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Impact of ventricle size on neuropsychological outcomes in treated pediatric hydrocephalus: an HCRN prospective cohort study

Authors :
Patrick J. McDonald
Jay Riva-Cambrin
David D. Limbrick
Abhaya V. Kulkarni
Robert B. Burr
Richard Holubkov
William E. Whitehead
Jessica S. Alvey
Curtis J. Rozzelle
Chevis N. Shannon
D. Douglas Cochrane
W. Jerry Oakes
Mandeep S. Tamber
James M. Drake
Robert P. Naftel
Thomas G. Luerssen
Samuel R. Browd
Tamara D. Simon
Ron W Reeder
John C. Wellons
John R. W. Kestle
Source :
Journal of neurosurgery. Pediatrics.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

OBJECTIVE In pediatric hydrocephalus, shunts tend to result in smaller postoperative ventricles compared with those following an endoscopic third ventriculostomy (ETV). The impact of the final treated ventricle size on neuropsychological and quality-of-life outcomes is currently undetermined. Therefore, the authors sought to ascertain whether treated ventricle size is associated with neurocognitive and academic outcomes postoperatively. METHODS This prospective cohort study included children aged 5 years and older at the first diagnosis of hydrocephalus at 8 Hydrocephalus Clinical Research Network sites from 2011 to 2015. The treated ventricle size, as measured by the frontal and occipital horn ratio (FOR), was compared with 25 neuropsychological tests 6 months postoperatively after adjusting for age, hydrocephalus etiology, and treatment type (ETV vs shunt). Pre- and posttreatment grade point average (GPA), quality-of-life measures (Hydrocephalus Outcome Questionnaire [HOQ]), and a truncated preoperative neuropsychological battery were also compared with the FOR. RESULTS Overall, 60 children were included with a mean age of 10.8 years; 17% had ≥ 1 comorbidity. Etiologies for hydrocephalus were midbrain lesions (37%), aqueductal stenosis (22%), posterior fossa tumors (13%), and supratentorial tumors (12%). ETV (78%) was more commonly used than shunting (22%). Of the 25 neuropsychological tests, including full-scale IQ (q = 0.77), 23 tests showed no univariable association with postoperative ventricle size. Verbal learning delayed recall (p = 0.006, q = 0.118) and visual spatial judgment (p = 0.006, q = 0.118) were negatively associated with larger ventricles and remained significant after multivariate adjustment for age, etiology, and procedure type. However, neither delayed verbal learning (p = 0.40) nor visual spatial judgment (p = 0.22) was associated with ventricle size change with surgery. No associations were found between postoperative ventricle size and either GPA or the HOQ. CONCLUSIONS Minimal associations were found between the treated ventricle size and neuropsychological, academic, or quality-of-life outcomes for pediatric patients in this comprehensive, multicenter study that encompassed heterogeneous hydrocephalus etiologies.

Details

ISSN :
19330715
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of neurosurgery. Pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9cac321aa2877c83e6641fab7f356074