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Pediatric Neurosurgical Neuropathology

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Brain tumors are second only to leukemias in children Brain tumors are the most common solid organ tumor in children 70% of pediatric brain tumors are in the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Pediatric Neurosurgical Neuropathology


1
Pediatric Neurosurgical Neuropathology
  • Brain tumors are second only to leukemias in
    children
  • Brain tumors are the most common solid organ
    tumor in children
  • 70 of pediatric brain tumors are in the
    posterior fossa
  • Pilocytic astrocytoma
  • Medulloblastoma
  • Ependymoma

2
CNS tumors pediatric vs. adult
  • Adults 70 of tumors are supratentorial
  • meningioma
  • pituitary adenoma
  • High grade astrocytoma
  • Anaplastic astrocytoma (grade III)
  • Glioblastoma multiforme (grade IV astrocytoma)
  • Pediatric 70 in posterior fossa
  • pilocytic astrocytoma (cerebellar astrocytoma)
  • medulloblastoma

3
Brain tumors intro
  • Intracranial neoplasms
  • Primary
  • Secondary
  • Metastatic
  • Local invasion
  • Tumors of the spinal cord

4
Primary brain tumors intro
  • Primary brain tumors are rare
  • 2.5 of all cancer deaths
  • Second most common type of tumor in children
  • There are over 100 different brain tumors
  • Most common types
  • Astrocytomas
  • Grades I-IV
  • Medulloblastomas
  • primitive neuroectodermal tumor-PNET
  • Meningiomas
  • Pituitary adenomas

5
Clinical presentation
  • Clinical symptoms depend upon
  • Age, location, and type of tumor and grade
  • Symptoms may include
  • Increased intracranial pressure
  • secondary to obstruction of CSF at aqueduct
  • hydrocephalus (infants), headache, papilledema,
    vomiting
  • seizures
  • focal neurological deficits
  • hormonal changes (pituitary adenoma)
  • visual changes (diplopia, field defects)
  • Pituitary adenoma - pressure on optic chiasm

6
CNS tumors diagnosis
  • Symptoms prompt neuroimaging
  • CT and MRI
  • intra-axial vs. extra-axial
  • Location of tumor
  • contrast enhancement
  • typical of high grade
  • also in some low grade, i.e., pilocytic
    astrocytomas

7
CNS tumors location
  • Extra-axial
  • meningiomas
  • Cerebral hemispheres
  • grade II-III astrocytomas, GBM
  • Crossing corpus callosum - GBM
  • optic nerve - pilocytic astrocytoma (NF-1)
  • Sella - Pituitary adenoma
  • Peri-III ventricle - Pilocytic astrocytoma, GBM

8
CNS tumors location
  • posterior fossa (in children)
  • pilocytic astrocytoma
  • medulloblastoma
  • brainstem (pons)
  • pontine glioma (astrocytoma)
  • spinal cord
  • low-grade astrocytomas (grade I and II)

9
Pilocytic astrocytomas
  • Most common in children
  • Grade I astrocytoma
  • Cerebellum (posterior fossa), optic nerve
  • Thalamic, spinal cord, cerebral
  • Discrete, well circumscribed mass
  • Often with associated cystic area
  • Contrast enhancing
  • Histologic appearance
  • Biphasic piloid cells and microcystic areas
  • Rosenthal fibers
  • no mitoses

10
Pilocytic astrocytomas
  • Tumor of cerebellum, often with cyst, biphasic,
    Rosenthal fibers, piloid cells

11
Astrocytoma - high grade
  • Astrocytoma grade II and III are very, very rare
    in the pediatric population
  • Grade IV - glioblastoma multiforme
  • Diffusely infiltrating glial tumor of cerebral
    hemispheres
  • Contrast enhancing tumor
  • Histological appearance
  • Densely cellular, with marked nuclear
    pleomorphism
  • Numerous mitoses
  • Endothelial proliferation
  • Necrosis with pseudopallisading

12
Glioblastoma (grade IV)
  • Less common in children than adults, typical
    pathology (necrosis with psuedopallisading)

13
Pontine glioma
  • Diffuse expansion of pons, usually high grade
    astrocytoma (III-IV)

14
Medulloblastomas
  • PNET of posterior fossa in children
  • Histologic appearance
  • Densely cellular small blue cell tumor
  • Numerous mitoses
  • Apoptotic (karyorrhectic) cells
  • Endothelial proliferation
  • Necrosis
  • neuronal or glial differentiation
  • Homer Wright rosettes
  • GFAP positive cells

15
Medulloblastoma
  • Mass arising in roof of fourth ventricle
  • Homer Wright rosettes

16
Ependymoma
  • Mass arising in floor of fourth ventricle
  • Perivascular pseudorosettes

17
Meningiomas
  • Discrete non-invasive tumor
  • Extra-axial, pushes into brain
  • Attached to dura
  • Hyperostosis or invasion of skull common
  • Histologic appearance
  • Fibroblastic or menigothelial cells
  • Meningothelial whorls
  • Psammoma bodies
  • Rare in children, may be intraventricular
    (lateral ventricles)

18
Meningiomas
  • Extra-axial tumor, meningothelial cells, whorls
    and psammoma bodies

19
Ganglioglioma
  • Cerebrum, cervicomedullary, often with cystic
    component
  • Increased numbers of neurons (some binucleate)
    and increased glial cells (usually astrocytic)

20
Craniopharyngioma
  • Heterogeneous, cystic mass in suprasellar region
  • Basiloid layer, stellate reticulum, wet
    keratin, often calcified

21
Choroid plexus papilloma
  • Lateral ventricle in children (fourth ventricle
    in adults)

22
Germ cell tumors
Germinoma
Teratoma
  • Pineal - 99 males, most are germinomas
  • Suprasellar - often mixed germ cell tumor, 50
    female
  • Tertomas are rare

23
Metastatic tumors
  • The most common brain tumor in adults is
    metastatic
  • Metastatic tumors are rare in children
  • The most common metastatic tumor in children is
    osteosarcoma
  • Local extension of malignant tumors of vertebral
    bodies (Ewings sarcoma) or paravertebral soft
    tissues (neuroblastoma) are not uncommon

24
Other tumors
  • Subependymal giant cell astrocytoma (SEGA)
  • Intraventricular tumor in Tuberous sclerosis
  • Desmoplastic infantile ganglioglioma (DIG)
  • Superficial cerebral tumor in infants
  • Dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumor (DNET)
  • Hamartomatous lesion associated with seizures
  • Atypical teratoid rhabdoid tumor (ATR, AT/RT)
  • Infants, posterior fossa, very malignant
  • Eosinophilic granuloma
  • A type of Langerhans cell histiocytosis
  • Single discrete osteolytic lesion in skull
  • Meningioangiomatosis
  • Hamartomatous superficial cerebral lesion
    associated with seizures

25
Hereditary syndromes
  • Neurofibromatosis type I
  • Café-au-lait spots
  • Dermatofibromas, multiple
  • optic nerve gliomas, bilateral
  • plexiform neurofibroma
  • Malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor
  • Neurofibromatosis type II
  • bilateral acoustic neuroma
  • multiple meningiomas
  • ependymomas
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