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Pediatric brain tumors are growths of cells that start in or near the brain in children. The growths, called tumors, can grow to press on nearby parts of the brain. This can cause symptoms, such as headaches and nausea.
Many types of pediatric brain tumors exist. Some grow quickly, and some grow slowly. Some are cancerous, and some aren't cancerous. Noncancerous brain tumors also are called benign brain tumors.
The type of brain tumor a child has helps determine the best treatment plan. Other things your child's healthcare team considers include the tumor's location, whether it has spread beyond the brain, and your child's age and overall health.
Treatment for brain tumors in children is often quite different from treatment for adult brain tumors. For this reason, seek out care at a medical center that has experience caring for children with brain tumors.
Pediatric brain tumor symptoms may vary depending on the tumor's location within the brain. Symptoms also might depend on the size of the tumor and how quickly it's growing.
Some of the more common signs and symptoms of pediatric brain tumors include:
Other possible signs and symptoms include:
Make an appointment with your child's doctor or other healthcare professional if your child has symptoms that worry you.
Most of the time, the cause of a pediatric brain tumor isn't known.
Pediatric brain tumors start when cells in the brain develop changes in their DNA. A cell's DNA holds the instructions that tell a cell what to do. In healthy cells, the DNA gives instructions to grow and multiply at a set rate. The instructions tell the cells to die at a set time. In tumor cells, the DNA changes give different instructions. The changes tell the tumor cells to make many more cells quickly. Tumor cells can keep living when healthy cells would die. This causes too many cells.
The extra cells might form a mass called a tumor. A tumor can grow and press on nearby brain tissue. Sometimes a growing tumor causes swelling and other changes in the nearby brain tissue.
Some tumor cells develop other DNA changes that turn them into cancer cells. Cancer cells can invade and destroy healthy tissue. Sometimes cancer cells can break away and spread beyond the brain. If brain cancer spreads, it tends to go to the fluid that surrounds the brain and spinal cord. This fluid is called cerebrospinal fluid.
Factors that may increase the risk of pediatric brain tumors include:
Brain tumors can happen at any age. In children, brain tumors tend to happen more often in those younger than 5.
Children who receive radiation therapy treatments to the head have an increased risk of brain tumors. For example, radiation therapy for one type of brain tumor may increase the risk of developing another type of brain tumor.
If the body's germ-fighting immune system is weakened by medicines or illness, there might be a higher risk of pediatric brain tumors. Children with weakened immune systems include those taking medicines to control their immune systems, such as after organ transplant. Certain medical conditions, such as infection with HIV, can weaken the immune system.
Some genetic syndromes that run in families can increase the risk of brain tumors in children. Examples include:
Tests of your child's DNA can show whether these syndromes are present.
There's no way to prevent pediatric brain tumors. If your child develops a brain tumor, you didn't do anything to cause it.
Pediatric brain tumor diagnosis often begins with questions about your child's symptoms and an exam. The exam can give your child's healthcare team clues about what's happening in your child's brain. It can help the healthcare team decide which tests are needed next.
Tests and procedures used to diagnose pediatric brain tumors include:
A neurological exam tests different parts of the brain to see how they're working. During the exam, a healthcare professional might check your child's:
If your child has trouble in one or more areas, this is a clue for the healthcare professional. A neurological exam helps the healthcare team understand what part of the brain might have a problem.
Imaging tests can make pictures of the brain that show the brain tumor's location and size. The most common imaging test for brain tumors is magnetic resonance imaging, also called MRI. Sometimes a special type of MRI is needed to get more-detailed pictures. Special types of MRI include functional MRI and magnetic resonance spectroscopy.
Other imaging tests include computerized tomography scans, also called CT scans, and positron emission tomography scans, also called PET scans.
A biopsy is a procedure to remove a sample of tissue for testing in a lab. For pediatric brain tumors, the sample is most often collected during surgery to remove the tumor.
If surgery isn't possible, the tissue sample might be removed with a needle. Removing a sample of brain tumor tissue with a needle is done with a procedure called stereotactic needle biopsy. During this procedure, a surgeon drills a small hole in the skull. The surgeon inserts a thin needle through the hole and into the brain tissue and draws out a sample of cells.
The sample goes to a lab for testing. In the lab, tests can show whether the cells are cancerous and how quickly the cells are growing. Special tests can look at the tumor cells' DNA. Your child's healthcare team uses the results from these tests to create a treatment plan.
A lumbar puncture is a procedure to collect fluid from around the spinal cord. A lumbar puncture, also called a spinal tap, is done using a needle. A healthcare professional inserts the needle between two bones in the lower back and draws out some of the fluid that surrounds the brain and spinal cord. This fluid is called cerebrospinal fluid. The fluid goes to a lab where it's tested for cancer cells.
Your child might need a lumbar puncture if there's a risk that the cancer has spread. Brain cancer usually doesn't spread. When it does, it tends to go to the cerebrospinal fluid. The fluid can carry the cancer cells to other parts of the brain and to the spinal cord.
