Literature DB >> 17233305

Pediatric craniopharyngiomas: classification and treatment according to the degree of hypothalamic involvement.

Stéphanie Puget1, Matthew Garnett, Alison Wray, Jacques Grill, Jean-Louis Habrand, Nathalie Bodaert, Michel Zerah, Mercia Bezerra, Dominique Renier, Alain Pierre-Kahn, Christian Sainte-Rose.   

Abstract

OBJECT: The current treatment of craniopharyngiomas is evolving into one of a multimodal approach in which the aim is disease control and improved preservation of quality of life (QOL). To date, an appropriate classification system with which to individualize treatment is absent. The objectives of this study were to identify preoperative prognostic factors in patients with craniopharyngiomas and to develop a risk-based treatment algorithm.
METHODS: The authors reviewed data obtained in a retrospective cohort of 66 children (mean age 7.4 years, mean follow-up period 7 years) who underwent resection between 1984 and 2001. Postoperative recurrence rates, vision status, and endocrine function were consistent with those reported in the literature. The postoperative morbidity was related to hypothalamic dysfunction. The preoperative magnetic resonance imaging grade, clinically assessed hypothalamic function, and the sugeon's operative experience (p = 0.007, p = 0.047, p = 0.035, respectively) significantly predicted poor outcome. Preoperative hypothalamic grading was used in a prospective cohort of 22 children (mean age 8 years, mean follow-up period 1.2 years) treated between 2002 and 2004 to stratify patients according to whether they underwent gross-total resection (GTR) (20%), complete resection avoiding the hypothalamus (40%), or subtotal resection (STR) (40%). In cases in which residual disease was present, the patient underwent radiotherapy. There have been no new cases of postoperative hyperphagia, morbid obesity, or behavioral dysfunction in this prospective cohort.
CONCLUSIONS: For many children with craniopharyngiomas, the cost of resection is hypothalamic dysfunction and a poor QOL. By using a preoperative classification system to grade hypothalamic involvement and stratify treatment, the authors were able to minimize devastating morbidity. This was achieved by identifying subgroups in which complete resection or STR, performed by an experienced craniopharyngioma surgeon and with postoperative radiotherapy when necessary, yielded better overall results than the traditional GTR.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17233305     DOI: 10.3171/ped.2007.106.1.3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosurg        ISSN: 0022-3085            Impact factor:   5.115


  94 in total

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4.  Management of pediatric craniopharyngioma: 10-year experience from high-flow center.

Authors:  Abd El Rahman Enayet; Mostafa M E Atteya; Hala Taha; Mohamed Saad Zaghloul; Amal Refaat; Eslam Maher; Amal Abdelaziz; Mohamed A El Beltagy
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5.  Quality of life, hypothalamic obesity, and sexual function in adulthood two decades after primary gross-total resection for childhood craniopharyngioma.

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Review 7.  Congenital craniopharyngioma treated by radical surgery: case report and review of the literature.

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8.  The endoscopic endonasal approach for pediatric craniopharyngiomas: the key lessons learned.

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9.  Acute presentation of craniopharyngioma in children and adults in a Danish national cohort.

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Review 10.  Microsurgical removal of craniopharyngioma: endoscopic and transcranial techniques for complication avoidance.

Authors:  Saira Alli; Semra Isik; James T Rutka
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