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- Heather M Conklin, Chenghong Li, Xiaoping Xiong, Robert J Ogg, and Thomas E Merchant.
- Division of Behavioral Medicine, St Jude Children's Research Hospital, 332 N Lauderdale St, Memphis, TN 38105-2794, USA. heather.conklin@stjude.org
- J. Clin. Oncol. 2008 Aug 20; 26 (24): 3965-70.
PurposeConformal radiation therapy (CRT) aims to limit the highest radiation dose to the tissue volume at risk while sparing surrounding normal tissues. This study investigated whether treatment of childhood ependymoma with CRT would preserve cognitive function. Academic competence was chosen as the primary outcome measure given it is a measure of applied cognitive abilities in a child's natural setting.Patients And MethodsEighty-seven pediatric patients diagnosed with ependymoma received CRT in which doses ranging from 54.0 to 59.4 Gy were prescribed to the postoperative tumor bed with a 10-mm clinical target volume margin. Cognitive testing was conducted at the start of CRT, 6 months, and annually after the start of CRT. The median length of follow-up was 59.6 months. Academic testing included subtests from the Wechsler Individual Achievement Test (WIAT) and the Achenbach Child Behavior Checklist.ResultsLinear mixed models with random coefficients revealed a modest but significant decline in reading scores during follow-up (WIAT slope estimate -0.064 +/- 0.028 points/month; P = .026). Math and spelling performance remained stable. Supratentorial tumor location and multiple surgeries were predictive of worse reading performance at CRT baseline. Male sex, longer symptomatic interval, pre-CRT chemotherapy, pre-existing endocrine deficiencies, hydrocephalus, and younger age at CRT (< 5 years) were predictive of a significant decline in reading scores over time.ConclusionCRT may result in better long-term cognitive outcomes when compared to conventional radiation therapy approaches. Reading appears more vulnerable than other academic skills and may decline over time despite stable intellectual functioning.
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