Radiological characterization of pediatric intramedullary astrocytomas: Do they differ from adults?

Intramedullary astrocytoma Pediatric spinal cord tumor Pilocytic astrocytoma

Journal

Brain & spine
ISSN: 2772-5294
Titre abrégé: Brain Spine
Pays: Netherlands
ID NLM: 9918470888906676

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
2024
Historique:
received: 10 05 2023
revised: 28 08 2023
accepted: 05 09 2023
medline: 21 3 2024
pubmed: 21 3 2024
entrez: 21 3 2024
Statut: epublish

Résumé

The incidence of intramedullary spinal cord tumors ranges from 2 to 4% of all central nervous system tumors. Only 6-8% are astrocytomas. The gold standard to diagnose a spinal cord tumor is the spinal cord MRI This work aims to determine if the usual radiological criteria of intramedullary astrocytomas (IMAs) are different depending on the patient's age. We evaluated the radiological features of IMAs in adult and pediatric groups through a retrospective study. We collected 31 patients with IMAs (11 children and 20 adults). We observed some trends but we did not highlight any statistically significant difference between all the radiological criteria studied (sagittal and axial spinal cord localization, T1-and T2-weighted characteristics, contrast uptake, infiltrating character, presence of necrosis, heterogeneous lesion, necrotic, hemorrhagic, presence of edema) and the patient's age. Given the rarity of IMAs and the lack of large specific pediatric studies, it seems essential to routinely report all cases encountered and create multicentric pediatric databases to draw more robust conclusions.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38510632
doi: 10.1016/j.bas.2023.102671
pii: S2772-5294(23)00959-1
pmc: PMC10951691
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

102671

Informations de copyright

© 2023 The Authors.

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

Auteurs

Nathalie Gilis (N)

Department of Neurosurgery, Erasmus Hospital, Route de Lennik 808, Brussels, Belgium.

Laetitia Lebrun (L)

Department of Pathology, Erasmus Hospital, Route de Lennik 808, Brussels, Belgium.

Valentina Lolli (V)

Department of Radiology, Erasmus Hospital, Route de Lennik 808, Brussels, Belgium.

Philippe David (P)

Department of Radiology, Erasmus Hospital, Route de Lennik 808, Brussels, Belgium.

Marine Rodesch (M)

Department of Pediatrics, Erasmus Hospital, Route de Lennik 808, Brussels, Belgium.

Alix Bex (A)

Department of Neurosurgery, Erasmus Hospital, Route de Lennik 808, Brussels, Belgium.

Christophe Fricx (C)

Department of Pediatrics, Erasmus Hospital, Route de Lennik 808, Brussels, Belgium.

Vivianne De Maertelaer (V)

Institute of Interdisciplinary Research (IRIBHM), Université Libre de Bruxelles, Route de Lennik 808, Brussels, Belgium.

Isabelle Salmon (I)

Department of Pathology, Erasmus Hospital, Route de Lennik 808, Brussels, Belgium.

Olivier De Witte (O)

Department of Neurosurgery, Erasmus Hospital, Route de Lennik 808, Brussels, Belgium.

Classifications MeSH