Erschienen in:
30.07.2016 | Original Paper
Intracranial germ cell tumors: a multi-institutional experience from three tertiary care centers in India
verfasst von:
Aanchal Kakkar, Ahitgani Biswas, Nikhil Kalyani, Uttara Chatterjee, Vaishali Suri, Mehar C. Sharma, Nishant Goyal, Bhawani S Sharma, Supriya Mallick, Pramod K. Julka, Girish Chinnaswamy, Brijesh Arora, Epari Sridhar, Sandip Chatterjee, Rakesh Jalali, Chitra Sarkar
Erschienen in:
Child's Nervous System
|
Ausgabe 11/2016
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Abstract
Objective
Central nervous system germ cell tumors (CNS GCTs) are relatively rare neoplasms. Incidence of CNS GCTs in Western literature is low (0.3–0.6 %) as compared to East Asia (3–4 %). No large study is available on CNS GCTs from India.
Methods
Intracranial GCT cases were retrieved from databases of three tertiary care institutes in India; clinicopathological data was reviewed.
Results
Ninety-five intracranial GCT cases were identified, accounting for 0.43 % of CNS tumors. Median age was 12 years (range, birth to 48 years); male preponderance was noted (66 %). Most patients (86.3 %) were aged <18 years. Pineal location was most common (45 %) and was associated with male gender and age >14 years. Germinoma was the commonest histopathological type (63.2 %), followed by teratoma (20 %). Suprasellar location was associated with germinoma histology. Follow-up was available for 71 patients (median, 15 months). Of these, 48 received adjuvant chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy. At the last follow-up, 44 patients showed no evidence of disease. Age >10 years, male gender, pineal location, and germinoma histology were associated with favorable outcome.
Conclusion
This is the first multicentric study from India establishing that incidence of CNS GCT in India is similar to that in the West and differs from that in East Asian countries. However, similar to both, germinoma is the commonest histological type, and pineal location is most frequent. Studies on molecular alterations based on ethnicity and geographical location are necessary to provide clarity on differences in incidence. Attention needs to be focused on decreasing treatment heterogeneity and minimizing treatment-related morbidity and mortality, improving the cure rate of these highly treatable tumors.