| Literature DB >> 33532921 |
Ciaran Scott Hill1,2, Mehdi Khan3, Kim Phipps4, Katherine Green5, Darren Hargrave5,6, Kristian Aquilina4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Optic pathway gliomas (OPGs), also known as visual pathway gliomas, are debilitating tumors that account for 3-5% of all pediatric brain tumors. They are most commonly WHO grade 1 pilocytic astrocytomas and frequently occur in patients with neurofibromatosis type 1. The location of these tumors results in visual loss and blindness, endocrine and hypothalamic dysfunction, hydrocephalus, and premature death. Their involvement of the visual pathways and proximity to other eloquent brain structures typically precludes complete resection or optimal radiation dosing without incurring significant neurological injury. There are various surgical interventions that can be performed in relation to these lesions including biopsy, cerebrospinal fluid diversion, and partial or radical resection, but their role is a source of debate. This study catalogues our surgical experience and patient outcomes in order to support decision-making in this challenging pathology.Entities:
Keywords: Glioma; Management; Optic; Pathway; Visual
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33532921 PMCID: PMC8184710 DOI: 10.1007/s00381-021-05060-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Childs Nerv Syst ISSN: 0256-7040 Impact factor: 1.475
Summary demographic details
| All cases | Patients who underwent resection | Patients who underwent any non-resection surgical intervention | Not operated | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total number | 121 | 17 | 33 | 71 |
| Age at diagnosis (mean) | 5.3 years average (0–16.2 range) | 1.8 years average (0.5–7.5 range) | 5.7 years average (0–14.8 range) | 5.8 years average (0.3–16.2 range) |
| Ethnicity | 65% White (79/121) 12% Asian (15/121) 13% Middle eastern (16/121) 9% Black (11/121) | 59% White (10/17) 12% Asian (2/17) 18% Middle eastern (3/17) 12% Black (2/17) | 58% White (19/33) 12% Asian (4/33) 15% Middle eastern (5/33) 15% Black (5/33) | 70% White (50/71) 13% Asian (9/71) 11% Middle eastern (8/71) 6% Black (4/71) |
| Sex | 51% female (62/121) 49% male (59/121) | 41% female (7/17) 59% male (10/17) | 58% female (19/33) 42% male (14/33) | 51% female (36/71) 49% male (35/71) |
| Neurofibromatosis 1 | 38% (46/121) | 6% (1/17) | 24% (8/33) | 52% (37/71) |
| Past medical history | 3% asthma (3/121) <1% acute lymphocytic leukemia (1/121) <1% congenital cardiac anomaly (1/121) <1% spastic diplegia (1/121) <1% recurrent ear infections (1/121) | 3% asthma (1/33) 3% recurrent ear infections (1/33) | 3% asthma (2/71) 1% acute lymphocytic leukemia (1/71) 1% congenital cardiac anomaly (1/71) 1% spastic diplegia (1/71) | |
| Primary presenting symptom | 45% visual symptoms (54/121) 17% screening/investigations for NF1 (21/121) 12% headache (14/121) 7% seizure (9/121) 7% hypothalamic symptoms or signs including precocious puberty or diencephalic syndrome (8/121) 6% motor symptoms/focal neurology (7/121) 3% failure to thrive (4/121) 2% other (2/121) 2% unknown (2/121) | 65% visual symptoms (11/17) 12% headache (2/17) 18% motor symptoms/focal neurology (3/17) 6% failure to thrive (1/17) | 30% visual symptoms (10/33) 15% screening/investigations for NF1 (5/33) 22% headache (7/33) 9% seizure (3/33) 3% hypothalamic symptoms or signs including precocious puberty or diencephalic syndrome (1/33) 9% motor symptoms/focal neurology (3/33) 9% failure to thrive (3/33) 3% other (1/33) 3% unknown (1/33) | 47% visual symptoms (33/71) 23% Screening/investigations for NF1 (16/71) 7% headache (5/71) 9% seizure (6/71) 10% hypothalamic symptoms or signs including precocious puberty or diencephalic syndrome (7/71) 3% motor symptoms/focal neurology (2/71) 0% failure to thrive (0/71) 1% other (1/71) 1% unknown (1/71) |
| Histological diagnosis | 70% unavailable (85/121) | 59% pilocytic astrocytoma (10/17) 6% pilomyxoid astrocytoma (1/17) 29% low-grade glioma–unspecified (5/17) 6% ganglioglioma (1/17) | 42% unavailable (14/33) Of those available: 74% pilocytic astrocytoma (14/19) 26% low-grade glioma–unspecified (5/19) 5% high-grade glioma –unspecified (1/19) | 100% unavailable (71/71) |
