Title of article
Medulloblastoma in childhood: new biological advances
Author/Authors
John R Crawford، نويسنده , , Tobey J MacDonald، نويسنده , , Roger J. Packer، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
13
From page
1073
To page
1085
Abstract
Summary
Medulloblastoma is the most common embryonal tumour in children. Patients with medulloblastoma are currently staged as average-risk or poor-risk on the basis of clinical findings. With current multimodality therapy, nearly 90% of children with average-risk, non-disseminated medulloblastoma have 5-year event-free survival, and those with high-risk disease have a 60–65% survival rate; however, the outcome for younger children, particularly infants, is worse. Children who survive medulloblastoma are at risk of long-term sequelae related to the neurological effects of the tumour, surgery, or radiotherapy, and the additive effects of chemotherapy. Molecular biology has changed our understanding of medulloblastoma and has implications for diagnostic stratification and treatment. As newer biological agents are translated from the lab to the bedside, clinicians need to understand the fundamental signalling pathways that are targeted during therapy. Greater understanding of the molecular biology of medulloblastoma is needed so that more children can be cured or have an improved quality of life
Journal title
Lancet Neurology
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Lancet Neurology
Record number
802075
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