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From Tumor to Network: Functional Connectome Heterogeneity and Alterations in Brain Tumors—A Multimodal Neuroimaging Narrative Review

Pablo S. Martínez Lozada, Johanna Pozo-Neira, José E. León-Rojas

2025Cancers10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Intracranial tumors such as gliomas, meningiomas, and brain metastases induce complex alterations in brain function beyond their focal presence. Modern connectomic and neuroimaging approaches, including resting-state functional MRI (rs-fMRI) and diffusion MRI, have revealed that these tumors disrupt and reorganize large-scale brain networks in heterogeneous ways. In adult patients, diffuse gliomas infiltrate neural circuits, causing both local disconnections and widespread functional changes that often extend into structurally intact regions. Meningiomas and metastases, though typically well-circumscribed, can perturb networks via mass effect, edema, and diaschisis, sometimes provoking global "dysconnectivity" related to cognitive deficits. Therefore, this review synthesizes interdisciplinary evidence from neuroscience, oncology, and neuroimaging on how intracranial tumors disrupt functional brain connectivity pre- and post-surgery. We discuss how functional heterogeneity (i.e., differences in network involvement due to tumor type, location, and histo-molecular profile) manifests in connectomic analyses, from altered default mode and salience network activity to changes in structural-functional coupling. The clinical relevance of these network effects is examined, highlighting implications for pre-surgical planning, prognostication of neurocognitive outcomes, and post-operative recovery. Gliomas demonstrate remarkable functional plasticity, with network remodeling that may correlate with tumor genotype (e.g., IDH mutation), while meningioma-related edema and metastasis location modulate the extent of network disturbance. Finally, we explore future directions, including imaging-guided therapies and "network-aware" neurosurgical strategies that aim to preserve and restore brain connectivity. Understanding functional heterogeneity in brain tumors through a connectomic lens not only provides insights into the neuroscience of cancer but also informs more effective, personalized approaches to neuro-oncologic care.

Topics & Concepts

NeuroscienceNeuroimagingDefault mode networkNeurocognitiveConnectomeConnectomicsDiffusion MRIMedicineFunctional neuroimagingFunctional imagingPsychologyFunctional connectivityCognitionMagnetic resonance imagingRadiologyFunctional Brain Connectivity StudiesAdvanced Neuroimaging Techniques and ApplicationsAdvanced MRI Techniques and Applications
From Tumor to Network: Functional Connectome Heterogeneity and Alterations in Brain Tumors—A Multimodal Neuroimaging Narrative Review | Litcius