Two girl patients with medulloblastoma. Case reports

Rom J Morphol Embryol. 2017;58(3):1103-1108.

Abstract

In childhood, the most common type of brain tumors is medulloblastoma, a highly malignant primary brain tumor that is found in the cerebellum or posterior fossa. The tumor mass increases and generates obstructive hydrocephalus. Risk factors (that might be involved in some cases) include the genetic syndrome such as type 1 neurofibromatosis, exposure to ionizing radiation and Epstein-Barr virus. Medulloblastoma is associated with recessively inherited Turcot disease and with conditions as ataxia-telangiectasia syndrome in several cases. The authors presented two cases of female patients (aged one year and eight months old, respectively 4-year-old), both of them with weight deficiency, with personal history of head trauma. First case, M.D.M., was admitted in Emergency Room of the Emergency County Hospital, Craiova, Romania, for symptoms that included headaches, impaired vision, vomiting, mental disorders, ataxia and body imbalance. The reason for refer to the Surgical Unit care was posterior fossa tumor diagnosed by computed tomography (CT) scan. The second case, V.F., a 4-year-old girl, was admitted to First Pediatrics Clinic of the same Hospital, on October 2014, for seizures, early morning vomiting, loss of appetite, inability to walk and stand and also, mental delay. She had "café au lait" spots on her trunk, suggesting type 1 neurofibromatosis. A brain CT scan revealed a tumor being developed in the fourth ventricle (in the vermis of the cerebellum). Both the girls underwent curative surgery in different Clinics from Bucharest. The two girls with the same diagnosis showed contrasting post-surgical evolution: M.D.M. still survives, while V.F. survived only for six months following first surgical intervention. The first patient, M.D.M., received chemotherapy before and after the surgery, which a slow but favorable recovery noted. For the second patient, the brain CT scan performed four months after surgery showed multiple masses in the cerebral posterior fossa, suggestive of leptomeningeal metastases, but without local recurrence of the medulloblastoma. The patient started chemotherapy and, after two sessions, she went for second surgical treatment. Six months after the second surgery, the second female patient, V.F., died. The objective of this study is to find the reasons of their different clinical evolution. The authors emphasized the clinical similarities of the patients, both being female, having similar symptoms and incidental medical events (upper and lower respiratory tract infections and head trauma) but most important, they stressed out the factors which contributed to the different clinical outcome, the second patient having a more aggressive form of medulloblastoma and receiving chemotherapy only after leptomeningeal metastases were evidenced. In addition, as for the second patient, she might had clinical criteria for type 1 neurofibromatosis (the author specified the number of the "café au lait" spots being over 6, like her brother, mental delay, without other clinical signs), which might have contributed to the poor outcome. The etiology of medulloblastoma can also be involved with chromosome 17 and the diagnosis of such a brain tumor can be an evolutive criterion for neurofibromatosis. The diagnosis can provided only by genetic tests. There is a vital risk and a reason for the lethal evolution of V.F.

Patient: As medulloblastoma is a very aggressive malignant tumor, the approximate cumulative survival rate for preschool age group having a histological follow-up was found to be 47% over a span of five years of rigorous treatment.

Publication types

  • Case Reports

MeSH terms

  • Brain Neoplasms / diagnosis*
  • Brain Neoplasms / pathology
  • Child, Preschool
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Medulloblastoma / diagnosis*
  • Medulloblastoma / pathology