| Literature DB >> 35884462 |
Rahul M Nikam1,2, Xuyi Yue1,2, Gurcharanjeet Kaur3, Vinay Kandula1, Abdulhafeez Khair1, Heidi H Kecskemethy1, Lauren W Averill1, Sigrid A Langhans2,4.
Abstract
Central nervous system tumors are the most common pediatric solid tumors; they are also the most lethal. Unlike adults, childhood brain tumors are mostly primary in origin and differ in type, location and molecular signature. Tumor characteristics (incidence, location, and type) vary with age. Children present with a variety of symptoms, making early accurate diagnosis challenging. Neuroimaging is key in the initial diagnosis and monitoring of pediatric brain tumors. Conventional anatomic imaging approaches (computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)) are useful for tumor detection but have limited utility differentiating tumor types and grades. Advanced MRI techniques (diffusion-weighed imaging, diffusion tensor imaging, functional MRI, arterial spin labeling perfusion imaging, MR spectroscopy, and MR elastography) provide additional and improved structural and functional information. Combined with positron emission tomography (PET) and single-photon emission CT (SPECT), advanced techniques provide functional information on tumor metabolism and physiology through the use of radiotracer probes. Radiomics and radiogenomics offer promising insight into the prediction of tumor subtype, post-treatment response to treatment, and prognostication. In this paper, a brief review of pediatric brain cancers, by type, is provided with a comprehensive description of advanced imaging techniques including clinical applications that are currently utilized for the assessment and evaluation of pediatric brain tumors.Entities:
Keywords: brain tumor; elastography; pediatrics; positron emission tomography; volumetrics
Year: 2022 PMID: 35884462 PMCID: PMC9318188 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14143401
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.575
Pediatric brain tumors—an overview.
| Family | Tumor Type | Additional Subtyping Based on Molecular Alterations | Frequent Molecular Alterations (*) |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Medulloblastomas | WNT-activated | ||
| SHH-activated (wildtype | SHH-1, SHH-2, SHH-4 |
| |
| SHH-activated with mutant | SHH-3 | ||
| Non-WNT/non-SHH (Group 3 and Group 4) | Subtypes 1-8 | ||
| Atypical teratoid/ rhabdoid tumors | ATRT-TYR, ATRT-SHH, ATRT-MYC | ||
|
| |||
| Diffuse high-grade | Diffuse midline glioma, H3 K27-altered | H3.3 K27-mutant; H3.1 or H3.2 K27-mutant; H3 wildtype with | Histone 3 mutations, |
| Diffuse hemispheric glioma, H3 G34-mutant | Histone 3 mutation, | ||
| Diffuse pediatric-type high-grade glioma, H3-wildtype and IDH-wildtype | RTK1; RTK2; | Enriched for | |
| Infant-type hemispheric glioma | |||
| Diffuse low-grade | Diffuse astrocytoma | ||
| Angiocentric glioma | |||
| Polymorphous low-grade neuroepithelial tumor | MAPK pathway– | ||
| Diffuse low-grade glioma, MAPK pathway-altered | MAPK pathway– | ||
| Astrocytic gliomas | Pilocytic astrocytoma | Pilomyxoid astrocytoma; pilocytic astrocytoma with histological features of anaplasia | |
| High-grade astrocytoma with piloid features | |||
| Pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma | |||
| Subependymal giant cell astrocytoma | |||
| Astroblastoma | |||
| Glioneuronal/ | Ganglioglioma | Most commonly | |
| Desmoplastic infantile ganglioglioma/astrocytoma | |||
| Dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumor | |||
| Diffuse glioneuronal tumor with oligodendroglioma-like features and nuclear clusters | Monosomy of chromosome 14 | ||
| Diffuse leptomeningeal glioneuronal tumor | With 1qgain; methylation class 1; methylation class 2 | KIAA1549:BRAF fusion or other MAPK alteration, combined with 1p deletion | |
| Multinodular and vacuolating neuronal tumor | MAPK pathway | ||
| Ependymomas | Supratentorial ependymomas | ZFTA fusion-positive; YAP fusion-positive; additional molecular subgroups awaiting to be defined | |
| Posterior fossa ependymomas | Group A (PFA); group B (PFB)-retained H3K27 trimethylation; additional molecular subgroups awaiting to be defined | Loss of H3K27 trimethylation, EZHIP overexpression | |
(*) Adapted from [16].
Figure 1Five-year-old female presented with headache, vomiting and gait disturbance. Axial T2 (a); axial DWI (b); axial SWAN (c); axial ASL-PWI (d); axial T1 fat saturated post contrast (e) images; and long TE (144 msec) spectroscopy (f). There is a large heterogeneous, intermediate T2 signal mass centered in the fourth ventricle (solid white arrow). This mass demonstrates restricted diffusion (curved black arrow) with numerous punctate foci of the hemorrhage (dashed arrow) and increased perfusion (curved white arrow) in the center of the lesion. There is moderate heterogeneous enhancement after contrast ministration (open arrow). Spectroscopy demonstrates Taurine peak at 3.4 ppm, high choline (Cho) and undetectable N-acetylaspartate (NAA). There is also high lactate (Lac) demonstrated as an inverted peak on this long TE spectroscopy. Final diagnosis was medulloblastoma, Group 3 (author’s institutional human ethics committee/institutional review board guidelines were followed for anonymized images).