| Dodge stage | 10% A (12/121) 34% B (41/121) 56% C (68/121) | 29% A (5/17) 29% B (5/17) 41% C (7/17) | 9% A (3/33) 67% B (22/33) 24% C (8/33) | 6% A (4/71) 20% B (14/71) 75% C (53/71) |
| Hypothalamic involvement | ||||
Radiological Clinical | 53% (64/121) 18% (22/121) | 52% (9/17) 41% (7/17) | 82% (27/33) 18% (6/33) | 39% (28/71) 13% (9/71) |
Summary treatment details
| Number of patients operated | 41% (50/121) |
|---|---|
| Total number of surgeries performed | 104 on 50 patients |
| Number of operative episodes per patient | 59% nil (71/121) 41% one (50/121) 16% two (19/121) 6% three (7/121) |
| Patients with number of separately classified procedures | 59% nil (71/121) 22% one (23/104) 14% two (14/104) 5% three (5/104) 4% four (4/104) 2% five (2/104) 2% six (2/104) |
| Types of operations performed | 30% biopsy (31/104) 25% ventriculoperitoneal shunt (26/104) 16% cyst drainage (17/104) 15% subtotal resection (16/104) 9% Ommaya reservoir (9/104) 4% complete resection (4/104) 1% endoscopic third ventriculostomy (1/104) |
| Surgical complication | 6% shunt failure (6/104) 1% bleeding into tumor (1/104) |
| Chemotherapy | % (65/121) |
| Chemotherapy complications | 65% none (42/65) 10% minor (7/65) 25% major/requiring change in regimen (16/65) |
| Radiotherapy | 14% (17/121) |
| Radiotherapy complication | 12% (2/17) |
| Proton beam therapy | 8% (4/121) |
Summary outcome details
| All patients | Patients who underwent resection | Patients who underwent any non-resection surgical intervention | Patients who did not have surgery | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Endocrine status | ||||
No deficit Single hormone deficiency Multiple hormone deficiency | 80% (97/121) 17% (20/121) 3% (/121) | 65% (11/17) 12% (2/17) 24% (4/17) | 88% (29/33) 12% (4/33) 0% (0/33) | 80% (57/71) 20% (14/71) 0% (0/71) |
| Cognitive difficulty | ||||
No dysfunction Yes Unable to assess | 82% (99/121) 17% (50/121) 1% (1/121) | 77% (13/17) 23% (4/17) 0% (0/17) | 82% (27/33) 12% (4/33) 3% (1/33) | 83% (59/71) 17% (12/71) 0% (0/71) |
| Recurrence | ||||
No Yes | 59% (71/121) 41% (50/121) | 18% (3/17) 82% (14/17) | 39% (13/33) 60% (20/33) | 77% (55/71) 23% (16/71) |
| Mortality within study period | 5% (6/121) | 6% (1/17) | 9% (3/33) | 3% (2/71) |
Fig. 1Summary of baseline and repeat visual outcomes classified by treatment group (resective surgery, non-resective surgery, or no surgery) and stratified by the eye with best and worst vision. The initial baseline visual assessment refers to the earliest on record, and the repeat the most recent on record
Details of patients who underwent resection surgery
| Patient number | Age at diagnosis | Pathology | Dodge (plan criteria) | Surgery undertaken (each discrete episode is numbered) | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2.5 | Pilocytic astrocytoma | 2 (2a) | 1. Subtotal resection and ventriculoperitoneal shunt 2. Ommaya reservoir 3. Redo subtotal resection | Visual improvement in one eye Multiple hormone deficiency Cognitive/behavioral difficulties Clinical hypothalamic dysfunction Surgical complication - bleed into tumor |
| 2 | 4.9 | Pilocytic astrocytoma (KIAA1549:BRAF fusion) | 2 (1cL2CL) | 1. Subtotal resection | No change in vision No endocrine dysfunction No hypothalamic dysfunction Cognitive/behavioral difficulties No surgical complications |
| 3 | 6.9 | Pilocytic astrocytoma | 2 (2a) | 1. Subtotal resection | No change in vision Multiple hormone deficiency Clinical hypothalamic dysfunction No cognitive/behavioral difficulties No surgical complications |
| 4 | 3.3 | Pilocytic astrocytoma (KIAA1549:BR AF fusion) | 3 (1b1c2a3) | 1. Subtotal resection 2. Redo subtotal resection and ventriculoperitoneal shunt 3. Cyst drainage and insertion of Ommaya | No change in vision No hormone deficiency Clinical hypothalamic dysfunction No cognitive/behavioral difficulties No surgical complications |
