16 research outputs found

    Endoscopic third ventriculostomy in obstructive infantile hydrocephalus: Remarks about the so-called 'unsuccessful cases'

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    Background: The failure rate following endoscopic third ventriculostomy (ETV) in infants younger than 2 years of age has been reported to be higher compared with that of older children, and it is unclear whether ETV might be superior to shunt placement in this age group. Methods: Between 2003 and 2009, 23 patients younger than 6 months and without a previous history of shunting underwent ETV in our institution. A review of the literature was performed on the basis of publications presenting detailed data on age and etiology in every single patient. Results: In our own patients, total success rate was 39.1%. In the successful cases, median age was 140 days, whereas in the unsuccessful cases it was 47 days. The difference between the two groups was statistically significant (p = 0.01). The median ages of both successful and unsuccessful groups corresponded to data gained from an analysis of the literature (p = 0.04). At a median follow-up of 47 months, 2 out of 14 patients shunted after a failed ETV were revised for ventriculoperitoneal shunt malfunction. Conclusion: The impact of age on ETV failure in infants is clear and becomes crucial during the first 2 months of life, even when excluding etiological factors. Nevertheless, age cannot be considered the only parameter of the decision-making process, especially in these very young patients. Probably, the definition of 'unsuccessful ETV' should be reevaluated in light of decreased risk of shunt malfunction observed after a failed ETV. Copyright © 2011 S. Karger AG, Basel

    Pineoblastoma segregates into molecular sub-groups with distinct clinico-pathologic features: a Rare Brain Tumor Consortium registry study

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    Pineoblastomas (PBs) are rare, aggressive pediatric brain tumors of the pineal gland with modest overall survival despite intensive therapy. We sought to define the clinical and molecular spectra of PB to inform new treatment approaches for this orphan cancer. Tumor, blood, and clinical data from 91 patients with PB or supratentorial primitive neuroectodermal tumor (sPNETs/CNS-PNETs), and 2 pineal parenchymal tumors of intermediate differentiation (PPTIDs) were collected from 29 centres in the Rare Brain Tumor Consortium. We used global DNA methylation profiling to define a core group of PB from 72/93 cases, which were delineated into five molecular sub-groups. Copy number, whole exome and targeted sequencing, and miRNA expression analyses were used to evaluate the clinico-pathologic significance of each sub-group. Tumors designated as group 1 and 2 almost exclusively exhibited deleterious homozygous loss-of-function alterations in miRNA biogenesis genes (DICER1, DROSHA, and DGCR8) in 62 and 100% of group 1 and 2 tumors, respectively. Recurrent alterations of the oncogenic MYC-miR-17/92-RB1 pathway were observed in the RB and MYC sub-group, respectively, characterized by RB1 loss with gain of miR-17/92, and recurrent gain or amplification of MYC. PB sub-groups exhibited distinct clinical features: group 1–3 arose in older children (median ages 5.2–14.0 years) and had intermediate to excellent survival (5-year OS of 68.0–100%), while Group RB and MYC PB patients were much younger (median age 1.3–1.4 years) with dismal survival (5-year OS 37.5% and 28.6%, respectively). We identified age

    Microarray analysis of periventricular region tumors of the central nervous system : identification of diagnostic and prognostic markers

