Survival, hypothalamic obesity, and neuropsychological/psychosocial status after childhood-onset craniopharyngioma: Newly reported long-term outcomes

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Abstract

Background Quality of life (QoL) and long-term prognosis are frequently, and often severely, impaired in craniopharyngioma (CP) patients. Knowledge of risk factors for long-term outcome is important for optimization of treatment. Methods Overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS), body mass index (BMI), neuropsychological status (EORTCQLQ-C30, MFI-20), and psychosocial status were analyzed in 261 patients with childhood-onset CP diagnosed before 2000 and longitudinally observed in HIT-Endo. Results Twenty-year OS was lower (P =. 006) in CP with hypothalamic involvement (HI) (n = 132; 0.84 ± 0.04) when compared with CP without HI (n = 82; 0.95 ± 0.04). OS was not related to degree of resection, sex, age at diagnosis, or year of diagnosis (before/after 1990). PFS (n = 168; 0.58 ± 0.05) was lower in younger patients (<5y at diagnosis) (n = 30; 0.39 ± 0.10) compared with patients aged 5-10 years (n = 66; 0.52 ± 0.08) and older than 10 years (n = 72; 0.77 ± 0.06) at diagnosis. PFS was not associated with HI, degree of resection, or sex. HI led to severe weight gain during the first 8-12 years of follow-up (median BMI increase: +4.59SD) compared with no HI (median increase: +1.20SD) (P =. 00). During >12 years of follow-up, patients with HI presented no further increase in BMI. QoL in CP patients with HI was impaired by obesity, physical fatigue, reduced motivation, dyspnea, diarrhea, and nonoptimal psychosocial development. Conclusions OS and QoL are impaired by HI in long-term survivors of CP. HI is associated with severe obesity, which plateaus after 12 years. OS/PFS are not related to degree of resection, but gross-total resection should be avoided in cases of HI to prevent further hypothalamic damage, which exacerbates sequelae.

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Sterkenburg, A. S., Hoffmann, A., Gebhardt, U., Warmuth-Metz, M., Daubenbüchel, A. M. M., & Müller, H. L. (2015). Survival, hypothalamic obesity, and neuropsychological/psychosocial status after childhood-onset craniopharyngioma: Newly reported long-term outcomes. Neuro-Oncology, 17(7), 1029–1038. https://doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/nov044

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