4.4 Article

Papillary Craniopharyngioma: A Type of Tumor Primarily Impairing the Hypothalamus - A Comprehensive Anatomo-Clinical Characterization of 350 Well-Described Cases

Journal

NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 112, Issue 10, Pages 941-965

Publisher

KARGER
DOI: 10.1159/000521652

Keywords

Craniopharyngioma; Hypothalamus; Infundibulum; Papillary craniopharyngioma; Pituitary tumors; Third ventricle

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This study systematically analyzes the relationship between the topography of papillary craniopharyngiomas (PCPs) and symptoms related to hypothalamic dysfunction. The results show that the location of the lesion has a significant impact on hypothalamic-related symptoms, types of hypothalamic attachments, and tumor recurrence rate.
Objective: Papillary craniopharyngiomas (PCPs) represent a rare histological type of craniopharyngiomas (CPs) usually involving the hypothalamus. This study systematically analyzes the clinical-anatomical correlation between tumor topography and symptoms related to hypothalamic dysfunction in the largest series of PCPs ever gathered. Methods: From 5,346 CP reports published from 1856 to 2021, we selected 350 well-described cases of the squamous-papillary type. Clinical presentation, tumor topography, severity of hypothalamic adhesion, patient outcome, and tumor recurrence were thoroughly analyzed. Results: PCPs predominantly occur in adult (96.3%), male (61.7%) patients presenting with headache (63.4%), visual alterations (56.2%), and psychiatric disturbances (50.4%). Most PCPs are solid (50%), round (72%) lesions that occupy the third ventricle (3V, 94.8%) and show low-risk severity adhesions to the hypothalamus (66.8%). Two major topographical categories can be found: strictly 3V (57.5%), growing above an intact 3V floor, and not-strictly or infundibulo-tuberal (32.9%), expanding at the infundibulum and/or tuber cinereum. The hypothalamic syndrome predominated among strictly 3V PCPs (p < 0.001). Psychiatric symptoms (p < 0.001) and high-risk hypothalamic attachments (p = 0.031) related to unfavorable postoperative outcomes among patients treated from 2006 onwards. The not-strictly 3V topography was identified as the major predictor of high-risk hypothalamic attachments (71.2% correctly predicted), which, along with incomplete tumor removal (p = 0.018), underlies the higher tumor recurrence of this topography (p = 0.001). Conclusions: This systematic review evidences that PCP topography is a major determinant of hypothalamic-related symptoms, type of hypothalamic attachments, and tumor recurrence rate. Accurate preoperative definition of PCP-hypothalamus relationships is essential for the judicious, safe management of these complex lesions.(c) 2021 S. Karger AG, Basel

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