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Title: Childhood meningiomas. Experience in the modern imaging era. Author: Perilongo G, Sutton LN, Goldwein JW, Gusnard D, Schut L, Biegel JA, Rorke LB, Lange B, D'Angio GJ. Journal: Pediatr Neurosurg; 1992; 18(1):16-23. PubMed ID: 1419837. Abstract: Twenty children with meningiomas (ages 18 months to 17 years) received initial therapy at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia between January 1975 and June 1991, accounting for 2% of children with primary brain tumors seen during that time interval. All were verified histopathologically, and none had had prior irradiation. Fifteen were male and 5 female. Fifteen tumors were intracranial, all located supratentorially. Two of these also had a component within the optic canal. One tumor was entirely within the orbit. Four meningiomas arose within the spinal canal. Associated conditions were neurofibromatosis (NF) type I (1 patient), NF type II (2 patients), and a facial alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma (1 patient). A gross total resection as documented by postoperative scan and operative note was accomplished in 12 patients. Four of these relapsed, at a mean of 3.5 years from initial surgery. In 4 patients a near-total resection (> 90%) was performed. Of these, 2 progressed at 9 months and 1.5 years. One of these died of complications associated with reoperation. In 4 patients a partial resection (50-90%) was performed. Two of these progressed at 4 months and 1 year, and the other 2 have been followed for less than 2 years. Five patients received radiation therapy (RT). One patient received RT as adjunctive therapy after primary surgery because of papillary histology. The other 4 had RT following reoperation for recurrence at a mean of 1.5 years from diagnosis (range, 7 months to 2 years). These 4 patients remain alive and with stable disease at a mean of 6 years from diagnosis (range 2-8.8 years).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]