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    Les services de Neurochirurgie du Groupement Hospitalier Est de Lyon ont une expĂ©rience reconnue pour l’exĂ©rĂšse des tumeurs des rĂ©gions pĂ©riventriculaires du systĂšme nerveux central notamment au niveau de la rĂ©gion pinĂ©ale. Dans ce contexte neurochirurgical favorable et avec l’opportunitĂ© d’utiliser des techniques de biologie molĂ©culaire, notre objectif a Ă©tĂ© l’identification de marqueurs diagnostiques pour chaque type tumoral par une Ă©tude transcriptomique en microarray, la caractĂ©risation d’un sous-type de tumeur du parenchyme pinĂ©al (TPP) plĂ©ĂŻomorphe, l’évaluation de la synthĂšse de mĂ©latonine par les TPP et l’étude du transcriptome de certains organes circumventriculaires (OCV) microdissĂ©quĂ©s chez le rat. L’analyse du transcriptome des tumeurs pĂ©riventriculaires a permis de regrouper les tumeurs par leur signature molĂ©culaire et d’identifier des marqueurs diagnostiques pour chaque type tumoral. De nouveaux marqueurs pronostiques potentiels (HoxD13, Prame, CD24 et Pou4f2 et gĂšnes de la voie Aurora kinase B) sont proposĂ©s en vue d’amĂ©liorer la classification des TPP. Pour ces derniĂšres, une Ă©tude multicentrique a permis de caractĂ©riser un sous-type tumoral, les tumeurs plĂ©ĂŻomorphes, souvent surgradĂ©es. L’étude des TPP ex vivo et in vivo montre leur capacitĂ© de synthĂšse de mĂ©latonine. Toutefois, nous n’avons pu obtenir une lignĂ©e de cellules tumorales stable. La microdissection des OCV du rat, parfois vestigiaux chez l’homme et qui pourraient ĂȘtre Ă  l’origine de tumeurs pĂ©riventriculaires, a permis d’étudier leur transcriptome et de mettre en Ă©vidence des marqueurs nouveaux ou dĂ©jĂ  associĂ©s dans la littĂ©rature Ă  ces structuresNeurosurgery of periventricular tumors, especially of pineal region tumors, is well developed at the Neurosurgical Hospital in Lyon. Taking opportunity of this background, our objective was identification of new diagnostic markers for each of these tumors using microarray transcriptome analysis, characterisation of a pleomorphic pineal parenchyma tumor (PPT) subtype, evaluation of melatonin synthesis in PPTs and the microarray analysis of molecular signature of some of circumventricular organs (CVO) after their laser microdissection in rat. The microarray analysis of periventricular tumors allowed molecular classification of the tumours and revealed different diagnostic markers for each type of tumors. Potentially new prognostic candidate genes (HoxD13, Prame, CD24 and Pou4f2 and Aurora kinase B pathway genes) are proposed for improvement of PPT classification. A PPT multicenter study allowed the characterisation of a pleomorphic subtype frequently managed as a higher grade tumour in the literature. The study of PPT ex vivo and in vivo showed their preserved capacity for melatonin production. However a stable PPT cell line culture could not be obtained. The laser microdissection of OCV in rat, sometimes vestigial in humans and potentially at the origin of the periventricular tumors, associated with a microarray study highlighted some potentially new or already described specific markers of these structure

    Mapping motor representations in the human cerebellum.

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    International audienceThe cerebellum is a major motor structure. However, in humans, its efferent topographical organization remains controversial and indirectly inferred from neuroimaging and animal studies. Even central questions such as 'Can we evoke limb movements by stimulating the cerebellar cortex?' have no clear answer. To address this issue, we electrically stimulated the posterior cerebellum of 20 human patients undergoing surgery for tumours located outside this structure (e.g. pineal gland, quadrigeminal plate). Stimulation, delivered at a 60-Hz frequency for 2 s, evoked focal (single-joint) ipsilateral movements. Different regions were associated with the production of head (vermal lobule VI), face/mouth (hemispheric lobule VI) and lower-limb (hemispheric lobules VIIb-IX) responses. Upper-limb representations were more widely distributed. They intermingled with face/mouth representations in the superior posterior cerebellum (hemispheric lobule VI) and lower-limb representations in the inferior posterior cerebellum (hemispheric lobules VIIb-IX). No intra- or inter-limb somatotopy was found in these areas. Functionally, upper-limb (face/mouth movements) and upper limb-lower limb postural coordinations are major elements of our motor repertoire. Representation of these pairs of segments in common regions might favour the production of integrated motor behaviours. The intermediate region of the posterior cerebellum (hemispheric lobule VII and vermal lobules VII-VIII) was mostly silent. Latency results in conjunction with previous electrophysiological evidence in animals suggest that electrically evoked motor responses were not mediated by a cortical route but rather by brainstem structures. The potential role of this descending efferent pathway for fine motor control is discussed

    Pediatric Low-Grade Glioma Surgery with Sodium Fluorescein: Efficient Localization for Removal and Association with Intraoperative Pathological Sampling

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    Low-grade gliomas are among the most common CNS lesions in pediatrics and surgery is often the first-line treatment. Intraoperative tools have been developed to maximize the results of surgery, and in particular dyes such as sodium fluorescein (SF) have been investigated in high-grade adult lesions. The use of SF in pediatric low-grade gliomas is still unclear. We retrospectively reviewed 22 pediatric CNS low-grade gliomas operated on with SF from September 2021 to October 2022. A total of 86% of lesions showed SF uptake, which was helpful intraoperatively (confirmation of initial localization of the tumor, or identification of tumor remnants) in 74% of them. The intraoperative fluorescence seems associated with gadolinium enhancement at the preoperative MRI. Interestingly, the extemporaneous pathological sampling (EPS) was informative in every case showing SF uptake, whereas in cases without SF uptake, the EPS was non-informative, although the tissue was later confirmed as pathological. These findings highlight the interest of SF for perioperative diagnosis of tumor tissue and may suggest in which cases the differentiation of tumor–healthy tissue could be especially blurred, posing difficulties for the pathologist

    Anatomical bases of fast parietal grasp control in humans: A diffusion-MRI tractography study

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    The dorso-posterior parietal cortex (DPPC) is a major node of the grasp/manipulation control network. It is assumed to act as an optimal forward estimator that continuously integrates efferent outflows and afferent inflows to modulate the ongoing motor command. In agreement with this view, a recent per-operative study, in humans, identified functional sites within DPPC that: (i) instantly disrupt hand movements when electrically stimulated; (ii) receive short-latency somatosensory afferences from intrinsic hand muscles. Based on these results, it was speculated that DPPC is part of a rapid grasp control loop that receives direct inputs from the hand-territory of the primary somatosensory cortex (S1) and sends direct projections to the hand-territory of the primary motor cortex (M1). However, evidence supporting this hypothesis is weak and partial. To date, projections from DPPC to M1 grasp zone have been identified in monkeys and have been postulated to exist in humans based on clinical and transcranial magnetic studies. This work uses diffusion-MRI tractography in two samples of right- (n = 50) and left-handed (n = 25) subjects randomly selected from the Human Connectome Project. It aims to determine whether direct connections exist between DPPC and the hand control sectors of the primary sensorimotor regions. The parietal region of interest, related to hand control (hereafter designated DPPChand), was defined permissively as the 95% confidence area of the parietal sites that were found to disrupt hand movements in the previously evoked per-operative study. In both hemispheres, irrespective of handedness, we found dense ipsilateral connections between a restricted part of DPPChand and focal sectors within the pre and postcentral gyrus. These sectors, corresponding to the hand territories of M1 and S1, targeted the same parietal zone (spatial overlap > 92%). As a sensitivity control, we searched for potential connections between the angular gyrus (AG) and the pre and postcentral regions. No robust pathways were found. Streamline densities identified using AG as the starting seed represented less than 5 % of the streamline densities identified from DPPChand. Together, these results support the existence of a direct sensory-parietal-motor loop suited for fast manual control and more generally, for any task requiring rapid integration of distal sensorimotor signals

    Central nervous system germ cell tumor, an archetypal AYA tumor and a model for pediatric and neuro-oncology collaboration, review from the EURACAN domain 10 group.

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    Peer reviewed: TrueSimple Summary: Adolescents and young adults (AYA) with cancer often fall through gaps between children's and adults' cancer services. They are consequently under-represented in clinical trials, and their survival is often inferior to that of children or adults with the same tumor type; in this paper, we use the example of central nervous system germ cell tumors (CNS-GCT), as a model of AYA tumor to illustrate this challenge. We describe how we have built bridges between pediatric and adult oncology, how this can apply to other types of brain tumors, and discuss ways to promote cancer care in the AYA population. Adolescents and young adults (AYA) with cancer are under-represented in clinical trials and have thus not benefited from the same improvement in outcomes as either younger or older patients. Central nervous system germ cell tumors (CNS-GCT) represent an ideal model of AYA tumor as their incidence peaks during adolescence and young adulthood. Since the early 90's, SIOP (International Society of Pediatric Oncology) has launched two successive European trials: SIOP CNS-GCT96 (January 1996 to December 2005) and SIOP CNS-GCTII protocols (October 2011 to July 2018), for CNS-GCTs. With the removal of the upper age limit in the SIOP CNS-GCTII trial, and closer collaboration between pediatric and adult oncologists within AYA multidisciplinary tumor boards, the proportion of adults enrolled in France has dramatically increased over time. The current article will use the example of CNS-GCT to illustrate how to build a bridge between pediatric and adult oncology, how this can apply to other types of brain tumors, and how to promote cancer care in the AYA population

    Preradiation chemotherapy may improve survival in pediatric diffuse intrinsic brainstem gliomas: Final results of BSG 98 prospective trial

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    Radiation therapy remains the only treatment that provides clinical benefit to children with diffuse brainstem tumors. Their median survival, however, rarely exceeds 9 months. The authors report a prospective trial of front-line chemotherapy aimed at delaying radiation until time of clinical progression. The aim was to investigate the possibility that radiotherapy would maintain its activity in children whose disease progressed after chemotherapy. Twenty-three patients took part in this protocol, the BSG 98 protocol, which consisted of frontline chemotherapy alternating hematotoxic and nonhematotoxic schedules. Each cycle included three courses delivered monthly; the first course was 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea– cisplatin, and the second and third were high-dose methotrexate. Three patients underwent one cycle; 5 patients each, two and three cycles; and 10 patients, four cycles. Twenty of the 23 patients eventually received local radiation therapy. A historical cohort of 14 patients who received at least local radiation therapy served as controls. Four patients experienced severe iatrogenic infections, and 11 patients required platelet transfusions. Median survival increased significantly in patients participating in the protocol compared to that in the historical controls (17 months, 95% confidence interval [CI], 10–23 months, vs. 9 months, 95% CI, 8–10 months; p = 0.022), though hospitalization was prolonged (57 vs. 25 days, p = 0.001). Although frontline chemotherapy alternating hematotoxic and nonhematotoxic schedules significantly increases overall median survival, its cost from infection and hospitalization deserves honest discussion with the children and their parents
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