AI Article Synopsis

  • Children with posterior fossa tumors treated with cranial irradiation (CRT) often experience significant cognitive deficits, affecting areas like spatial learning and memory compared to healthy peers.
  • Neuroimaging revealed that those receiving CRT had smaller thalamic volumes and negative correlations between radiation doses to the hippocampus and cognitive performance.
  • The study indicates that cranial irradiation can adversely impact critical brain structures, resulting in long-term cognitive challenges for affected children.

Article Abstract

Background: Posterior fossa irradiation with or without whole brain irradiation results in high doses of radiation to the thalamus, hippocampus, and putamen, structures critical to cognitive functioning. As a result, children with brain tumors treated with cranial irradiation (CRT) may experience significant cognitive late effects. We sought to determine the effect of radiation to those structures on neuropsychological outcome.

Methods: Forty-seven children with a history of posterior fossa tumor (17 treated with surgery; 11 with surgery and chemotherapy; and 19 with surgery, chemotherapy, and CRT) underwent neuroimaging and neuropsychological assessment at a mean of 4.8 years after treatment, along with 17 healthy sibling controls. The putamen, thalamus, and hippocampus were segmented on each participant's magnetic resonance imaging for diffusion indices and volumes, and in the radiation treatment group, radiation dose to each structure was calculated.

Results: Performance on visuoconstruction and spatial learning and memory was lower in patient groups than controls. Volume of the thalamus, when controlling for age, was smaller in the patient group treated with CRT than other groups. Higher radiation doses to the putamen correlated with higher fractional anisotropy in that structure. Higher radiation dose to the hippocampus correlated with lower spatial learning, and higher dose to thalami and putamina to lower verbal and nonverbal reasoning.

Conclusions: All children with posterior fossa tumors, regardless of treatment modality, had cognitive deficits compared to their sibling controls. Posterior fossa irradiation may affect thalamic volume and aspects of verbal and nonverbal cognitive functioning.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11410875PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/brb3.70019DOI Listing

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