| Literature DB >> 34925209 |
Zihao Zhou1, Sheng Zhang2, Fangqi Hu3.
Abstract
Craniopharyngioma is an intracranial congenital epithelial tumor growing along the pathway of the embryonic craniopharyngeal tube. The main clinical symptoms of patients with craniopharyngioma include high intracranial pressure, visual field defect, endocrine dysfunction, and hypothalamic dysfunction. At present, the preferred treatment remains the surgical treatment, but the recovery of endocrine and hypothalamic function following surgery is limited. In addition, endocrine disorders often emerge following surgery, which seriously reduces the quality of life of patients after operation. So far, research on craniopharyngioma focuses on ways to ameliorate endocrine dysfunction. This article reviews the latest research progress on pathogenesis, manifestation, significance, and treatment of endocrine disorders in patients with craniopharyngioma.Entities:
Keywords: craniopharyngioma; endocrine disorders; pituitary hormone deficiency; risk; treatment
Year: 2021 PMID: 34925209 PMCID: PMC8675636 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2021.737743
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
The reports of endocrine dysfunction in the literature.
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| Qi et al. ( | Children | 2001–2012 | 98 | 75 (77%) | 38 (39%) | 46 (47%) | 53 (54%) | 29 (25%) |
| Adults | 2001–2012 | 114 | 39 (34%) | 63 (55%) | 35 (31%) | 37 (33%) | 26 (27%) | |
| Qi et al. ( | Children | 1996–2012 | 109 | 52 (48%) | – | 50 (46%) | 35 (32%) | 24 (22%) |
| Tan et al. ( | Children | 1973–2011 | 185 | 147 (80%) | 118 (64%) | 140 (76%) | 127 (69%) | 115 (62%) |
| Wijnen et al. ( | Children | 1978–2015 | 63 | 31 (53%) | 10 (56%) | 19 (32%) | 17 (28%) | 4 (7%) |
| Adults | 1978–2015 | 65 | 17 (27%) | 39 (61%) | 35 (56%) | 25 (39%) | 4 (6%) | |
| Bao et al. ( | Children | 1997–2009 | 20 | 14/18 (78%) | 14 (70%) | 8 (40%) | 11 (55%) | 5 (25%) |
| Adults | 1997–2009 | 32 | 25/27 (93%) | 20 (63%) | 7 (22%) | 17 (53%) | 11 (34%) | |
| Mende et al. ( | Adults | Not mentioned | 148 | 41/135 (30%) | 69/136 (51%) | 106/136 (78%) | 96 (71%) | 70/135 (52%) |
| Guo et al. ( | Children | 2011–2016 | 185 | – | 90 (49%) | 130 (70%) | 115 (62%) | – |
| Huang et al. ( | Children | 1995–2019 | 35 | – | – | 10/26 (39%) | 7/17 (41%) | 5 (14%) |
| Sun et al. ( | Adults | 2012–2015 | 20 | – | 10 (50%) | 12 (60%) | – | 12 (60%) |
| Sowithayasakul et al. ( | Children | 2015–2016 | 17 | 8 (47%) | – | 11 (65%) | – | – |
| Adults | 2015–2016 | 19 | 16 (84%) | – | 14 (74%) | – | – | |
| Boekhoff et al. ( | Children | 2007–2014 | 215 | 100 (46.5%) | 47 (21.9%) | 138 (64.2%) | 137 (63.7%) | 30 (14.0%) |
| Total | Children | – | 924 | 427/688 (62%) | 317/766 (41%) | 552/918 (60%) | 486/892 (54%) | 212/510 (42%) |
| Adults | – | 398 | 138/360 (38%) | 176/367 (48%) | 209/376 (56%) | 175/525 (33%) | 123/366 (34%) |
GHD, growth hormone deficiency; HPG, hypothalamus-pituitary-gonad axis; HPT, hypothalamus–pituitary–thyroid axis; HPA, hypothalamus pituitary adrenal axis; DI, diabetes insipidus.