Optic nerve and chiasmatic-hypothalamic tumors. J. Francisco Salomão Section of Pediatric Neurosurgery – Dept. of Pediatric Surgery Fernandes Figueira.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
NEUROCUTANEOUS SYNDROMES
Advertisements

Neurocutaneous Disorders
Neurofibromatosis (NF)
Neurofibromatosis and Seizures “Knowledge is Power”
Case 20 Thomas J. Giordano, M.D., Ph.D.. History A 54-year old man with a past medical history of goiter for approximately 4 years was followed by ultrasound.
Ray Peeples, MD. Case 1  50 y/o F with NF1  hx of meningioma debulking (2/10) and cervical neurofibroma removal (7/09)  MRI studies showed an enhancing.
The Eye & General Medicine Exophthalmos & thyroid eye disease A case report for a ‘Grand Round’ Good Hope Hospital, March 2003 David Kinshuck, Associate.
OPTIC PATHWAY GLIOMA. 1 % of CNS tumors 3-5 % of pediatric tumors 65% of patients are younger than 5 years of age Occur with equal frequency in males.
Optic Nerve Sheath Meningiomas
Presented by: Jacqueline Holt March 4th 2003
62 years old man Main complaint: Back pain at night but not during the day Loss of appettite Weight loss.
Pediatric Brain Tumors
Management of Ependymomas George Jallo Division of Pediatric Neurosurgery Johns Hopkins University.
Brain Tumors in Pediatrics
Challenges and Considerations in Linking Adult and Pediatric CNS Malignancies Henry S. Friedman, MD The Brain Tumor Center at Duke.
UNIVERSITÀ CATTOLICA DEL SACRO CUORE Facoltà di Medicina e Chirurgia “A. Gemelli” - ROMA ISTITUTO DI CLINICA PEDIATRICA Direttore: Prof. Riccardo Riccardi.
Characterization of retinal thickness in children with neurofibromatosis type 1 and optic pathway gliomas using optical coherence tomography David Wolf,
Von Recklinghausen Neurofibromatosis NF1 By: Jessica Mollman.
By Rachel, Xiao Xia, Helen. Introduction Definition Symptoms Causes Prevention Treatment Prognosis Statistics Conclusion.
Brain tumors. Incidence of tumors ► per population per year ► 5-15% among all tumors.
Case Report Submitted by:Jordan Emerson Faculty reviewer:Dr. Sandra Oldham, M.D. Date accepted:29 August 2007 Radiological Category:Principal Modality.
Primary Spinal Tumors (Soft tissue tumors) H. Louis Harkey Department of Neurosurgery University of Mississippi Jackson, MS.
ANDY LIM Surgical HMO2.  Classification  Clinical presentation  Investigations  Management.
CNS Neoplasm Dr. Raid Jastania, FRCPC Assistant Professor, Faculty of Medicine, Umm Alqura University Vice Dean, Faculty of Dentistry.
Neurofibromatosis Darrell J. Watts. A genetic disorder that causes tumors to develop and grow in the nervous system. leads to changes in the individual’s.
International Survey on Management of Paediatric Ependymomas: Preliminary Results Guirish Solanki ¥, G Narenthiran § Department of Neurosurgery ¥ Birmingham.
Mak KS, 1 Miller RC, 2 Krishnan S, 3 Laperriere N, 4 Micke O, 5 Rutten I, 6 Kadish SP, 7 Ozsahin M, 8 and Mirimanoff RO 8 1 Harvard Medical School, Boston,
INTRAMEDULLARY SPINAL CORD TUMORS K. Liaropoulos, P. Spyropoulou, N. Papadakis 3rd Neurosurgery clinic, Athens Euroclinic.
Se cond Cancers and Residual Disease in Patients Treated for Gastric Mucosa-Associated Lymphoid Tissue Lymphoma by Helicobacter pylori Eradication and.
Grand Rounds Conference Reema Syed, MBBS University of Louisville Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences June 19, 2015.
Clinical Case Nº3 Dr. Markus Schuler. Case description 58-year-old man History of severe cardiac problems Large tumour in the left thigh Tests results:
