Childhood Craniopharyngioma: Hypothalamus-Sparing Surgery Decreases the Risk of Obesity

Églantine Elowe-Gruau(Hôpital Necker-Enfants Malades), Jacques Beltrand(Sorbonne Paris Cité), Raja Brauner(Fondation Ophtalmologique Adolphe de Rothschild), Graziella Pinto(Sorbonne Paris Cité), Dinane Samara‐Boustani(Université Paris Cité), Caroline Thalassinos(Hôpital Necker-Enfants Malades), Kanetee Busiah(Hôpital Necker-Enfants Malades), Kathleen Laborde(Hôpital Necker-Enfants Malades), Nathalie Boddaert(Hôpital Necker-Enfants Malades), Michel Zérah(Université Paris Cité), Claire Alapetite(Institut Curie), Jacques Grill(Institut Gustave Roussy), Philippe Touraine(Sorbonne Université), Christian Sainte‐Rose(Université Paris Cité), Michel Polak(Délégation Paris 5), Stéphanie Puget(Université Paris Cité)
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
May 1, 2013
Cited by 211Open Access
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Abstract

CONTEXT: Craniopharyngioma is a brain tumor whose high local recurrence rate has for a long time led to a preference for extensive surgery. Limited surgery minimizing hypothalamic damage may decrease the severe obesity rate at the expense of the need for radiotherapy to complete the treatment. OBJECTIVE: We compared weight gain and local recurrence rates after extensive resection surgery (ERS) and hypothalamus-sparing surgery (HSS). DESIGN: Our observational study compared a historical cohort managed with ERS between 1985 and 2002 to a prospective cohort managed with HSS between 2002 and 2010. SETTING: The patients were treated in a pediatric teaching hospital in Paris, France. PATIENTS: Thirty-seven boys and 23 girls were managed with ERS (median age, 8 years); 38 boys and 27 girls were managed with HSS (median age, 9.3 years). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Data were collected before and 6 months to 7 years after surgery. Body mass index (BMI) Z-score was used to assess obesity and the number of surgical procedures to assess local recurrence rate. RESULTS: Mean BMI Z-score before surgery was comparable in the 2 cohorts (0.756 after ERS vs 0.747 after HSS; P = .528). At any time after surgery, mean BMI Z-score was significantly lower after HSS (eg, 1.889 SD vs 2.915 SD, P = .004 at 1 year). At last follow-up, the HSS cohort had a significantly lower prevalence of severe obesity (28% vs 54%, P < .05) and higher prevalence of normal BMI (38% vs 17%, P < .01). Mean number of surgical procedures was not significantly different in the 2 cohorts. CONCLUSIONS: Hypothalamus-sparing surgery decreases the occurrence of severe obesity without increasing the local recurrence rate.


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