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Magnetic resonance-guided stereotactic laser ablation therapy for the treatment of pediatric brain tumors: a multiinstitutional retrospective study

Authors :
George Price
Sarah Graber
Matthew D. Smyth
Michael J. Levy
Anthony C Wang
Robert J. Bollo
Daniel E. Couture
Michael Sather
Laurie Bailey
Chima O. Oluigbo
Michael H. Handler
Zulma Tovar-Spinoza
Gene H. Barnett
Sean C. Huckins
Kavelin Rumalla
Erin Alexander
Sabrina Shandley
Ashton Roach
Phillip B. Storm
Sanjiv Bhatia
Elsa V Arocho-Quinones
Antonio Meola
Sean M. Lew
Aria Fallah
Angela V. Price
David D. Gonda
Daniel M Hafez
Sergey Tarima
David Donahue
Carrie R. Muh
Francesco T. Mangano
Wendi Evanoff
Kadam Patel
Nicholas J. Brandmeir
M Scott Perry
Eric M. Thompson
Deki Tsering
Ann-Christine Duhaime
Wendy W. Jenkins
Source :
J Neurosurg Pediatr, Journal of neurosurgery. Pediatrics, vol 26, iss 1
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

OBJECTIVEThis study aimed to assess the safety and efficacy of MR-guided stereotactic laser ablation (SLA) therapy in the treatment of pediatric brain tumors.METHODSData from 17 North American centers were retrospectively reviewed. Clinical, technical, and radiographic data for pediatric patients treated with SLA for a diagnosis of brain tumor from 2008 to 2016 were collected and analyzed.RESULTSA total of 86 patients (mean age 12.2 ± 4.5 years) with 76 low-grade (I or II) and 10 high-grade (III or IV) tumors were included. Tumor location included lobar (38.4%), deep (45.3%), and cerebellar (16.3%) compartments. The mean follow-up time was 24 months (median 18 months, range 3–72 months). At the last follow-up, the volume of SLA-treated tumors had decreased in 80.6% of patients with follow-up data. Patients with high-grade tumors were more likely to have an unchanged or larger tumor size after SLA treatment than those with low-grade tumors (OR 7.49, p = 0.0364). Subsequent surgery and adjuvant treatment were not required after SLA treatment in 90.4% and 86.7% of patients, respectively. Patients with high-grade tumors were more likely to receive subsequent surgery (OR 2.25, p = 0.4957) and adjuvant treatment (OR 3.77, p = 0.1711) after SLA therapy, without reaching significance. A total of 29 acute complications in 23 patients were reported and included malpositioned catheters (n = 3), intracranial hemorrhages (n = 2), transient neurological deficits (n = 11), permanent neurological deficits (n = 5), symptomatic perilesional edema (n = 2), hydrocephalus (n = 4), and death (n = 2). On long-term follow-up, 3 patients were reported to have worsened neuropsychological test results. Pre-SLA tumor volume, tumor location, number of laser trajectories, and number of lesions created did not result in a significantly increased risk of complications; however, the odds of complications increased by 14% (OR 1.14, p = 0.0159) with every 1-cm3 increase in the volume of the lesion created.CONCLUSIONSSLA is an effective, minimally invasive treatment option for pediatric brain tumors, although it is not without risks. Limiting the volume of the generated thermal lesion may help decrease the incidence of complications.

Details

ISSN :
19330715
Volume :
26
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of neurosurgery. Pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....df6f3f9f5e9c688c94ea7696f406f19d