Pediatric Craniopharyngioma: The Effect of Visual Deficits and Hormone Deficiencies on Long-Term Cognitive Outcomes After Conformal Photon Radiation Therapy

Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2023 Mar 1;115(3):581-591. doi: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2022.09.061. Epub 2022 Sep 18.

Abstract

Purpose: Pediatric patients with craniopharyngioma risk cognitive deficits when treated with radiation therapy. We investigated cognitive outcomes after conformal photon radiation therapy (CRT) and the effect of visual deficits and hormone deficiencies.

Methods and materials: One hundred one pediatric patients were enrolled on a single institutional protocol beginning in 1998 (n = 76) or followed a similar nonprotocol treatment plan (n = 25). CRT (54 Gy) was administered using a 1.0- or 0.5-cm clinical target volume margin. Median age at CRT was 9.50 years (range, 3.20-17.63 years). Patients were followed for 10 years with assessment of hearing, vision, hormone deficiencies, and cognitive performance.

Results: Intellectual functioning (intelligence quotient) was significantly lower in children treated at a younger age and those who received higher doses to temporal lobes and hippocampi. Black race (-17.77 points, P = .002) and cerebrospinal fluid shunting (-11.52 points, P = .0068) were associated with lower baseline intelligence quotient. Reading scores were lower over time in models incorporating age, shunt, and dose to specific brain structures. Patients treated for growth hormone deficiency within 12 months of CRT had better intelligence and attention outcomes. Among patients with normal baseline vision, the 10-year cumulative incidence of change in visual acuity was 4.00% ± 2.82% and in visual field 10.42% ± 4.48%. Reading scores decreased after treatment (0.7873 points/y, P = .0451) in those with impaired baseline vision.

Conclusions: Cognitive outcomes are selectively affected by dose to brain subvolumes, comorbidities of visual deficits, and treatment of endocrinopathy in pediatric craniopharyngioma. Improved treatment selection, normal tissue sparing methods of irradiation, and posttreatment management of endocrinopathy should be considered.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Brain Neoplasms* / radiotherapy
  • Child
  • Child, Preschool
  • Cognition / radiation effects
  • Craniopharyngioma* / complications
  • Craniopharyngioma* / radiotherapy
  • Hormones / therapeutic use
  • Humans
  • Pituitary Neoplasms* / complications
  • Pituitary Neoplasms* / radiotherapy
  • Radiotherapy, Conformal* / adverse effects
  • Radiotherapy, Conformal* / methods

Substances

  • Hormones