Cases reported "Medulloblastoma"

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1/49. Secondary supratentorial anaplastic astrocytoma following treatment of medulloblastoma.

    The development of secondary tumours is a rare but well known late effect of radiation therapy of lesions in the central nervous system. Most radiation-induced tumours are of mesenchymal origin, but on rare occasions gliomas can occur. We describe a patient in whom a supratentorial anaplastic astrocytoma developed 15 years after surgery and radiotherapy for a childhood posterior fossa medulloblastoma. A concise review of the pertinent literature is given.
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ranking = 1
keywords = glioma
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2/49. hypnosis instead of general anaesthesia in paediatric radiotherapy: report of three cases.

    PURPOSE: This report proposes hypnosis as a valid alternative to general anaesthesia for immobilisation and set-up in certain cases in paediatric radiotherapy. methods: We report three cases of children who underwent radiotherapy in 1994 and were treated using hypnosis for set-up during irradiation. The first and the second were two cases of macroscopic resection of cerebellar medulloblastoma in which craniospinal irradiation was necessary, while the third patient suffered of an endorbitary relapse of retinoblastoma previously treated with bilateral enucleation, radiotherapy and chemotherapy; in this last situation the child needed radiation as palliative therapy. hypnosis was used during treatment to obtain the indispensable immobility. Hypnotic conditioning was obtained by our expert psychotherapist while the induction during every single treatment was made by the clinician, whose voice was presented to the children during the conditioning. RESULTS: Every single fraction of the radiation therapy was delivered in hypnosis and without the need for narcosis. CONCLUSIONS: hypnosis may be useful in particular situations to prepare paediatric cancer patients during irradiation, when lack of child collaboration might necessitate the use of general anaesthesia and when anaesthesia itself is not possible.
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ranking = 1.0970901686772
keywords = retinoblastoma
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3/49. Medulloblastomas with extensive posttherapy neuronal maturation. Report of two cases.

    The authors report on two patients with classic medulloblastoma, each of whom underwent extensive therapy-associated neuronal maturation. The first patient presented at 3 months of age with hydrocephalus caused by a 5-cm tumor in the cerebellar vermis. He underwent a gross-total resection of a desmoplastic medulloblastoma. No mature elements were identified. Despite adjuvant chemotherapy, a 1.5-cm recurrent tumor developed 6 months later. Sections from the subtotally resected tumor demonstrated exclusively mature neuronal elements, ranging from neurocytes to ganglion cells. Four months later, a second recurrent tumor was resected. The specimen collected this time demonstrated classic medulloblastoma morphological characteristics. The patient was subsequently treated with radiation therapy, which seemed to have an effect; however, the tumor eventually progressed and the patient died. The second patient presented at 3 years of age with a midline medulloblastoma and was treated with subtotal resection, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy. Although the tumor remained stable on radiographic imaging, a second resection was performed 8 years later to alleviate hydrocephalus. Histological examination revealed predominantly small mature neurons with scattered ganglion cells and extensive calcification. No adjuvant therapy was given and the patient is alive and well as of his last follow-up examination. The mature neuronal neoplasms resected in both patients demonstrated negligible proliferative indices and stained appropriately with neuronal immunohistochemical markers. The smaller neuronal population resembled those of a central neurocytoma and medullocytoma/cerebellar neurocytoma. Analogous to neuroblastoma, our cases suggest that adjuvant therapy can induce extensive or complete neuronal maturation in medulloblastoma. Additional cases must be studied to determine the prognostic significance of this rare phenomenon.
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ranking = 0.98819811449673
keywords = neuroblastoma
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4/49. Adjuvant immunotherapy for malignant brain tumors in infants and children.

    Immune deficiency of immunocompetent cells or of humoral factors are essential causes of tumor growth. The authors have investigated the transfer of immunocompetent cells - allogeneic bone marrow cell transfusion and white blood cell intracranial infusion - for the treatment of 11 malignant gliomas in infants and children as an adjuvant to surgery, radiation and/or chemotherapy. Ten cases, from 3 months to 11 years, received bone marrow cell transfusion. Two medulloblastomas and 3 pontine gliomas are dead. Five cases are alive and well 37-65 months following surgery. Among these two posterior fossa neoplasms, a medulloblastoma and a glioblastoma have survived 46 and 65 months, respectively. One cerebral glioblastoma received allogeneic white blood cells infused locally into the tumor bed: it recurred 1 year following surgery, chemotherapy, and immunotherapy. Cytolysis of the tumor cells by sensitized lymphoid cells were demonstrated in this case. The role of immunotherapy should be limited at the present time to adjuvant therapy until its effect on tumor growth is statistically confirmed. The results so far are promising, and improvement of the immunological approach in treating malignant brain tumors is under way.
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ranking = 29.0294588985
keywords = glioblastoma, glioma
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5/49. High-dose anthracyclines in the treatment of advanced primitive neuroectodermal tumors in adults--a single institution experience.

    Primitive neuroectodermal tumors (PNET) are rare malignancies of presumed neural crest origin, most often presenting as bone or soft tissue masses in the trunk or axial skeleton, in children and young adults. Treatment of advanced PNET in adults is not clearly defined in the literature. Data concerning dose-intensive chemotherapy regimens for poor-risk patients with those tumors are sparse, due to rarity of PNET in adults, their diverse presentation, the variable treatment procedures applied and the absence of direct comparisons. On the other hand, the role of anthracyclines in the treatment of advanced soft tissue sarcomas is well known and substantial. Six advanced PNET patients were treated at the Institute for Oncology and radiology of serbia, during last five years, with high-doses of doxorubicin or epidoxorubicin combined with cisplatin. The paper reviews each of our patients, discussing how does chemotherapy influence the outcome in these patients, in context of the feasibility of high-doses of anthracyclines in advanced settings. High dose anthracyclines (epidoxorubicin 150 mg/m2) in combination with cisplatin 120 mg/m2 induced a complete response lasting for 63 months in a patient with desmoplastic medulloblastoma of the cerebellum metastatic to bones and bone marrow. The same treatment but with the epidoxorubicin dose of 180 mg/m2 induced a complete response in a patient with olfactory neuroblastoma. Administration of high dose doxorubicin (75 mg/m2) seems feasible in association with irradiation treatment in patients with extraosseal Ewing sarcoma/PNET but the place of high dose chemotherapy within this setting remains to be determined.
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ranking = 0.98819811449673
keywords = neuroblastoma
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6/49. Trilateral retinoblastoma variant indicative of the relevance of the retinoblastoma tumor-suppressor pathway to medulloblastomas in humans.

