Division of Neurosurgery, Department of Pediatric Surgery, Montreal Children's Hospital, 1001 Decarie Boulevard, Montreal, QC, H4A-3J1, Canada.
Adult and Children's Center for Outcomes Research and Delivery, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, 13199 E. Montview Blvd, Suite 300, Aurora, CO, 80045, USA.
J Neurooncol. 2018 May;137(3):621-629. doi: 10.1007/s11060-018-2756-1. Epub 2018 Mar 9.
Pediatric meningiomas, which account for < 1% of all meningiomas, are thought to have unique features, including being more aggressive than their adult counterparts. The goal of this investigation was to compare pediatric and adult meningiomas in a large head-to-head comparison. We used the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Result (SEER) datasets to compare meningioma demographics, first treatments, and outcomes among children/adolescents (0-21 years), young adults (22-45 years), and older adults (> 45 years). During 2004-2012, SEER contained 59148 patients age 0-107 years diagnosed with meningioma, with children/adolescents accounting for 381 (0.64%) patients. Unlike older and young adults, children/adolescents with meningioma did not demonstrate female predominance, and had an equal 1:1 male-to-female ratio. Children/adolescents also had almost three-times as many spinal tumors (13.1%) than young adults (4.2%) and older adults (4.4%). Both children/adolescents and young adults had undergone more gross total resections (both 43%) versus older adults (25%), and were treated more with radiation (14.6%, and 12.0% respectively) than their older counterparts (8.5%). In addition, both children/adolescents and young adults had significantly lower all-cause mortality (4.5% in both) than older adults (24.6%), during median 35-month follow-up. Inherent limitations of the SEER datasets restrict our ability to answer important questions regarding comparisons of tumor grading, histological diagnosis, cause-specific mortality, and neurofibromatosis status. Pediatric meningiomas appear distinct from their adult counterparts as they do not display the typical female predominance and include more clinically relevant spinal tumors. More extensive surgeries, greater use of radiation therapy, and lower all-cause mortality were seen in both children/adolescents and young adults, which raises questions regarding the perceived uniquely aggressive nature of pediatric meningiomas. However, due to the significant limitations of the SEER datasets, our results must be interpreted cautiously and stand only to foster novel questions, which would be better answered in well-designed, prospective studies.
儿科脑膜瘤占所有脑膜瘤的 <1%,被认为具有独特的特征,包括比成人脑膜瘤更具侵袭性。本研究的目的是在大型头对头比较中比较儿科和成人脑膜瘤。我们使用监测、流行病学和最终结果 (SEER) 数据集比较儿童/青少年(0-21 岁)、年轻成年人(22-45 岁)和老年人(>45 岁)的脑膜瘤人口统计学、首次治疗和结果。在 2004-2012 年期间,SEER 包含 59148 名年龄在 0-107 岁之间诊断患有脑膜瘤的患者,其中儿童/青少年占 381 名(0.64%)患者。与老年和年轻成年人不同,患有脑膜瘤的儿童/青少年没有表现出女性优势,男女比例为 1:1。儿童/青少年的脊柱肿瘤几乎是年轻成年人(4.2%)和老年人(4.4%)的三倍。儿童/青少年和年轻成年人接受的大体全切除(均为 43%)多于老年人(25%),并且接受的放疗(分别为 14.6%和 12.0%)多于老年患者(8.5%)。此外,在中位 35 个月的随访期间,儿童/青少年和年轻成年人的全因死亡率均显著低于老年人(均为 4.5%),而老年人的全因死亡率为 24.6%。SEER 数据集固有的局限性限制了我们回答关于肿瘤分级、组织学诊断、特定原因死亡率和神经纤维瘤病状态比较的重要问题的能力。儿科脑膜瘤与成人脑膜瘤不同,它们不显示典型的女性优势,并且包含更多具有临床意义的脊柱肿瘤。儿童/青少年和年轻成年人接受的手术更广泛,放疗的使用更多,全因死亡率更低,这引发了关于儿科脑膜瘤被认为具有独特侵袭性的性质的问题。然而,由于 SEER 数据集的重大局限性,我们的结果必须谨慎解释,只能促进提出新的问题,这些问题在精心设计的前瞻性研究中会得到更好的回答。