GLIOMAS Are tumors of the CNS that arise from glial cells
N EUROFIBROMATOSIS (NF) By Angela M. O VERVIEW Discovered by Friedrich Daniel von Recklinghausen in 1882 Genetic neurological disorder that affects cell.
Kerrington Smith, M.D. CTOS Nov 14, 2008
 Identify different options of cancer therapy.  Most cancers are treated with a combination of approaches.
MANAGEMENT OF MANTLE CELL LYMPHOMA IN TUNISIA R BEN LAKHAL, L KAMMOUN, K ZAHRA, S KEFI Sousse 25 MAY 2012.
The “Elephant Man Disease”. What Causes Neurofibromatosis?  Neurofibromatosis is caused by tumors that grow along nerves in the body.  Tumors that grow.
Brain Abscess & Intracranial Tumors
Updates on Optic Neuritis Briar Sexton Neuro-ophthalmology Clinical Day Friday, November 18, 2005.
Skin Manifestations of Neurofibromatosis Type 1 (NF1)
Neurofibromatosis Ben Saward ST3 VTS February 2012.
Multiple Craniotomies in the Management of Multifocal and Multicentric Glioblastoma Raymond Sawaya, M.D.
Brain:Spinal cord tumors 10:1
A 4 year old girl presenting with short stature Teaching NeuroImages Neurology Resident and Fellow Section © 2014 American Academy of Neurology.
Khaled M F SAOUD Professor of neurosurgery, Ain shams university
Aggressive extra-abdominal fibromatosis: can aggressive management be avoided in a subgroup of patients ? S. Bonvalot *, H. Eldweny *, V Haddad A. Le Cesne,
Long-term efficacy of early versus delayed radiotherapy for low-grade astrocytoma and oligodendroglioma in adults: the EORTC randomised trial From.
The Royal Marsden Solitary fibrous tumours The outcomes of 106 patients illustrating the unpredictable biological behaviour N Alexander, K Thway, JM Thomas,
„Café-au-lait”- Spots Dr. György Fekete II. Department of Pediatrics Semmelweis University, Budapest.
A.Bocchio A.Bocchio Regional Hospital Valle d’Aosta, Italy Pilocytic juvenile astrocytoma: a difficult diagnosis?
NEUROCUTANEOUS SYNDROME
Operative Management of Osteosarcoma Patients with Pulmonary Metastasis Jen Kramer, MD R2 Swedish Medical Center February 2011.
It is essential to obtain the exact history of the hypersalivation as well as a thorough and complete past medical history. Oral evaluation should be performed,
Brain Tumors Mark Browning, M.D. IUSME. Differential Diagnosis includes: Primary CNS tumor Most common primary sites of brain mets: – Lung – Breast.
Radical Prostatectomy versus Watchful Waiting in Early Prostate Cancer Anna Bill-Axelson, M.D., Lars Holmberg, M.D., Ph.D., Mirja Ruutu, M.D., Ph.D., Michael.
Infarction after surgery of chiasmatic gliomas B. Bison 1, M. Warmuth-Metz 1, M. Hupp 1, F. Falkenstein 3, C. Mirow 3, J. Krauß 2, AK Gnekow 3 Referencecenter.
Evaluating the Clinical Outcomes of Sixty-Three Patients Treated with Gamma Knife as Salvage Therapy for Glioblastoma Multiforme Erik W Larson, Halloran.
The impact of age on outcome in early-stage breast cancer 방사선종양학과 R2. 최진현.
Patient Presentation 2½ yo boy presented with known NF1 and a right neck mass in 2/09 MRI revealed involvement of the right carotid sheath with collapse.
ORBITAL TUMOURS 1. Vascular tumours 2. Lacrimal gland tumours
NEUROFIBROMATOSIS noo r-oh-fahy-broh-muh-toh-sis
Handling and Evaluation of Breast Cancer Biopsy
Bilateral nephroblastomatosis
CNS tumors PhD Tomasz Wiśniewski.
Lymphoma in Pediatrics 23rd Nov 2018
39/69 hormone replacement 9/69 Cerebrovascular events
Metastasen der Wirbelsäule
Fig. 2. Kaplan-Meier plots for PFS and OS of 37 patients according to histological diagnosis (A and D), the extent of tumor resection (B and E), and adjuvant.
Presentation transcript:

