Neurodevelopmental status of infants and young children treated for brain tumors with preirradiation chemotherapy.
- 1 November 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) in Journal of Clinical Oncology
- Vol. 7 (11), 1660-1666
- https://doi.org/10.1200/jco.1989.7.11.1660
Abstract
In an effort to reduce the severity of late neurotoxicities associated with cranial irradiation, 14 infants and young children with malignant brain tumors were given preirradiation chemotherapy for 2 to 22 months (median, 8 months). Prospective neurodevelopmental evaluations were routinely conducted and now extend from 35 to 60 months (median, 41 months) postdiagnosis, and 10 to 52 months (median, 31 months) postirradiation in the 12 surviving children. At the initiation of chemotherapy, less than one fourth of the patients displayed normal performance status or mental functioning on age-corrected tests; the majority remained stable or declined while receiving chemotherapy. Declining mental development and adaptive behavior were noted in six patients following radiation therapy with only two patients now functioning in the normal range for age. The analysis suggests that neurodevelopmental progress is a function of multiple factors, including neurologic and sensorimotor deficits associated with the tumor, surgical intervention, and chemotherapy that antedated radiation therapy. This implies that delaying irradiation will not necessarily improve the patients' functional status. Whether the interval of postponement of irradiation evidenced in this sample will translate into an ultimately better quality of life remains unknown. Given the probable interaction of multiple risk factors, well-controlled prospective clinical trials are needed to definitively analyze this issue.This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hearing loss in children and young adults receiving cisplatin with or without prior cranial irradiation.Journal of Clinical Oncology, 1989
- Brain tumors in the very young child: Postoperative chemotherapy in combined-modality treatmentCancer, 1988
- Factors Affecting Intellectual Outcome in Pediatric Brain Tumor PatientsNeurosurgery, 1987
- Survival of children with brain tumorsNeurology, 1986
- Assessment of the long-term effects of primary radiation. Therapy for brain tumors in childrenCancer, 1982
- Quality of long-term survival following irradiation for intracranial tumors in children under the age of twoInternational Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics, 1981
- Cerebral Tumors in InfancyAmerican Journal of Diseases of Children, 1968