is to control the disease and preserve quality of life. No outcome can be guaranteed, and expectations are shared honestly.

When should surgery be done — is waiting harmful?

Because glioblastoma grows rapidly, treatment is usually planned quickly. Once the diagnosis is clear, surgery and then the radiotherapy-chemotherapy course are started without delay. How long to wait is determined by the tumor's location, the patient's condition and multidisciplinary evaluation.

Can the entire tumor be removed at surgery?

The goal is the widest possible safe resection while preserving function. If the tumor is close to critical areas such as speech or movement, the resection may be kept limited to reduce the risk of permanent loss. The microscopic disease that cannot be removed is targeted with radiotherapy and chemotherapy.

I am outside Izmir — can you assess my MRI first?

Yes. You can send your existing MRI or CT images via WhatsApp (+90 533 075 72 94) and receive a preliminary assessment. If appropriate, you will be invited to our clinic in Izmir Konak for an examination, and additional imaging and multidisciplinary evaluation will be planned if needed.

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