Long-term endocrine effects and trends in body mass index changes in patients with childhood-onset brain tumors.
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| Abstract |    :  
                  As survival rates have improved owing to advances in management strategies for pediatric brain tumors, long-term complications such as endocrine dysfunction, have emerged as a major issue. This study investigated the long-term endocrine effects of childhood-onset brain tumors in a large number of patients. This study included 151 patients with brain tumors diagnosed between January 1995 and December 2016. The following data were retrospectively reviewed: tumor location, tumor histology, endocrine abnormalities, hypothalamic involvement on brain imaging, treatment modalities, and trends in body mass index. The mean age at diagnosis of patients with sellar/suprasellar (SE/SUP-SE) tumors and supra/infratentorial (ST/IT) tumors was 9.9 ± 4.5 and 6.5 ± 4.2 years, respectively. In patient with prepubertal age at diagnosis, height standard deviation score was lower in patients with SE/SUP-SE tumors at diagnosis (P = 0.031), which was lower in patients with ST/IT tumors at the final visit (P < 0.001). The prevalence of combined pituitary hormone deficiencies was higher among patients with SE/SUP-SE tumors than in those with ST/IT tumors (81.7 vs. 36.1%, P < 0.001). Among 98 non-obese patients with SE/SUP-SE tumors, 36.7% developed obesity. The prevalence of combined pituitary hormone deficiencies and obesity was higher in patients with SE/SUP-SE tumors than in those with tumors in other locations; growth impairment was more severe in patients with ST/IT tumors.  | 
        
| Year of Publication |    :  
                  2018 
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| Journal |    :  
                  Journal of neuro-oncology 
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| Date Published |    :  
                  2018 
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| ISSN Number |    :  
                  0167-594X 
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| URL |    :  
                  https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11060-018-2765-0 
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| DOI |    :  
                  10.1007/s11060-018-2765-0 
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| Short Title |    :  
                  J Neurooncol 
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