Craniopharyngioma
Subtypes of craniopharyngioma
Adamantinomatous craniopharyngioma
- A craniopharyngioma w/ epithelium that form stellate reticulum, wet keratin and basal palisades.
- Up to 95% of cases of this variant shows CTNNB1 mutations and aberrant nuclear expression of beta- catenin.
- Bimodal age distribution: childhood peak age 5–15 years, adult peak age 45–60 years.38
Papillary craniopharyngioma
- A craniopharyngioma w/ papillary features.
- Occurs in the supratentorial compartment or 3rd ventricle.
- 81–95% of cases show BRAF V600E mutations.
- Usually solid, or rarely cystic.
- Occurs almost exclusively in adults with a mean age of 40–55 years.
Overview of Adult and Pediatric Craniopharyngioma
Adult | Pediatric | |
---|---|---|
EPIDEMIOLOGY | ||
Age in years | 65–74 | 5–14 |
Gender | M = F | M > F |
Clinical presentation | Vision loss, hydrocephalus | Headaches, hydrocephalus |
Endocrine dysfunction | Less common | Common |
RADIOLOGY | ||
Cysts | Less common | Common |
Calcification | Less common | Common |
PATHOLOGY TYPE | ||
Adamantinomatous | Yes | Yes |
Papillary | Yes | No |
TREATMENT OPTIONS | ||
Surgery | Yes | Yes |
Radiotherapy | Yes | Yes |
Targeted therapy | Yes (papillary subtype) | No |
TREATMENT MORBIDITY | ||
Surgery | Better tolerated than radiation | |
Radiotherapy | Better tolerated than surgery |