| 5 | 3.5 | Low-grade glioma (unspecified) | 1 (1aL) | 1. Subtotal resection | Visual improvement in one eye No hormone deficiency No hypothalamic dysfunction No cognitive/behavioral difficulties No surgical complications |
| 6 | 3.8 | Pilocytic astrocytoma | 1 (1aR) | 1. Gross total resection | No change in vision No hormone deficiency No hypothalamic dysfunction Cognitive/behavioral difficulties No surgical complications |
| 7 | 2 | Pilocytic astrocytoma | 1 (1aR) | 1. Gross total resection | Visual improvement in one eye No hormone deficiency No hypothalamic dysfunction No cognitive/behavioral difficulties No surgical complications |
| 8 | 1.7 | Low-grade glioma (unspecified) | 2 (1aR2BR) | 1. Subtotal resection 2. Insertion of Ommaya reservoir 3. Redo subtotal resection and insertion, cyst drainage and insertion of second Ommaya reservoir | Visual improvement in one eye Multiple hormone deficiencies No hypothalamic dysfunction No cognitive/behavioral difficulties No surgical complications Death aged 3yrs 11 months |
| 9 | 1.9 | Pilocytic astrocytoma | 1 (1aR1cR) | 1. Gross total resection | No change in vision No hormone deficiency No hypothalamic dysfunction No cognitive/behavioral difficulties No surgical complications |
| 10 | 2.3 | Pilocytic astrocytoma (BRAF wild type) | 1 (1aR) | 1. Biopsy 2. Gross total resection | No change in vision No hormone deficiency No hypothalamic dysfunction No cognitive/behavioral difficulties No surgical complications |
| 11 | 1.2 | Pilomyxoid astrocytoma (BRAF V600E mutation) | 3 (1bR2bR3b) | 1. Biopsy 2. Subtotal resection | Visual deterioration in both eyes No hormone deficiency Hypothalamic dysfunction No cognitive/behavioral difficulties No surgical complications |
| 12 | 0.7 | Low-grade glioma (unspecified) | 3 (2bR3R) | 1. Cyst drainage 2. Subtotal resection and ventriculoperitoneal shunt | No vision information available Multiple hormone deficiency Hypothalamic dysfunction No cognitive/behavioral difficulties No surgical complications |
| 13 | 5.8 | Pilocytic astrocytoma | 3 (2b3B) | 1. Biopsy and ventriculoperitoneal shunt 2. Subtotal resection, cyst drainage, and ventriculoperitoneal shunt revision | No change in vision Single hormone deficiency No hypothalamic dysfunction Cognitive/behavioral difficulties Surgical complication – shunt failure |
| 14 | 0.5 | Pilocytic astrocytoma (BRAF wild type) | 3 (1c2b3b) | 1. Biopsy and ventriculoperitoneal shunt 2. Subtotal resection | No change in vision No hormone deficiency No hypothalamic dysfunction No cognitive/behavioral difficulties No surgical complications |
| 15 | 0.5 | Ganglioglioma | 3 (3L) | 1. Biopsy and ventriculoperitoneal shunt 2. Subtotal resection and cyst drainage | Visual improvement in one eye No hormone deficiency Hypothalamic dysfunction No cognitive/behavioral difficulties No surgical complication |
| 16 | 1.1 | Low-grade glioma (unspecified) | 2 (1cR2bR) | 1. Ventriculoperitoneal shunt 2. Subtotal resection | Visual improvement in both eyes No hormone deficiency Hypothalamic dysfunction No cognitive/behavioral difficulties No surgical complications |
| 17 | 2.4 | Low-grade glioma (unspecified) | 3 (1bB1cB2a3B4B) | 1. Ventriculoperitoneal shunt 2. Subtotal resection and ventriculoperitoneal shunt revision 3. Redo subtotal resection, cyst drainage, and Ommaya reservoir insertion | Visual deterioration in one eye Single hormone deficiency Hypothalamic dysfunction No cognitive/behavioral difficulties Surgical complication – shunt failure |
Fig. 2Examples of pre- and post-operative imaging following subtotal surgical resection. Pre- and post-operative images of two patients (patient A and patient B) showing subtotal resection of an optic pathway glioma demonstrating conservative resection at the anterior skull base, and along the floor and posterior walls of the third ventricle where the hypothalamus is often indistinguishable from the tumor. Patient A also demonstrates drainage of a periventricular tumor cyst
Key published guidelines relating to surgical management of optic pathway glioma
| Author and reference | Title | Summary of key recommendation/s |
|---|---|---|
