| Literature DB >> 26391590 |
Kévin Beccaria1,2, Christian Sainte-Rose3,4, Michel Zerah5,6, Stéphanie Puget7,8.
Abstract
Paediatric chordomas are rare malignant tumours arising from primitive notochordal remnants with a high rate of recurrence. Only 5 % of them occur in the first two decades such less than 300 paediatric cases have been reported so far in the literature. In children, the average age at diagnosis is 10 years with a male-to-female ratio closed to 1. On the opposite to adults, the majority of paediatric chordomas are intracranial, characteristically centered on the sphenooccipital synchondrosis. Metastatic spread seems to be the prerogative of the under 5-year-old children with more frequent sacro-coccygeal locations and undifferentiated histology. The clinical presentation depends entirely on the tumour location. The most common presenting symptoms are diplopia and signs of raised intracranial pressure. Sacrococcygeal forms may present with an ulcerated subcutaneous mass, radicular pain, bladder and bowel dysfunctions. Diagnosis is suspected on computerised tomography showing the bone destruction and with typically lobulated appearance, hyperintense on T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging. Today, treatment relies on as complete surgical resection as possible (rarely achieved because of frequent invasiveness of functional structures) followed by adjuvant radiotherapy by proton therapy. The role of chemotherapy has not been proven. Prognosis is better than in adults and depends on the extent of surgical resection, age and histology subgroup. Biological markers are still lacking to improve prognosis by developing targeted therapy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26391590 PMCID: PMC4578760 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-015-0340-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Fig. 1CT scanner of a clival chordoma. a. Axial brain window. The retroclival lesion developed posteriorly (dotted line) with contact to the brainstem (arrowhead). b. Axial bone window. Erosion of both posterior clinoid proccesses by the chordoma (arrows). c. Erosion of the posterior side f the clivus (arrow)
Fig. 2T2 weighted MRI of a clival chordoma. a. Axial plane. A voluminous chordoma developed from the clivus with extension to both cerebellopontine angles (single arrowheads). Brainstem is pushed back posteriorly (double arrowhead). b. Sagittal plane. The chordoma eroded the inferior part of the clivus (asterisk) and developed anteriorly to the cervical spine. Typical lobulated appearance with multiples hypointense septae can be observed
Outcome of paediatric chordomas observed in the major paediatric series of the literature.
| Author | Number of cases | Treatment | Mean follow-up in months (min-max) | Progression free survival (%) | Overall survival (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Surgery | Radiotherapy | Chemotherapy | |||||
| Benk et al.[
| 18 | Partial resection (18) | Proton (18) | - | 72 (19–120) | 63 (5 years) | 68 (5 years) |
| Borba et al.[
| 79 (review) | Not precise | Not precise | Not precise | 39 (1–300) | - | 56.8 |
| Hoch et al.[
| 73 | Total/Partial resection (73) | Proton (73) | - | 90 (12–252) | - | 81 |
| Ridenour et al.[
| 20 | Partial (14) | Conventional (10) | (2) | 129 (1–501) | - | 63 |
| Proton (2) | |||||||
| None (2) | |||||||
| Total (4) | Conventional (2) | ||||||
| None (2) | |||||||
| Biopsy (2) | Conventional (2) | ||||||
| Necker - Lariboisière (not published) | 34 | Partial (24) | Conventional (2) | (3) | 78 (0.3-239) | 54.3 (15 years) | 63 |
| Proton (3) | |||||||
| Conventional + Proton (12) | |||||||
| Radiosurgery (1) | |||||||
| Tomotherapy (1) | |||||||
| None (4) | |||||||
| Unknown (1) | |||||||
| Total (6) | Conventional (2) Proton (3) Conventional + Proton (1) | (1) | |||||
| Unknown (4) | |||||||