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Case Studies |
Department of Psychology (D.J.M., M.B.) and Division of Hematology/Oncology (D.J.M., E.B.), Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, ON, M5G-1X8 Canada; Department of Pediatrics (D.J.M., M.B., E.B.) and Department of Radiation Oncology (N.L.), University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, M5S-2Z9 Canada; Department of Psychology, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON, N1G-2W1 Canada (M.B.); Department of Radiation Oncology, Princess Margaret Hospital, Toronto, ON, M5G-2M9 Canada (N.L.); and Department of Pediatrics, University of Texas-Houston Health Science Center, Houston, TX, 77030 USA (S.H.L.)
Address correspondence to D. Mabbott, Paediatric Brain Tumor Program, The Hospital for Sick Children, 555 University Ave., Toronto, ON M5G 1X8, Canada (donald.mabbott{at}sickkids.ca).
| Abstract |
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Key Words: focal radiotherapy medulloblastoma neurocognitive outcome preschool children
| Introduction |
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Comparing the cognitive functioning of twins with overlapping genetic backgrounds and comparable socio-economic, prenatal, perinatal, and family history, but discordant for a brain tumor, can provide important preliminary information on neurocognitive late effects of focal radiation.15 Twin case-control studies have documented poor spine and upper and lower limb growth, increased levels of thyroid-stimulating hormone, and deteriorated intellectual ability in twins treated with craniospinal radiation relative to their nonaffected twin.16-18 The goal of the present twin case-control study was to serially investigate neurocognitive and behavioral outcome in a preschool girl diagnosed with medulloblastoma compared to her nonaffected twin sister, after treatment with a protocol including focal radiotherapy. If focal radiation has an adverse impact on early neurocognitive functioning, then over time the affected twin treated should demonstrate poorer performance in cognitive and behavioral function relative to her nonaffected twin.
| Materials and Methods |
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| Case History |
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At 16 months of age, the affected twin presented with a 3-week history of intermittent vomiting and irritability, progressive ataxia, and lethargy. A CT scan demonstrated a midline posterior fossa mass with marked dilation of the lateral ventricles and compression of the fourth ventricle. The tumor was incompletely resected: there was tumor invasion of the brainstem along the inferior margins of the fourth ventricle bilaterally that precluded total resection. An external ventricular drain was first inserted, and 11 days later a left ventriculoperitoneal shunt was placed to address hydrocephalus. Pathological evaluation was consistent with medulloblastoma, with tumor cytogenetics abnormal with hypertriploidy and cerebrospinal fluid positive for tumor cells. Based on these findings and combined with the presence of residual tumor, she was treated with MOPP chemotherapy (mustard IV, vincristine, procarbazine, and prednisone). Subsequent imaging revealed response to therapy, with a small residual in the area of the foramen of Luschka remaining.
In order to avoid/delay craniospinal radiation, she was treated with high-dose chemotherapy (intensification with busulfan/thiotepa) followed by autologous stem cell rescue at 20 months of age and then with 5,400 cGy/30 daily fractions via focal stereotactic intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) to the surgical cavity plus a 1.5-cm margin (Fig. 1). Although the affected twin lost many of her developmental motor milestones during treatment, she recovered all of them by 6 months posttreatment. Follow-up MRI showed no evidence of residual or recurrent disease. Both Italian and English were spoken in the home. The affected twin was 37 months old at the time of the first neurocognitive assessment and was 49 months old at second assessment. Thus, she was evaluated approximately 12 and 24 months after completion of radiotherapy.
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Nonaffected Twin Case History
The nonaffected twin was born at 36 weeks by induced vaginal delivery and weighed 4 pounds 14 ounces. She was monitored in hospital for 3 weeks after birth due to her relatively low birth weight. The nonaffected twin's early developmental motor milestones (i.e., sitting alone, crawling, and walking) were mildly delayed; she sat at 8 months and walked at 15-18 months. She demonstrated significant speech-language delay and has been seen for developmental assessment, which documented significant expressive language delay with significant delay in sound production abilities, as well as gross motor delay. She had a tongue tie clipped at 30 months of age. Recent ophthalmological and hearing examination was normal. She was 37 and 49 months at the time of the first and second assessments, respectively.