Medulloblastoma: molecular subgroups [24,29,30].
| Imaging | Wnt | SHH | Group 3 | Group 4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | Cerebellar peduncle/cerebellopontine angle | Cerebellar hemispheres | Midline/fourth ventricle | Midline/fourth ventricle |
| Post-contrast enhancement | Variable | Present, intense | Present | Variable, can be non-enhancing |
| Drop metastasis | Rare | Rare | Frequent | Frequent |
| MRS | - | Prominent choline and lipids, low creatine, no or small taurine peak | Readily detectable taurine and creatine levels | Readily detectable taurine and creatine levels |
Figure 2Fourteen-year-old boy with headaches and episodes of right facial and hand numbness. Axial T1 fat sat post contrast (a); axial DWI (b); axial ASL-PWI (c); coronal T1 tractography (d); and functional (e,f) images. There are two well-defined lobulated heterogeneously enhancing lesions within the posterior aspect of the left frontal lobe (solid white arrow). The lesions show restricted diffusion (curved white arrow) and increased perfusion (arrowhead). The cortical spinal tracts are identified tracking in between the two tumor masses (red–dashed arrows). The Broca’s area is identified in the left inferior frontal gyrus anterior and inferior to the lateral frontal mass lesion (dashed arrow). The motor cortex with right finger tapping is immediately posterior to the smaller mass in the lateral aspect of the left frontal lobe (open arrow). Pathology: giant cell glioblastoma (author’s institutional human ethics committee/institutional review board guidelines were followed for anonymized images).
Figure 3Five-month-old referred for increased head circumference. Sagittal T2 (a); axial DWI (b); axial SWAN (c); axial T1 IR (inversion recovery) post contrast (d); short TE 35 millisecond spectroscopy (e); and axial non-contrast enhanced CT (f) post ventricular shunt placement. There is a large heterogeneous solid ill-defined mass lesion involving the superior and anterior aspect of the vermis (solid white arrow) effacing the fourth ventricle. There are multiple cystic areas within the lesion demonstrating fluid/fluid levels. There is restricted diffusion (curved black arrow) and hemorrhage (dashed arrow). No significant enhancement is identified (open arrow). Spectroscopy demonstrates very high myoinositol (mI), high choline (Cho) and decreased N-acetylaspartate (NAA). There is also elevation of lactate (Lac). CT scan shows high density within the lesion, indicating acute hemorrhage within the lesion (curved white arrow). Pathology confirmed an atypical teratoid rhabdoid tumor (author’s institutional human ethics committee/institutional review board guidelines were followed for anonymized images).
Figure 4Sixteen-year-old female presented with headaches awakening her from sleep. Sagittal T2 (a); axial FLAIR (b); axial ASL-PWI (c); axial DWI (d); axial SWAN (e); and axial T1 fat saturated post contrast (f) images. There is a large cystic lesion within the right cerebellar hemisphere (solid white arrow) with a solid component within its posterior and inferior aspect (curved black arrow). The solid component of the tumor is hyperintense on T2/FLAIR images with multiple prominent flow voids indicating a highly vascular tumor. There is marked increased perfusion (arrowhead) of the solid component without associated restricted diffusion (curved white arrow). There is no calcification or hemorrhage within the solid component (dashed arrow), with the solid component demonstrating intense enhancement (open arrow) on the post-contrast image. Features are highly specific for hemangioblastoma (pathology proven). Author’s institutional human ethics committee/institutional review board guidelines were followed for anonymized images.
Figure 5Eight-month-old male referred for bulging fontanelle. Axial CT (a); axial T2 (b); axial DWI (c); axial ASL-PWI (d); axial T1 fat saturated post contrast (e) images; and short TE 35 millisecond spectroscopy (f). CT scan demonstrates mildly hyperdense mass (arrow) with its epicenter in the region of the right foramen of Luschka. The mass is heterogeneously hyperintense on the T2 weighted image (curved arrow). There is no restricted diffusion (dashed arrow). Increased perfusion is identified (curved black arrow) with avid enhancement (open arrow). Spectroscopy demonstrates very high myoinositol (mI), high choline (Cho) and decreased N-acetylaspartate (NAA). There is also elevation of lactate (Lac). Pathology confirmed an atypical choroid plexus papilloma. Author’s institutional human ethics committee/institutional review board guidelines were followed for anonymized images.
Figure 6Eight-year-old boy with worsening headaches. Axial T2-weighted image (a) demon-strates a hyperintense, heterogeneous mass centered in the optic-chiasmatic, hypothalamic region (arrow). On the post-contrast T1-weighted image (b) there is moderate enhancement (arrow), with increased diffusivity on the ADC map (c) (arrow). On the stiffness map (d), the mass demonstrates heterogenous decreased stiffness (ROI) as compared to the uninvolved white matter. The tumor stiffness measured 2.48 ± 0.70 kPa, while the average brain stiffness excluding the tumor measured 2.83 ± 0.72. Pathology confirmed a ganglioglioma WHO grade I, with Ki-67: 3–4%. Genetic analysis depicted KIAA1549-BRAF fusion. Author’s institutional human ethics committee/institutional review board guidelines were followed for anonymized images.