Treatment for pediatric brain tumors depends on many factors. Your child's healthcare team considers the type, size and location of the tumor. The care team also considers your child's age and overall health. Treatment options might include surgery, radiation therapy, radiosurgery, chemotherapy and targeted therapy.
The goal of surgery for pediatric brain tumors is to remove all of the tumor cells. It's not always possible to do that. Sometimes the brain tumor is in a spot that's hard to reach. Sometimes it is near important parts of the brain that could be hurt during surgery. In these situations, the surgeon may remove as much of the tumor as is safely possible.
Surgery to remove a pediatric brain tumor carries risks, such as infection and bleeding. Other risks may depend on the part of the child's brain where the tumor is located. For instance, surgery on a tumor near nerves that connect to the eyes may carry a risk of vision loss.
Radiation therapy for brain tumors uses powerful energy beams to kill tumor cells. The energy can come from X-rays, protons and other sources.
During radiation therapy, your child lies on a table in the treatment room. A machine moves around the child and aims radiation at precise points. Radiation treatments require keeping very still so that the machine targets the exact area. Young children and others who have trouble holding still might need medicine to help them relax and keep still.
Some medical centers offer different types of energy sources for radiation therapy, such as:
Side effects of radiation therapy depend on the type and dose of radiation your child receives. Common side effects include feeling very tired, scalp irritation, temporary hair loss and headaches. Sometimes nausea and vomiting occur, but anti-nausea medicine can help control those side effects.
Stereotactic radiosurgery for brain tumors is an intense form of radiation treatment. It aims beams of radiation from many angles at the brain tumor. Each beam isn't very powerful. But the point where the beams meet gets a very large dose of radiation that kills the tumor cells.
Radiosurgery treatment is typically done in one treatment.
Different types of energy can be used during radiosurgery treatment. Which type is best for your child will depend on your child's situation. Options might include:
Side effects of radiosurgery include feeling very tired and skin changes on the scalp. The skin on your child's head may feel dry, itchy and sensitive. Some children have blisters on the skin or hair loss. Sometimes the hair loss is permanent.
Chemotherapy for brain tumors uses strong medicines to kill tumor cells. Chemotherapy medicines can be taken in pill form or injected into a vein. Sometimes the chemotherapy medicine is placed in the brain tissue during surgery.
Chemotherapy side effects depend on the medicines your child receives. General side effects of chemotherapy include nausea, vomiting and temporary hair loss.
Targeted therapy for brain tumors uses medicines that attack specific chemicals present within the tumor cells. By blocking these chemicals, targeted treatments can cause tumor cells to die.
Targeted therapy medicines are available for certain types of brain tumors in children. Your child's brain tumor cells may be tested to see whether targeted therapy might help.
Clinical trials are studies of new treatments. These studies provide a chance to try the latest treatments. The risk of side effects might not be known. Ask your child's healthcare team if your child might be able to be in a clinical trial.
Palliative care is a special type of healthcare that helps children with serious illnesses feel better. For children with brain tumors, palliative care can help relieve pain and other symptoms. A team of healthcare professionals offers palliative care. The team can include doctors, nurses and other specially trained professionals. The goal is to improve the quality of life for your child and your family.
Palliative care specialists work with you, your family and your care team to help your child feel better. They provide an extra layer of support during your child's treatments. Your child can have palliative care at the same time as brain tumor treatments, such as surgery, chemotherapy and radiation therapy.
Children may need support after treatment to help them recover. Brain tumors can develop in parts of the brain that control motor skills, speech, vision and thinking. Rehabilitation services to help regain these functions include:
Little research has been done on alternative treatments for pediatric brain tumors. No alternative medicine treatments have been proved to cure brain tumors and some may be harmful.
Alternative medicine is a term that's commonly used to describe treatments that aren't usually offered by healthcare professionals. As researchers study these treatments and the evidence for these alternative methods grows, doctors and other healthcare professionals are including them in treatment plans alongside the standard treatments. It's an approach that healthcare professionals sometimes call integrative medicine.
Some integrative medicine treatments might help your child cope with pediatric brain tumor symptoms and the side effects of treatment. Your healthcare team will work with your family to make sure your child is comfortable. Combining integrative treatments with standard treatments may offer some extra comfort.
Options may include:
If your child is interested in trying any of these treatments, talk with your healthcare team about what might work best for your child. Ask your team to recommend care professionals who have experience working with children with brain tumors.
Here are some suggestions to help guide your family through your child's brain tumor treatment.
When your child has medical appointments or stays in the hospital:
After leaving the hospital:
See your child's doctor or other healthcare professional if your child has any symptoms that worry you. If a brain tumor is suspected, ask for a referral to an experienced specialist in pediatric brain tumors.
Consider taking a relative or friend along to the appointment to help remember all the information provided.
Here's some information to help you and your child get ready for the appointment.
Before your child's appointment, make a list of:
For a pediatric brain tumor, some basic questions to ask include:
Don't hesitate to ask other questions that occur to you.
Be prepared to answer some questions about your child's medical history and symptoms. These might include: