2004
DOI: 10.1002/pbc.20111
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Impact of location on outcome in children with low‐grade oligodendroglioma

Abstract: The outcome of children with centrally located low-grade oligodendroglioma is particularly poor, while tumors of the cerebral hemispheres and cerebellum carry an excellent prognosis, even with minor tumor resection.

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Cited by 41 publications
(36 citation statements)
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“…Note that although some clinical studies with children and teenagers surgically treated for oligodendroglial tumors have been published during recent years, they did not report on very long-term prognosis. 1,2,7,[14][15][16][19][20][21] Our clinical results clearly indicate that long-term survival is more common in children and teenagers than in adults with such tumors.…”
mentioning
confidence: 82%
“…Note that although some clinical studies with children and teenagers surgically treated for oligodendroglial tumors have been published during recent years, they did not report on very long-term prognosis. 1,2,7,[14][15][16][19][20][21] Our clinical results clearly indicate that long-term survival is more common in children and teenagers than in adults with such tumors.…”
mentioning
confidence: 82%
“…Of these publications, 20 were case series (Table). 1,[4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22] Histologically, the vast majority (70%-90%) of reported thalamic tumors are classified as astrocytoma. However, this literature is limited and difficult to interpret regarding histologic subtypes in children, as many studies combine age groups, are confined to more specific entities (eg, pilocytic astrocytoma (PA) or ''high-grade astrocytoma''), group biologically distinct entities (eg, PA and low-grade diffuse astrocytoma [DA] as ''low-grade astrocytoma''), or are single case reports.…”
Section: Epidemiologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interestingly, a number of authors have singled out thalamic or ''central'' oligodendroglioma as being biologically distinct both from diffuse thalamic astrocytomas of a comparable grade and from peripheral (hemispheric) pediatric oligodendrogliomas of a comparable grade. 6,7,11,16,26,39 Thalamic oligodendrogliomas are often anaplastic at biopsy/ resection and relentlessly progress (14% 3-year survival in one series) despite extent of resection or chemotherapy and radiation in a manner comparable with thalamic glioblastoma. 16 Surprisingly, low-grade (WHO grade II) thalamic oligodendrogliomas have a similarly dismal prognosis.…”
Section: Who Classification Of Tumors Of the Central Nervous Systemmentioning
confidence: 99%
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