Optic nerve and chiasmatic-hypothalamic tumors

J. Francisco Salomão Section of Pediatric Neurosurgery – Dept. of Pediatric Surgery Fernandes Figueira Institute (Oswaldo Cruz Foundation - Fiocruz) Rio de Janeiro, R.J. Rio de Janeiro, R.J.Brazil

Gliomas

OPT 3-6% of pediatric intracranial tumors 75% in the first decade of life 15-20% of CNS astrocytomas No gender predominance

OPT - Classification Prechiasmatic Exophitic Diffuse Prechiasmatic Chiasmatic-hypothalamic

Histopathology Pilomixoid astrocytoma (Tihan et al, 1999) Astrocytic tumors Astrocytoma - Fibrilary, protoplasmátic, gemystocític Anaplastic astrocytoma (malignant) GCGB, Gliosarcoma Multiform gliblastomas 1.1.4Pilocytic astrocitoma 1.1.5Pleomorphic xantoastrocitoma 1.1.6GCSA(Tuberous sclerosis)

OPT Diagnostic criteria of NF1 National Institutes of Health consensus statement on neurofibromatosis (1987) 1. Six or more café-au-lait macules larger than 5mm in greatest diameter in prepubertal individuals and larger than 15 mm in postpubertal individuals; 2. Two or more neurofibromas of any type or one plexiform neurofibroma; 3. Freckling in the axilary or inguinal region; 4. Optic glioma; 5. Two or more Lisch nodules (iris hamartomas); 6. A distinctive osseous lesion (eg, sphenoid dysplasia or thinning of long bone cortex with or without pseudoarthrosis); 7. A first degree relative (parent, sibling, or offspring) with neurofibromatosis 1 according the above criteria. (Two or more criteria are needed for a diagnosis of NF1) Neurofibromatosis 1 Sporadic

OPT and NF1 Orbital optic nerve 50-75% of patients have NF1 Multicentric tumors Asymptomatic Indolents Proptosis / visual deficit Sporadic OPT Chiasm and hypothalamus 10 % NF1 Isolated Aggressive IC hypertension

OPT and NF1 “ OPG in patients without NF differs significantly from NF- OPG in both imaging features and prognosis. Non NF- OPG and NF-OPG are apparently distinct entities, each warranting a specific diagnostic, clinical and therapeutic approach.” Kornreich L et al., 2001

Optic nerve glioma (ONG) Proptosis Painless Non pulsatile Visual loss Optic atrophy/ papilledema Decreased eye movements

ONG

Surgical indications Loss of unilateral vision (blindness) Progressive visual loss Exophtalmos Surgical contraindications Partially preserved vision Moderate proptosis Stable lesions Contralateral extension or chiasmal envolvement

ONG

Chiasmatic-hypothalamic tumors (Ch-H)

Ch-H

Signs and symptoms Chiasmatic Hypothalamic

Ch-H tumors : Problems in management Natural history and course Number of patients Variability of treatment options Lack of prospective of studies Biologic behavior What is the best treatment ?

Ch-H – Options of treatment Observation Stable lesions NF1 Surgery Radical subtotal Limited  Decompression  Biopsy Chemotherapy Radiation therapy

Surgery – Subtotal removal Hoffman, 1983 Albrighth & Selabassi, 1985 Fletcher et al., 1986 Wisoff, 1990

Surgery – Subtotal removal

Operative morbidity and morbidity Diabetes insipidus Hypersomnia Amaurosis Precocious puberty ADH ISS Death

Limited surgery + Chemotherapy 6m1y

Limited surgery + Chemotherapy Before (02/1998) ) After (05/2000 )

Biopsy + Chemotherapy

Current trends Avoid radiation therapy Delay radiation therapy

Radiation therapy Intelectual impairment Visual impairment Endocrine impairment Moyamoya disease Brain infarction Induced tumors Relapse Older children

Chemotherapy + Radiation therapy RT 2004

Outcome : Factors affecting long-term survival Increasing age NF1 Chemotherapy Radiation therapy 69% 10y PFS Grabenbauer et al., 2000 Chemotherapy 34% 5y PFS 89% 5y OS 61% 5y RT FS Laithier et al., 2003

OPT are a puzzle

OPT are a puzzle

OPT - Conclusions 1. OPT have an unpredictable course despite histological benignity; 2. Tumors associated with NF1 have a most favorable outcome; 3. Age is the most important prognostic factor and younger children have the worst prognosis; 4. Unilateral ONGs associated with blindness and proptosis are best treated with radical resection; 5. Subtotal radical surgery of Ch-H tumors is feasible but is associated with a high morbidity; 6. Chemotherapy seems to be a reasonable alternative as first line treatment of Ch-H tumors; 7. Prospective, randomized, multicentric studies are needed in order to know the natural history and define the best treatment of OPT.