| National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence 2018 [ | Brain tumors (primary) and brain metastases in adults (NG99) | - Consider active monitoring without a histological diagnosis, for lesions with radiological features typical of optic pathway glioma |
| International Society of Pediatric Oncology 2017 [ | SIOP PODC Adapted treatment guidelines for low grade gliomas in low- and middle-income settings | - Observation of incompletely resected optic pathway gliomas, especially in NF1 patients, should be the rule |
| British Neuro-Oncology Society 2011 [ | Guidelines on the diagnosis and management of optic pathway glioma (OPG) | - Surgery of any sort results in almost inevitable damage to the optic nerve or pathway and where imaging characteristics are classical biopsy cannot usually be justified - Where useful vision is maintained on the side of the tumor, it is hard to argue for debulking or resective surgery - In the context of failing or useless vision on one side, debulking or resective surgery may be appropriate to protect vision on the good side and potentially control hydrocephalus and delaying radiotherapy - Probably better to have a strategy of managing these patients on an individualized basis - Biopsy may be appropriate if imaging is atypical - CSF shunting and surgery to decompress tumor-related cysts will have a role in some patients - Debulking of large tumors is most likely to be valuable where continued growth is threatening or causing neurological deterioration - Radical or complete resections will be unusual in the region of the hypothalamus due to risks of causing post-operative hypothalamic syndrome |
| National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence 2006 [ | Improving outcomes for people with brain and other CNS tumors | - The majority of these patients will be managed initially by the neuroscience brain and other CNS tumors multidisciplinary team (MDT) - National tumor groups should be established and funded to standardize care for these patients Uncertainties surrounding treatment requires specialist input |
| Listernick et al 2007 [ | Optic pathway gliomas in Neurofibromatosis-1: controversies and recommendations | - Surgical decompression limited to partial removal of the intraorbital optic nerve should be performed on NF1-associated optic nerve gliomas only for cosmetic purposes or to treat corneal exposure - Optic nerve gliomas without chiasmal involvement at initial presentation do not “grow backward” and extend into the chiasm, surgical removal of an optic nerve glioma, particularly the intracranial portion, to prevent “spread” to the chiasm is unnecessary - Hypothalamic or chiasmal gliomas occasionally may require surgical decompression, especially when hydrocephalus occurs due to third ventricular compression - Surgical biopsy is not generally useful for typical OPG in children with NF1, it may have some utility for NF1-associated OPGs with an unusual location or presentation |
Key publications of surgical management of optic pathway glioma
| Author and reference | Title | Population | Key finding/s and conclusion/s |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hidalgo et al. 2019 [ | Long-term clinical and visual outcomes after surgical resection of pediatric pilocytic/pilomyxoid optic pathway gliomas | - Approximately half of all children experience a long-term benefit from resection both as primary treatment and as a second-line therapy after failure of primary treatment. - Patients in whom chemotherapy failed have a retrieval rate similar to those treated upfront with surgery. Resection at the time of failure of the primary treatment - Primary surgery does not appear to have a significant benefit for children younger than 2 years or tumors with pilomyxoid features - There was an inherent bias of including only children who were referred and amenable to surgical intervention | |
| Bin Abdulqader et al 2019 [ | Endoscopic transnasal resection of optic pathway pilocytic astrocytoma | - Authors reported that endoscopic endonasal approach provided a direct corridor to OPG with acceptable results in terms of tumor resection and visual outcomes | |
