| Literature DB >> 7976487 |
J Radcliffe1, G R Bunin, L N Sutton, J W Goldwein, P C Phillips.
Abstract
Twenty-four children, aged 1.5-20 yr at diagnosis, with noncortical brain tumors, primarily medulloblastoma, have been followed for 3-4 yr for intellectual status. All the children received craniospinal irradiation, and 19 of 24 received chemotherapy as well. For the group as a whole. Full Scale IQ fell from 104 at baseline to 91 at final follow-up. Children younger than 7 yr at diagnosis showed a significant decrease in IQ as early as year 1, and all changes from baseline to years 3 and 4 were significant. In contrast, children older than 7 yr at diagnosis did not show a significant IQ change from baseline to year 3 or 4. The Spearman correlation coefficient between IQ change and age at diagnosis from baseline to year 4 was 0.57 (P = 0.003). This study supports the hypothesis that children treated with whole brain radiation at a younger age have more severe cognitive impairment than those treated at a later age. Limitations in sample size and duration of observations do not permit us to identify whether a true plateau occurs 2-4 yr after irradiation versus a continued progressive decline in intellectual performance. Moreover, we cannot at this time distinguish between a true dementing process versus failure to acquire new cognitive skills at a rate comparable to age-matched peers.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1994 PMID: 7976487 DOI: 10.1016/0736-5748(94)90081-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Dev Neurosci ISSN: 0736-5748 Impact factor: 2.457