4.7 Review

Childhood-onset Craniopharyngioma

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Volume 106, Issue 10, Pages E3820-E3836

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/clinem/dgab397

Keywords

craniopharyngioma; neurosurgery; hypothalamic obesity; pituitary; quality of life; irradiation

Funding

  1. German Childhood Cancer Foundation, Bonn, Germany [DKS2014.13]

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Craniopharyngiomas are rare embryonic malformational tumors of low-grade malignancy, often presenting in children with symptoms such as hypothalamic and visual disturbances. Treatment approaches vary based on tumor location, typically involving surgical resection and radiation therapy.
Craniopharyngiomas are rare embryonic malformational tumors of the sellar/parasellar region, classified by the World Health Organization (WHO) as tumors with low-grade malignancy (WHO I). The childhood adamantinomatous subtype of craniopharyngioma is usually cystic with calcified areas. At the time of diagnosis, hypothalamic/pituitary deficits, visual disturbances, and increased intracranial pressure are major symptoms. The treatment of choice in case of favorable tumor location (without hypothalamic involvement) is complete resection. It is important to ensure that optical and hypothalamic functionality are preserved. In case of unfavorable tumor location, that is with hypothalamic involvement, a hypothalamus-sparing surgical strategy with subsequent local irradiation of residual tumor is recommended. In the further course of the disease, recurrences and progression often occur. Nevertheless, overall survival rates are high at 92%. Severe impairment of quality of life and comorbidities such as metabolic syndrome, hypothalamic obesity, and neurological consequences can be observed in patients with disease- and/or treatment-related lesions of hypothalamic structures. Childhood-onset craniopharyngioma frequently manifests as a chronic disease so that patients require lifelong, continuous care by experienced multidisciplinary teams to manage clinical and quality of life consequences. For this review, a search for original articles and reviews published between 1986 and 2020 was performed in Pubmed, Science Citation Index Expanded, EMBASE, and Scopus. The search terms used were craniopharyngioma, hypothalamus, pituitary obesity, irradiation, neurosurgery.

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