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Journal ArticleDOI

A prospective study of cognitive function in children receiving whole-brain radiotherapy and chemotherapy: 2-year results.

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TLDR
The 2-year results of this study suggest that children with brain tumors treated with CRT are cognitively impaired and that these deficits worsen over time.
Abstract
As survival rates have risen for children with malignant primary brain tumors, so has the concern that many survivors have significant permanent cognitive deficits. Cranial irradiation (CRT) has been implicated as the major cause for cognitive dysfunction. To clarify the etiology, incidence, and severity of intellectual compromise in children with brain tumors after CRT, a prospective study was undertaken comparing the neuropsychological outcome in 18 consecutive children with malignant brain tumors treated with CRT to outcome in 14 children harboring brain tumors in similar sites in the nervous system who had not received CRT. Children with cortical or subcortical brain tumors were not eligible for study. Neuropsychological testing was performed after surgery prior to radiotherapy, after radiotherapy, and at 1- and 2-year intervals thereafter. Children who had received CRT had a mean full-scale intelligence quotient (FSIQ) of 105 at diagnosis which fell to 91 by Year 2. Similar declines were noted in their performance intelligence quotient (IQ) and verbal IQ. After CRT, patients demonstrated a statistically significant decline from baseline in FSIQ (p less than 0.02) and verbal IQ (p less than 0.04). Children who had not received CRT did not demonstrate a fall in any cognitive parameter over time. The decline between baseline testing and testing performed at Year 2 in patients who had CRT was inversely correlated with age (p less than 0.02), as younger children demonstrated the greatest loss of intelligence. Children less than 7 years of age at diagnosis had a mean decline in FSIQ of 25 points 2 years posttreatment. No other clinical parameter correlated with the overall IQ or decline in IQ. After CRT, children demonstrated a wide range of dysfunction including deficits in fine motor, visual-motor, and visual-spatial skills and memory difficulties. After CRT, children with brain tumors also demonstrated a fall in a wide range of achievement scores and an increased need, over time, for special help in school. The 2-year results of this study suggest that children with brain tumors treated with CRT are cognitively impaired and that these deficits worsen over time. The younger the child is at the time of treatment, the greater is the likelihood and severity of damage. These children, although not retarded, have a multitude of neurocognitive deficits which detrimentally affects school performance. New treatment strategies are needed for children with malignant brain tumors.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Phase III study of craniospinal radiation therapy followed by adjuvant chemotherapy for newly diagnosed average-risk medulloblastoma.

TL;DR: An encouraging EFS rate for children with nondisseminated MB treated with reduced-dose craniospinal radiation and chemotherapy is disclosed and additional, careful, step-wise reductions in CSRT in adequately staged patients may be possible.
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Neuropsychological consequences of cerebellar tumour resection in children: cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome in a paediatric population.

TL;DR: The results of the present study reveal that clinically relevant neuropsychological changes may occur following cerebellar tumour resection in children and provide further clinical evidence that the cerebellum is an essential node in the distributed neural circuitry subserving higher-order behaviours.
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Radiation response of the central nervous system.

TL;DR: It is suggested that the 5% incidence of radiation myelopathy probably lies between 57 and 61 Gy to the spinal cords in the absence of dose modifying chemotherapy, and a more pronounced volume effect is believed to exist in the brain than in the spinal cord.
Journal ArticleDOI

Treatment of Children With Medulloblastomas With Reduced-Dose Craniospinal Radiation Therapy and Adjuvant Chemotherapy: A Children's Cancer Group Study

TL;DR: The results suggest that reduced-dose craniospinal radiation therapy and adjuvant chemotherapy during and after radiation is a feasible approach for children with nondisseminated medulloblastoma.
Journal ArticleDOI

Outcome for children with medulloblastoma treated with radiation and cisplatin, CCNU, and vincristine chemotherapy

TL;DR: The authors conclude that overall progression-free survival remains excellent for children with posterior fossa medulloblastomas treated with this drug regimen and Chemotherapy has a definite role in the management of children with medull Oblastoma.
References
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Book

Practical Nonparametric Statistics

W. J. Conover
TL;DR: Probability Theory. Statistical Inference. Contingency Tables. Appendix Tables. Answers to Odd-Numbered Exercises and Answers to Answers to Answer Questions as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Declines in iq scores and cognitive dysfunctions in children with acute lymphocytic leukaemia treated with cranial irradiation

TL;DR: More extensive testing of surviving children with newly diagnosed ALL, with and without decline in IQ, revealed patterns of functional deficits and residual strengths that could not be characterised with IQ testing alone.
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