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Brain Tumors in Pediatrics

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Brain Tumors in Pediatrics Resident Education Lecture Series Brain Tumors - Background 20-30% of cancers in children 2500-3000 new diagnoses/year 2nd most common ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Brain Tumors in Pediatrics


1
Brain Tumors in Pediatrics
Resident Education Lecture Series
2
Brain Tumors - Background
  • 20-30 of cancers in children
  • 2500-3000 new diagnoses/year
  • 2nd most common neoplasm
  • Most occur before age 10 years
  • Male/Female 1.3/1.0
  • 60-70 5 year survival

3
Relative Incidence of Brain Tumors in Children
Table 25-1. Approximate incidence of common CNS
tumors in children. Pizzo Poplack
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Location Supra vs. Infra
  • Supratentorial 25-40
  • Astrocytoma, low grade 8-20
  • Astrocytoma, high grade 6-12
  • Ependymoma 2-5
  • Mixed glioma 1-5
  • Ganglioglioma 1-5
  • Oligodendroglioma 1-2
  • PNET 1-2
  • Choroid plexus tumor 1-2
  • Meningioma 1-2
  • Germ Cell Tumors 1-2
  • Other 1-3

7
Location Supra vs. Infra
  • Infratentorial 45-60
  • Medulloblastoma (PNET) 20-25
  • Astrocytoma, low grade 12-18
  • Ependymoma 4-8
  • Brain stem glioma, high grade 3-9
  • Brain stem glioma, low grade 3-6
  • Other 2-5

8
Brain Tumors - Signs/Symptoms
  • Increased intracranial pressure - symptoms
  • Headache (am)
  • Nausea/vomiting (am)
  • Double vision
  • Head tilt
  • Decreased alertness
  • Lethargy/irritability
  • Poor feeding, FTT
  • Endocrine dysfunction
  • Unexplained behavior changes
  • - affect, motivation, energy level

9
Brain Tumors Signs/Symptoms
  • Increased ICP Signs
  • Papilledema, optic atrophy
  • Loss of vision
  • OFC (head circumference) increased
  • Bulging fontanelles, spreading sutures
  • Setting sun sign (Parinaud syndrome)
  • Increased blood pressure, low pulse ?
    herniation?

10
Posterior Fossa Brainstem Tumors - Clinical
Features
  • Posterior Fossa primary
  • Ataxia
  • Tremors
  • Dysarthria
  • Stiff neck
  • Papilledema
  • Brainstem primary
  • Extremity weakness
  • Cranial nerve signs
  • double vision
  • facial weakness
  • swallowing dysfunction

11
Hemispheric Tumors Clinical Features
  • Hemiparesis
  • Hemianopsia
  • Aphasia
  • Seizures

12
Treatment
  • Tumor Type Surgery XRT Chemo
  • Medulloblastoma CrSp
  • Low grade astro focal ----
  • cerebellar ???? ----
  • optic glioma NO ???? ????
  • High grade astro/GBM ?
  • Brain stem glioma (exophytic) focal ?
  • Ependymoma focal ----
  • Germ cell tumor ? bx

13
Treatment - Surgery
  • In general, needed for diagnosis
  • - exceptions GCT, BSG
  • Ideal is gross total resection
  • Balance prognosis vs. morbidity
  • Debulking, shunts, reservoirs
  • - for symptom/ICP reduction, therapy

14
Treatment Radiation Therapy
  • Potential for use in all brain tumors
  • exceptions choroid plexus tumors
  • Neuro-axis prophylaxis (cranio-spinal rx)
  • if tumor disseminates via CSF
  • Concerns for long term effects
  • neuro-cognitive
  • hearing
  • secondary cancers
  • endocrine
  • skeletal growth

15
Therapy - Chemotherapy
  • Adjunct therapy in most cases
  • particularly in GCT, medulloblastoma
  • Of interest in young children
  • (avoid or prolong XRT)
  • Blood brain barrier may be limiting
  • Newer studies suggest this may not be so
  • Local delivery via pumps/reservoir/IT

16
Medulloblastoma/PNET
  • Similar histology, different tumor names based on
    location.
  • Therapies vary
  • Medulloblastoma - posterior fossa
  • PNET - supratentorial
  • Pineoblastoma - pineal region
  • median age 5 years
  • MF 21
  • propensity to disseminate
  • 1/3 with metastatic disease at diagnosis

17
Medulloblastoma Prognostic Factors
  • Age - Younger tend to do worse
  • Extent of resection
  • Non-posterior fossa tumors
  • Non-localized disease
  • Standard risk 70-80 5 yr survival
  • High risk 50
  • what are risk groups?

18
Medulloblastoma
  • CSF dissemination
  • check for leptomeningeal spread
  • brain/spine MRI, LP
  • Can spread to lung, liver, BM, bone, LNs rare
  • Difference between supratentorial PNET (sPNET),
    medulloblastoma, and pineoblostoma?

19
Ependymoma
  • 10 of childhood brain tumors
  • Median age 3-4 yrs
  • 2/3 of primary in posterior fossa
  • May have leptomeningeal spread - MRI of
    brain/spine, CSF
  • Prognostic factors
  • Extent of resection!!!
  • Age some reports of better survival if gt
    5-7 years at diagnosis
  • Histology

20
Ependymoma - continued
  • Extent of resection most important
  • Near to gross total resection 50-75
  • Less than NTR 0-30
  • Radiation therapy helps survival
  • Reduces local recurrence
  • Chemotherapy has not shown efficacy
  • Recurrence is rarely fixable

21
Brain Stem Gliomas
  • Diffuse intrinsic pontine gliomas
  • median survival 6-9 months
  • death within 2 years gt 90
  • Radiation - transient clinical improvement
  • Low grade gliomas
  • tectal, exophytic, extra-medullary
  • highly enhancing on MRI
  • more indolent

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23
Low Grade Astrocytoma/Glioma
  • 30-35 of CNS tumors
  • 40-50 supratentorial, virtually anywhere
  • MF 21
  • Association with NF-1
  • more indolent course
  • GTR ? gt90 5 year survival
  • RX
  • Radiation
  • Chemo if symptomatic, progressive, or recurrent

24
Brain Tumors in lt 3 year olds
  • 60-70 supratentorial
  • XRT has significant neuro-cognitive effects
  • Goal of therapies
  • Delay XRT to at least 3 yrs old with
    chemotherapy ? most relapse prior to XRT
  • Current study
  • Short course (16 wks) chemo
  • 2nd look surgery
  • Focal (conformal) XRT
  • Maintenance chemotherapy

25
Complications From Tumor/Therapy
  • Neurological deficits
  • limb paresis
  • Rehab/PT/OT, support
  • swallowing/speech dysfunction
  • ENT, Speech therapy
  • Nutrition issues
  • neuro-cognitive deficits
  • School/education issues
  • Social interaction issues
  • endocrine dysfunction
  • end-organ damage
  • kidney, liver, hearing, neuropathy

26
Pediatric Brain Tumors
  • Leading cause of morbidity/mortality
    in pediatric cancers
  • Need for aggressive supportive care
  • Need for palliation

27
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28
From ABP Certifying Exam Content Outline
  • Recognize the signs and symptoms of
    craniopharyngioma
  • Recognize the clinical manifestations of brain
    tumor
  • Recognize the physical characteristics of a
    headache due to increased intracranial pressure
  • Differentiate the clinical manifestations of
    spinal cord compression (eg, from a tumor) from
    those of other myelopathies, and evaluate
    appropriately

29
Credits
  • Sachin Jogal MD
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