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Neurosurgical treatment of brain tumors in the first 6 months of life: long-term follow-up of a single consecutive institutional series of 30 patients
- Source :
- Child's Nervous System
- Publication Year :
- 2015
- Publisher :
- Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2015.
-
Abstract
- Object The aim of this study is to delineate the long-term results for patients going through surgery for pediatric brain tumors in the first 6 months of life. Methods Thirty consecutive children (1–182 days old) who underwent primary resection for a brain tumor during the years 1973–2012 were included in this retrospective study on surgical morbidity, mortality rate, academic achievement, and/or work participation. Gross motor function and activities of daily life were scored according to the Barthel index. Results Of the 30 patients, 11 children had surgery in the first 3 months of life (1 to 88 days) and 19 were aged 3 to 6 months (94–182 days) at the time of surgery. The male/female ratio was 1.0 (15/15). No patients were lost to follow-up. Two patients died in the postoperative period (30 days). Another eight patients died during the follow-up. Twenty patients are alive, with follow-up times from 2 to 38 years, median 13 years. Among the 28 children who survived the primary resection, eight underwent repeat surgery from 6 months to 5 years after the first operation. Two children were operated three times, and one of these also a fourth time. Gross total resection (GTR) was achieved in 20 of the primary resections, subtotal resection (STR) in 6, and in the last 4, only a biopsy or a partial resection was performed. Nine children received adjuvant chemotherapy and three of these also radiotherapy (in the years 1979–1987). Among the 20 survivors, the Barthel index is normal (100) in 18 patients, 40 in one, and 20 in the last one. Eight tumors were located to the posterior fossa, and 22 were supratentorial. Eighteen tumors were histologically low-grade (WHO grade I–II), most of these were plexus papillomas (7) or astrocytomas (7), and 12 were high-grade (WHO grade III–IV); PNET/medulloblastomas (6), ependymoma (2), glioblastoma (2), teratoma, and plexus carcinoma. Conclusion Infants with brain tumors may clearly benefit from surgical resection with favorable results even for prolonged periods of time. Ten children died, two of them with prolonged survival for 9 and 29 years. Among the 20 survivors, a stable very long-term result appears obtainable in 18 also when it comes to quality of life. Four of the survivors have been treated for highly malignant tumors with a follow-up of 5, 11, 14, and 26 years. One of our infant patients treated for GBM in 1982, lived for 29 years, however, with a progressive decline in the quality of life probably due to postoperative whole-brain radiation.
- Subjects :
- Male
Ependymoma
medicine.medical_specialty
medicine.medical_treatment
Clinical Neurology
Brain tumor
Neurosurgical Procedures
Brain tumor in infants
Quality of life
Pediatric neurosurgery
Activities of Daily Living
medicine
Carcinoma
Humans
Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health
Retrospective Studies
Long-term results
Original Paper
Brain Neoplasms
Norway
business.industry
Mortality rate
Retrospective cohort study
General Medicine
medicine.disease
Surgery
Radiation therapy
Treatment Outcome
Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
Female
Neurology (clinical)
Neurosurgery
business
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14330350 and 02567040
- Volume :
- 31
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Child's Nervous System
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....4138f6ff28313d58daa1b30d6bb5fee3
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s00381-015-2792-5