An infant with hyperalertness, hyperkinesis, and failure to thrive: A rare diencephalic syndrome due to hypothalamic anaplastic astrocytoma

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Abstract

Background: Diencephalic Syndrome is a rare clinical condition of failure to thrive despite a normal caloric intake, hyperalertness, hyperkinesis, and euphoria usually associated with low-grade hypothalamic astrocytomas. Case presentation: We reported an unusual case of diencephalic cachexia due to hypothalamic anaplastic astrocytoma (WHO-grade III). Baseline endocrine function evaluation was performed in this patient before surgery. After histological diagnosis, he enrolled to a chemotherapy program with sequential high-dose chemotherapy followed by hematopoietic stem cell rescue. The last MRI evaluation showed a good response. The patient is still alive with good visual function 21 months after starting chemotherapy. Conclusions: Diencephalic cachexia can rarely be due to high-grade hypothalamic astrocytoma. We suggest that a nutritional support with chemotherapy given to high doses without radiotherapy could be an effective strategy for treatment of a poor-prognosis disease.

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APA

Stival, A., Lucchesi, M., Farina, S., Buccoliero, A. M., Castiglione, F., Genitori, L., … Sardi, I. (2015). An infant with hyperalertness, hyperkinesis, and failure to thrive: A rare diencephalic syndrome due to hypothalamic anaplastic astrocytoma. BMC Cancer, 15(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-015-1626-x

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