| Results |
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Variable performance in language functioning was observed for both twins (Table 1). Based on the PLS, the twins demonstrated very poor to borderline expressive language function across both assessments. The PLS index of receptive language was significantly higher than the expressive language index for both twins. The nonaffected twin demonstrated stable low-average performance on receptive language tasks across both assessments. Consistent with the pattern observed for intellectual measures, the affected twin demonstrated improvement in expressive and receptive language from the first to the second assessment. Both twins demonstrated average receptive vocabulary (PPVT-III). The nonaffected twin's scores were higher than the affected twin's and showed substantial improvement in relative functioning from the first to the second assessment. Visual-motor integration (VMI) improved for both twins across assessments (Table 1), from low-average to average ability. The affected twin demonstrated higher test scores compared to her sister at both time points.
Observational measures were videotaped and scored by two coders who were blind to the medical status of the twins. Consistent with the pattern observed for the standardized tests, ratings of the affected twin's behavior in the tasks of social interaction and competence improved across assessment sessions. Ratings of the quality of social play interactions for both parent and affected twin increased from the first to second assessment. The affected twin was rated as being more responsive to and socially engaged with her mother and more engaged with the toys she was playing with and her general environment. Ratings of the mother's interactions corresponded with this pattern, with increased levels of warmth, supportive actions, and responsiveness noted for the second assessment relative to the first. Both child and parent ratings remained the same for the nonaffected twin: the quality of interactions between the nonaffected twin and the mother were rated as higher than those with the affected twin during the first assessment, but with the improvement noted for the affected twin, ratings were essentially the same for both twins at the second assessment. The affected twin also showed improved social competence across assessments, with increased use and complexity of language and in cooperation and initiative from the first to the second assessment sessions. No increases in ratings of social competence were evident for the nonaffected twin. Finally, for independent exploratory play with novel toys, the affected twin and the nonaffected twin demonstrated similar frequencies of functional play during the first assessment. However, at the second assessment, the nonaffected twin showed increases in her level of play and engagement, and exploration of toys and her play was more advanced in terms of problem solving. In contrast, functional play in the affected twin decreased. These results are consistent with the parent report that with age the affected twin became more cautious and less likely to spontaneously engage in new activities without maternal support.
| Discussion |
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Our findings are notable compared with the very poor intellectual outcome typically associated with craniospinal radiation in infants and young children. Focal posterior fossa radiation still encompasses substantial amounts of the cerebral hemispheres, including occipital and parietal lobes, thalamus, and diencephalon, and has been associated with relatively poor intellectual outcome.14 In the present case study, the affected twin was treated with IMRT, which yielded volumes restricted primarily to the tumor bed and involved dose modulation, sparing cerebral tissue from a significant amount of radiation. Hence, IMRT may be especially critical in preserving cognitive function and may be useful for addressing concerns regarding cognitive outcome in this vulnerable population.
Further, we found that measures of preschool children's social and behavioral functioning, including parent-child interaction, social competence, and goal-directed play, are useful for demonstrating the social consequences of disease and are sensitive to improvement with normalization of function after treatment. Hence, these measures may be useful in examining outcome in larger samples of preschool patients. This would yield ecologically valid information, may be useful in predicting future cognitive and social functioning,19 and can provide important information for developing home-based interventions for young children. Comprehensive assessment of multiple areas is important because subtle deficits may emerge for patients treated with focal radiation that are not detected using only standardized cognitive tests, despite intact intellectual functioning.
Finally, our findings must be considered in the context of previous slight developmental delays for both twins, and their very poor expressive language, which may reflect the bilingual language environment in which the twins reside or may be a consequence of their birth history and low birth weight. However, the twins' history reflects the reality that children with a range of premorbid backgrounds are treated for brain tumors, and the impact of treatment manifests within the context of their broader developmental functioning. Further, because of the case study design, we report qualitative descriptions of change over time. Certainly, the potential benefits of focal radiation require evaluation in larger patient series using quantitative analyses. Despite these constraints, our preliminary findings of improvement in intellectual, language, visual-motor, parent-child interaction, and social competence over time after treatment with focal posterior fossa IMRT are unique, and this study is the first to document minimal deleterious effects after treatment, albeit in a single case study.
| Footnotes |
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Received for publication September 15, 2006. Accepted for publication December 28, 2006.
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