| Liu et al 2018 [ | Analysis of survival prognosis for children with symptomatic optic pathway gliomas who received surgery | - Surgery is safe and feasible for children with large-volume OPGs, functional impairments, and obstructive hydrocephalus - Partial intratumor resection is recommended using neuronavigation guidance system | |
| El Beltagy et al 2016 [ | Treatment and outcome in 65 children with optic pathway gliomas | - The initial role of surgery in newly developed OPG is biopsy for tissue diagnosis and relief of the hydrocephalus if present - More radical surgery may not be indicated as an initial therapy, but surgery may have a definite role in controlling progression of the disease upon failure of chemotherapy | |
| Millward et al 2015 [ | The role of early intra-operative MRI in partial resection of optic pathway/hypothalamic gliomas in children | - Control of tumor progression was achieved in all patients without any surgically related mortality or morbidity. Seven patients had on table second-look surgery with significant further tumor resection following intraoperative MRI - Intraoperative MRI is a safe and useful additional tool, to be combined with advanced neuronavigation techniques for partial tumor resection | |
| Goodden et al 2014 [ | The role of surgery in optic pathway/hypothalamic gliomas in children | - Surgery has a clear role for diagnosis, tumor control, and relief of mass effect. In particular, primary surgical debulking of tumor (without adjuvant therapy) is safe and effective | |
| Sawamura et al 2008 [ | Role of surgery for optic pathway/hypothalamic astrocytomas in children | - The open biopsy offered no noteworthy benefit for the patients despite surgical risk and delay of chemotherapy - Surgical resection was not curative in any patient - The role of surgical intervention is restricted to bulk-reduction surgery only when it is inevitable, especially at relapse after chemotherapy | |
| Leonard et al 2006 [ | The role of surgical biopsy in the diagnosis of glioma in individuals with neurofibromatosis 1 | - Biopsy in NF1- associated gliomas with unusual clinical or radiographic presentations shows a high rate of tumors that are not classical pilocytic astrocytomas and may include higher grade tumors | |
| Khafaga et al 2003 [ | Optic gliomas: a retrospective analysis of 50 cases | - Complete surgical resection is successful in tumors confined to an optic nerve. For disease that has progressed into or beyond the chiasm, total resection is not practical. Partial resection may provide symptomatic relief and will provide a tissue diagnosis - The correct balance of partial resection, surveillance, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy remains to be determined for this disease | |
| Sutton et al 1995 [ | Long-term outcome of hypothalamic/chiasmatic astrocytomas in children treated with conservative surgery | - It is unlikely that any single modality will be the optimum treatment for all children with hypothalamic/chiasmatic astrocytoma | |
| Tenny et al 1982 [ | The neurosurgical management of optic glioma. Results in 104 patients | - Unilateral resectable tumor should be removed, assuming vision is severely compromised, but a conservative approach should be taken in patients in whom vision is preserved and proptosis minimal - Tumor resection is advised to relieve obstructive hydrocephalus or for biopsy purposes - Posterior lesions should be treated by radiation therapy usually after surgical exploration if indicated |
Remaining questions in the surgical management of optic pathway glioma
| How can we predict a particular clinical course—including tumor stability or response to chemotherapy—so that we can select those who may require surgical intervention? | |
| How do surgical interventions alter the natural history? | |
| Which cases will benefit from surgical intervention? | |
| Which surgical approaches/interventions afford the most benefit (and how would those cases best be selected)? | |
| What is the optimal timing of a given surgery? | |
| What factors predict/determine surgical outcomes? | |
| Which emerging developments can improve surgical outcome? |