    Results of recent studies have led investigators to suggest that the retinoblastoma tumor-suppressor (rb) gene plays an underappreciated role in the genesis of brain tumors. Such tumors cause significant rates of mortality in children suffering from hereditary retinoblastoma. It has been assumed that the pineal gland, which is ontogenetically related to the retina, accounts for the intracranial origin of these trilateral neoplasms. To address this issue, the authors describe an unusual trilateral retinoblastoma variant. The authors provide a detailed clinicopathological correlation by describing the case of a child with bilateral retinoblastoma who died of a medulloblastoma. The intraocular and intracranial neoplasms were characterized by performing detailed imaging, histopathological, and postmortem studies. karyotype analysis and fluorescence in situ hybridization were used to define the chromosomal defect carried by the patient and members of her family. An insertion of the q12.3q21.3 segment of chromosome 13 into chromosome 18 at band q23 was identified in members of the patient's family. This translocation was unbalanced in the proband. The intraocular and cerebellar neoplasms were found to be separate primary neoplasms. Furthermore, the pineal gland was normal and the cerebellar neoplasm arose within the vermis as a medulloblastoma. Finally, the two neoplasms had different and characteristically identifiable cytolological and immunohistochemical profiles. The findings of the present study, taken together with those of recent molecular and transgenic studies, support the emerging concept that rb inactivation is not restricted to central nervous system regions of photoreceptor lineage and that inactivation of this tumor suppressor pathway may be relevant to the determination of etiological factors leading to medulloblastoma in humans.
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ranking = 13.165082024127
keywords = retinoblastoma
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7/49. Skeletal metastases from retinoblastoma.

    Four patients with skeletal metastases from retinoblastomas are presented. Radiologically, the metastases showed periosteal new bone formation and permeative-type bone destruction, particularly involving the long bones of the extremities, and they tended to be bilateral. The metastases resembled those of neuroblastoma and, to a lesser extent, medulloblastoma. The relationship between these three tumors is discussed.
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ranking = 6.4736489578829
keywords = retinoblastoma, neuroblastoma
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8/49. medulloblastoma with extensive nodularity: single photon emission CT study with iodine-123 metaiodobenzylguanidine.

    We present the case of an infant with medulloblastoma with extensive nodularity, which had been called cerebellar neuroblastoma. MR imaging clearly revealed a nodular enhancement, which appeared as a grape-like lesion. Single photon emission CT revealed markedly high iodine-123 metaiodobenzylguanidine uptake in the enhancing tumor. iodine-123 metaiodobenzylguanidine single photon emission CT may be useful in the diagnosis of medulloblastoma with extensive nodularity, which has been considered to be a subgroup of medulloblastoma with extensive neuronal differentiation.
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ranking = 0.98819811449673
keywords = neuroblastoma
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9/49. Malignant astrocytoma of the optic nerve in a child.

    Malignant gliomas of optic nerve and chiasm are rare, rapidly fatal neoplasms of adulthood. This report documents the occurrence of a malignant astrocytoma of the optic nerve in an 11-year-old boy who 9 years previously had a cerebellar medulloblastoma treated with surgery and irradiation. This malignant optic nerve glioma followed the same aggressive clinical course as that seen in adults, with death 9 months after diagnosis despite surgery and chemotherapy. Radiation may have been an important factor in the development of this malignant tumor which is almost never seen in the pediatric age group.
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ranking = 2
keywords = glioma
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10/49. Immunocytochemical demonstration of interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein in cerebellar medulloblastoma.

    Previously, immunoreactive rod-opsin and S-antigen (arrestin), two highly characteristic markers of retinal photoreceptors and pinealocytes, were shown to be present in certain medulloblastoma cells. It, thus, has been suggested that such cells differentiate along the photoreceptor lineage. This is corroborated in the present immunocytochemical investigation using antibodies against another photoreceptor-cell marker, the interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein (IRBP). As shown in preparations of human retina and pineal organ, IRBP can be successfully demonstrated in formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded tissue: the IRBP immunoreaction is located to the outer and inner segments of retinal photoreceptor cells and to perikarya of certain pinealocytes. Examination of formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded biopsy specimens of 66 cerebellar medullo-blastomas revealed varying numbers of IRBP-immuno-reactive tumor cells in 19 cases that were formerly shown to contain rod-opsin and S-antigen immunoreaction. IRBP-immunoreactive tumor cells were also found in a retinoblastoma and a pineocytoma, but not in neuroblastoma, ganglioneuroblastoma, glioblastoma, oligodendroglioma and astrocytoma. The results indicate: (1) cerebellar medulloblastomas are heterogeneous in their differentiation potential; (2) one type of medulloblastoma displays photoreceptor characteristics; (3) this type appears to be closely related to retinoblastoma and pineal cell tumors; and (4) all three types of tumors may display additional common features to be explored in future studies.
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ranking = 18.685306015598
keywords = glioblastoma, retinoblastoma, glioma, neuroblastoma
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