Survivors of infant atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumors present with severely impaired cognitive functions especially for fluid intelligence and visual processing: data from the German brain tumor studies

Author:

Traunwieser Thomas12ORCID,Loos Elena12,Ottensmeier Holger3ORCID,Gastberger Katharina12ORCID,Nemes Karolina12,Mynarek Martin45ORCID,Bison Brigitte67ORCID,Kandels Daniela12,Neumayer Petra12,Neumann‐Holbeck Anne4,Lüttich Peggy8,Baust Katja9,Faulstich‐Ritter Kristin10,John Rainer11,Kreisch Andrea12,Landmann Judyta13,Manteufel Eva14,Nest Alexandra15,Prüfe Jenny16,Schubert Lisa3,Stamm Walther15,Timmermann Beate17,Gerss Joachim18,Rutkowski Stefan4,Schlegel Paul‐Gerhardt3,Eyrich Matthias3,Gnekow Astrid K.12ORCID,Frühwald Michael C.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Swabian Children's Cancer Center Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine University Hospital Augsburg Augsburg Germany

2. Bavarian Cancer Research Center Augsburg Germany

3. Department of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology University Hospital Würzburg Würzburg Germany

4. Department of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology University Medical Center Hamburg Eppendorf Hamburg Germany

5. Mildred Scheel Cancer Career Center HaTriCS4 University Medical Center Hamburg‐Eppendorf Hamburg Germany

6. Diagnostic and Interventional Neuroradiology Faculty of Medicine University of Augsburg Augsburg Germany

7. Neuroradiological Reference Center for the Pediatric Brain Tumor (HIT) Studies of the German Society of Pediatric Oncology and Hematology Faculty of Medicine University Augsburg Augsburg Germany

8. Hopp Children's Cancer Center Heidelberg (KiTZ) German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) and Heidelberg University Hospital Heidelberg Germany

9. Department of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology University Hospital Bonn Bonn Germany

10. Department of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine Ulm University Medical Center Ulm Germany

11. Department Pediatric Hematology and Oncology Center for Chronically Sick Children (SPZ), Charité ‐ Universitätsmedizin Berlin corporate member of Freie Universität Berlin and Humboldt‐Universität zu Berlin Berlin Germany

12. Department of Pediatrics University Hospital and Medical Faculty Carl‐Gustav‐Carus Technische Universität Dresden Dresden Germany

13. Department of Paediatric Haematology and Oncology Hannover Medical School Hannover Germany

14. Division of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology Department of Pediatrics Justus‐Liebig University of Giessen Giessen Germany

15. Department of Pediatric Hematology Oncology, Hemostaseology and Stem Cell Transplantation Dr. von Hauner Children's Hospital University Hospital LMU Munich Munich Germany

16. Department of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology Pediatrics III Essen University Hospital Essen Germany

17. Department of Particle Therapy University Hospital Essen, West German Proton Therapy Centre Essen (WPE), West German Cancer Center (WTZ) German Cancer Consortium (DKTK) Essen Germany

18. Institute of Biostatistics and Clinical Research University of Münster Münster Germany

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe contribution of tumor type, multimodal treatment, and other patient‐related factors upon long‐term cognitive sequelae in infant brain tumor survivors remains undefined. We add our retrospective analysis of neuropsychological and quality of survival (QoS) outcome data of survivors of atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumors (ATRT) and extracranial malignant rhabdoid tumors of the soft tissues (eMRT) and kidneys (RTK) treated within the same framework. Neuropsychological data from children with ATRT were compared to data from children with non‐irradiated low‐grade glioma (LGG).Patients and methodsFollowing surgery, patients (0–36 months at diagnosis) had received radio‐chemotherapy (up to 54 Gy; ATRT: n = 13; eMRT/RTK: n = 7), chemotherapy only (LGG: n = 4; eMRT/RTK: n = 1) or had been observed (LGG: n = 11). Neuropsychological evaluation employing comparable tests was performed at median 6.8 years (ATRT), 6.6 years (eMRT/RTK), and 5.2 years (LGG) post diagnosis.ResultsWe detected sequelae in various domains for all tumor types. Group comparison showed impairments, specifically in fluid intelligence (p = .041; d = 1.11) and visual processing (p = .001; d = 2.09) in ATRT patients when compared to LGG patients. Results for psychomotor speed and attention abilities were significantly below the norm for both groups (p < .001–.019; d = 0.79–1.90). Diagnosis predicted impairments of cognitive outcome, while sex‐ and age‐related variables did not. QoS outcome for all rhabdoid patients displayed impairments mainly in social (p = .008; d = 0.74) and school functioning (p = .048; d = 0.67), as well as lower overall scores in psychosocial functioning (p = .023; d = 0.78) and quality of life (p = .006; d = 0.79) compared to healthy controls.ConclusionSurvivors of infant ATRT experience various late effects in cognition and QoS following multimodal treatment, while infant LGG patients without radiotherapy demonstrated comparable impairments in psychomotor and attention abilities. Early onset and multimodal treatment of rhabdoid tumors require close monitoring of neuropsychological and QoS sequelae.

Publisher

Wiley

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