Objectives
The objectives of the study are to document the incidence of medical events in survivors of childhood posterior fossa astrocytoma
or medulloblastoma in four time periods (diagnosis, perioperative, short-term survival, long-term survival), and to study
whether medical events predict neurobehavioral outcome.
Materials and methods
Twenty-nine astrocytoma and 29 medulloblastoma survivors were studied at least 5 years post-diagnosis. The incidence of medical
events in each time period was compared in each group in relation to long-term intelligence, memory, functional independence,
and health-related quality of life. As expected, medical and neurobehavioral outcome were poorer in the medulloblastoma group.
In the astrocytoma group, poorer long-term neurobehavioral outcome was associated with more adverse medical events in the
perioperative and short-term survival periods.
Conclusions
Long-term neurobehavioral outcome is related to time-dependent medical events in astrocytoma survivors. The data confirm earlier
reports of poorer outcome after medulloblastoma and add new information about clinical markers of poor neurobehavioral outcome
in survivors of childhood astrocytoma.
Keywords Astrocytoma - Medulloblastoma - Childhood - Tumor - Neuropsychological - Late effects
A commentary on this paper is available at doi: 10.1007/s00381-008-0661-1.