National multicentered retrospective review of clinical and intraoperative factors associated with the development of cerebellar mutism after pediatric posterior fossa tumor resection

Author:

Kameda-Smith Michelle M1,Ralugojan Malavan1,Elliott Cameron2,Bliss Lori2,Moore Hanna2,Sader Nicholas3,Alsuwaihel Mosaab4,Tso Michael K3,Dakson Ayoub4,Ajani Olufemi1,Yarascavitch Blake1,Fleming Adam1,Mehta Vivek2,Aminnejad Minoo1,Farrokhyar Forough1,Singh Sheila K1

Affiliation:

1. McMaster University

2. University of Alberta

3. University of Calgary

4. Dalhousie University

Abstract

Abstract Background Cerebellar mutism (CM) is characterized by a significant loss of speech in children following posterior fossa (PF) surgery. The biological origin of CM remains unclear and is the subject of ongoing debate. Significant recovery from CM is less likely than previously described despite rigorous multidisciplinary neuro-rehabilitational efforts. Methods A national multi-centered retrospective review of all children undergoing PF resection in 4 midsized Canadian academic pediatric institutions was undertaken. Patient, tumor, and surgical factors associated with the post-operative development of CM were reviewed. Retrospective identification of PF surgery patients including those developing and those that did not (internal control). Results The study identified 258 patients across the 4 centers between 2010–2020 (mean age 6.73 years; 42.2 female). Overall, CM was experienced in 19.5% of patients (N = 50). Amongst children who developed CM histopathology included medulloblastoma (35.7%), pilocytic astrocytoma (32.6%), and ependymoma (17.1%). Intraoperative impression of adherence to the floor of the 4th ventricle was positive in 36.8%. Intraoperative abrupt changes in blood pressure and/or heart rate were identified in 19.4% and 17.8% of cases. The clinical resolution of CM was rated to be complete, significant resolution, slight improvement, no improvement, and deterioration in 56.0%, 8.0%, 20.0%, 14.0%, 2.0%, respectively. In the cohort of children who experienced post-operative CM as compared to their no-CM counterpart, proportionally more tumors were felt to be adherent to the floor of the 4th ventricle (56.0% vs 49.5%), intraoperative extent of resection was a GTR (74% vs 68.8%), and changes in heart rate were noted (≥ 20% from baseline) (26.0% vs 15.9%). However, a logistic regression for experiencing CM identified only intraoperative impression of adherence to the floor of the 4th ventricle (OR 2.32, p = 0.011), abrupt changes in intraoperative HR (> 20% from baseline) (OR 2.34, p = 0.028), and medulloblastoma histology (OR 3.77, p = 0.001) to significantly associated with development of post-operative CM. Conclusion As a devastating surgical complication, identifying and understanding the biological origin of CM is the first step to complication avoidance. Maximal safe resection irrespective of intraoperative pathology remains the strategy to minimize the devastating post-operative development of CM.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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