• Int. J. Radiat. Oncol. Biol. Phys. · Nov 2014

    Effect of cerebellum radiation dosimetry on cognitive outcomes in children with infratentorial ependymoma.

    • Thomas E Merchant, Shelly Sharma, Xiaoping Xiong, Shengjie Wu, and Heather Conklin.
    • Division of Radiation Oncology, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee. Electronic address: thomas.merchant@stjude.org.
    • Int. J. Radiat. Oncol. Biol. Phys. 2014 Nov 1; 90 (3): 547-53.

    PurposeCognitive decline is a recognized effect of radiation therapy (RT) in children treated for brain tumors. The importance of the cerebellum and its contribution to cognition have been recognized; however, the effect of RT on cerebellum-linked neurocognitive deficits has yet to be explored.Methods And MaterialsSeventy-six children (39 males) at a median 3.3 years of age (range, 1-17 years old) were irradiated for infratentorial ependymoma from 1997 to 2008. The total prescribed dose was 54 to 59.4 Gy administered to the postoperative tumor bed with 5- or 10-mm clinical target volume margin. Age-appropriate cognitive and academic testing was performed prior to the start of RT and was then repeated at 6 months and annually throughout 5 years. The anterior and posterior cerebellum and other normal brain volumes were contoured on postcontrast, T1-weighted postoperative magnetic resonance images registered to treatment planning computed tomography images. Mean doses were calculated and used with time after RT and other clinical covariates to model their effect on neurocognitive test scores.ResultsConsidering only the statistically significant rates in longitudinal changes for test scores and models that included mean dose, there was a correlation between mean infratentorial dose and intelligence quotient (IQ; -0.190 patients/Gy/year; P=.001), math (-0.164 patients/Gy/year; P=.010), reading (-0.137 patients/Gy/year; P=.011), and spelling scores (-0.147 patients/Gy/year; P=.012), where Gy was measured as the difference between the mean dose received by an individual patient and the mean dose received by the patient group. There was a correlation between mean anterior cerebellum dose and IQ scores (-0.116 patients/Gy/year; P=.042) and mean posterior cerebellum dose and IQ (-0.150 patients/Gy/year; P=.002), math (-0.120 patients/Gy/year; P=.023), reading (-0.111 patients/Gy/year; P=.012), and spelling (-0.117 patients/Gy/year; P=.015) scores.ConclusionsSparing portions of the cerebellum should be considered in RT planning for children with infratentorial ependymoma because of the potential impact of radiation dose on cognitive function.Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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