Fusiform dilatation of the internal carotid artery in childhood-onset craniopharyngioma: multicenter study on incidence and long-term outcome

Anika Hoffmann, Monika Warmuth-Metz, Kristin Lohle, Julia Reichel, Anna M. M. Daubenbuchel, Anthe S. Sterkenburg, Hermann L. Mueller*

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    31 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Fusiform dilatations of the internal carotid artery (FDCA) represent a vascular complication following surgery for suprasellar tumors in children. Incidence rate and long-term prognosis of FDCA in terms of survival rates, vascular complications, and quality of survival are unknown for patients with childhood-onset craniopharyngioma.

    Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) results of 583 patients with childhood-onset craniopharyngioma, recruited from 2001 to 2015 in the German Childhood Craniopharyngioma Registry, were reviewed for FDCA. Risk factors for FDCA and long-term outcome after FDCA were analyzed.

    Fourteen of 583 patients (2.4 %) developed FDCA based on reference assessment of MRI. FDCA occurred ipsilateral to the surgical approach and was not related to degree of resection, hypothalamic involvement, or irradiation. The median time interval between first detection of FDCA and initial surgery was 0.79 years (range 0.01-5.56 years). During a median follow-up of 6.47 years (range 1.2-21.9 years) after first detection of FDCA, no bleeding or cerebrovascular events were observed in any patient. Irradiation was not related to FDCA. Survival rates and functional capacity were similar in patients with and without FDCA. Clinically the FDCA was unapparent in all cases and not treated.

    FDCA is a rare complication related to surgical treatment of childhood-onset craniopharyngioma without major impact on prognosis and clinical course of the disease.

    KRANIOPHARYNGEOM 2000-NCT00258453; KRANIOPHARYNGEOM 2007-NCT01272622.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)422-428
    Number of pages7
    JournalPituitary
    Volume19
    Issue number4
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Aug-2016

    Keywords

    • Craniopharyngioma
    • Aneurysm
    • Carotid artery
    • Children
    • Survival
    • Surgery
    • BODY-MASS INDEX
    • QUALITY-OF-LIFE
    • PEDIATRIC CRANIOPHARYNGIOMAS
    • SURGERY
    • RESECTION
    • MANAGEMENT
    • DILATION
    • OBESITY
    • RADIATION
    • CHILDREN

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