Assessment of the long-term effects of primary radiation therapy for brain tumors in children
- PMID: 7066864
- DOI: 10.1002/1097-0142(19820415)49:8<1580::aid-cncr2820490810>3.0.co;2-7
Assessment of the long-term effects of primary radiation therapy for brain tumors in children
Abstract
One-hundred-twelve children with primary brain tumors received definitive radiotherapy between the years 1958--1979. Sixty-nine patients were alive at intervals of 1--21 years. Thirty-eight patients underwent neurologic and endocrine evaluation, psychologic and intelligence testing, and assessement for second malignancy post-treatment. A second intracranial malignancy developed in one child, for an incidence of 1.6%. Performance status was good to excellent in 89% of the patients studied. Seventeen percent of the group were mentally retarded. Behavioral disorders were identified in 39% of the patients, 59% of the mothers, and 43% of the fathers. Of the 23 patients with nonparasellar tumors, six were found to have growth hormone deficiency, including two patients with panhypopituitarism. Disability was related to age under 3 years at the time of treatment and tumor extension to the hypothalamus.
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