Facts About Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma (DIPG)
What is a DIPG?
-
Primary cancerous brain tumor that
spreads widely through the brainstem (4, 8)
-
Brainstem controls breathing, heart
rate, and nerves and muscles used in seeing, hearing,
walking, talking, and
eating (8)
-
Brainstem gliomas are highly
aggressive brain tumors (7)
-
The worst of pediatric gliomas (15)
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Usually diagnosed in children
between ages 5-9 (6)
-
Pediatric brain tumors are very
different biologically than adult counterparts (10)
What are the symptoms?
-
Clumsiness or wobbliness in walking,
loss of balance, weakness of a leg and/or arm, double
vision, headaches,
nausea and vomiting, tilting of the head, facial
weakness, unusual sleepiness or change in energy level
(4, 8
-
Symptoms are usually present for 6
months or less at time of diagnosis (4)
What is the cause?
Are there any treatments options?
-
No surgical options due to diffuse
invasion throughout brainstem (4)
-
Surgery would cause severe damage to
structures vital for arm and leg movement, eye movement,
swallowing,
breathing, and even consciousness (4)
-
Participation in clinical trials
with innovative therapy is encouraged (4, 9)
-
Radiation is the only real treatment
option but benefit is transient (9)
-
Even after radiation, regrowth and
progression anticipated within 1 year (9)
-
Chemotherapy benefits unclear,
studies show little improvement in survival (4)
-
Steroid treatment almost always
indicated for swelling around brainstem (4)
-
Steroid side effects: mood changes,
weight gain, fluid retention, glucose instability, high
blood pressure, and
increased susceptibility to infection (4)
-
Shunts sometimes required due to
obstruction of circulating brain fluid (4)
-
After progression, no salvage
regimen to extend survival
-
Comfort care is recommended until
death (8)
What is the prognosis?
-
Brain tumors are the most common
cause of cancer death among children (16)
-
Overall mortality rate of pediatric
cancer has decreased in past 20 years, but deaths from
brain and spinal cord
tumors have increased from 18% to 30% (10)
-
Brainstem tumors are the most
dreaded cancers in pediatric oncology due to their
dismal prognosis (4)
-
Typically follows an unstoppable
course of progression despite treatment, a large
majority of die within a year of
diagnosis (4)
-
Over 97% die within three years (15)
-
One study showed 37% survival rate
at 1 year, 20% at 2 years, and 13% at 3 years, with a
median survival of 10
months; only 9 of 119 patients lived longer than 3 years
(7)
-
5-yr survival rate < 20% (13)
-
Over 90% die within 18 months of
diagnosis (9)
-
High rate of recurrence or
progression (4)
-
Mortality rates remain unchanged in
the last decade (12)
How common is it?
-
Brain tumors are the most common
pediatric cancer other than leukemia and lymphoma (8)
-
Brain tumors comprise approximately
25% of all pediatric cancers (12)
-
Primary brain tumors constitute the
most common solid tumor of childhood (9)
-
Brain tumors are the leading cause
of solid tumor cancer death in children (12)
-
Brainstem tumors account for about
10 to 15% of childhood brain tumors (4)
-
About 2/3 of all childhood brain
tumors are gliomas (2)
-
Most childhood brainstem gliomas are
pontine gliomas (8)
-
5-10 out of every 100 brain tumors
is a DIPG (1)
Why is it so deadly?
-
Many essential areas exist in a
relatively small and enclosed space; small amounts of
abnormal cell growth cause
significant symptoms (2)
-
Due to the tumor location it
compresses the vital structures that control life:
heartbeat, blood pressure, breathing,
swallowing and muscle control and sensation of the limbs
(7)
-
Sudden death can result from
increased pressure within the brain either from swelling
around the tumor or
hemorrhage of the tumor (7)
What is life like for a child with a
DIPG? (from the stories of DIPG kids)
-
The onset of significant symptoms is
quick
-
Immediate hospitalization for lots
of tests, blood draws, drugs and surgeries
-
Possible daily sedation which may be
necessary for radiation for 6 weeks
-
Diet restrictions
-
Multiple medications to be taken 2-3
times/day
-
Frequent vomiting due to pressure on
brainstem
-
Significant weight gain, mood
changes, interrupted sleep due to steroids
-
Loss of physical abilities ---
starts with loss of muscle control on one side of body,
i.e. arm and leg and then
progresses into both sides, trunk and head/neck/face
until they can no longer walk, stand, sit without
support, use
their arms, maintain head in upright position, eat,
drink, talk and eventually breathe
-
Loss of bowel/bladder control
-
Cognitive abilities are spared ---
basically these kids are trapped in a body that won’t
cooperate yet their minds are
completely intact --- it’s torture!
What about further research?
-
The increase in brain and spinal
cord cancer rates in past two decades has been the
subject of numerous reports (5)
-
“Considering the rarity, it isn’t
economically worthwhile for most drugs to be
specifically developed for DIPG” (3)
-
Only two new brain tumor treatments
approved in the past 25 years (12)
-
Survival past 12 to 14 months
uncommon and new approaches to treating these tumors are
urgently needed (14)
-
“It is even suggested that a cure to
DIPG might result in a cure for almost every other type
of cancer” (3)
-
But……not enough is being done so we
need your help!!
References:
1. About Kids Health. (2004). Diagnosing diffuse pontine
gliomas.
http://www.aboutkidshealth.ca.
2. Cohen, K. and Yohay, K. High grade
gliomas. The Childhood Brain Tumor Foundation.
http://childhoodbraintumor.org
3. The Cure Starts Now. Awareness and
what you can do.
http://www.thecurestartsnow.org.
4. Foer, D and Fisher, P. Brain stem
gliomas in childhood. The Childhood Brain Tumor Foundation.
http://www.childhoodbraintumor.org.
5. Gurney, J., Smith, M., and Bunin, G.
CNS and miscellaneous intracranial and intraspinal neoplasms.
National Cancer Institute: SEER Pediatric Monograph.
http://seer.cancer.gov.
6. Kieran, M. (2007). Diffuse pontine
glioma. UpToDate.
http://www.uptodate.com.
7. Landolfi, J. (2006). Brainstem
gliomas. eMedicine from WebMD.
http://www.emedicine.com.
8. National Cancer Institute. (2006).
Childhood brain stem glioma treatment: Patient version.
http://www.cancer.gov.
9. National Cancer Institute. (2008).
Childhood brain stem glioma treatment: Health professionals
version.
http://www.cancer.gov.
10. National Cancer Institute. (2005).
Pediatric brain tumors. BenchMarks, 5(2).
http://www.cancer.gov.
11. National Cancer Institute. (2007). A
snapshot of pediatric cancers.
http://planning.cancer.gov.
12. North American Brain Tumor
Coalition. (2008). Brain tumor facts.
http://www.nabraintumor.org.
13. Pediatric Brain Tumor Foundation.
Facts about pediatric brain tumors.
http://www.pbtfus.org.
14. St Jude Children’s Research
Hospital. Brain tumor: Brain stem glioma.
http://www.stjude.org.
15. Wagner, S., et al. (2006). Treatment
options in childhood pontine gliomas. Journal of Neuro-
Oncology, 79, 281–287.
16. University of California, San
Francisco Children’s Hospital. (2006). UCSF establishes
pediatric brain
tumor institute.
http://www.ucsfhealth.org. |