hrp0094p2-350 | Pituitary, neuroendocrinology and puberty | ESPE2021

Nuchal Skinfold Thickness in Pediatric Brain Tumor Patients

Peng Junxiang , Boekhoff Svenja , Eveslage Maria , Bison Brigitte , Sowithayasakul Panjarat , Muller Hermann L. ,

Background: Severe obesity and tumor relapse/progression have impact on long-term prognosis in pediatric brain tumor patients.Methods: In a cross-sectional study, we analyzed nuchal skinfold thickness (NST) on magnetic-resonance imaging (MRI) follow-up monitoring as a parameter for assessment of nuchal adipose tissue in 177 brain tumor patients (40 World Health Organization (WHO) grade 1–2 brain tumor; 31 grade 3&#1...

hrp0095fc9.6 | Pituitary, Neuroendocrinology and Puberty | ESPE2022

Cerebral infarction in childhood-onset craniopharyngioma patients: results of KRANIOPHARYNGEOM 2007

Boekhoff Svenja , Bison Brigitte , Genzel Daniela , Eveslage Maria , Friedrich Carsten , Flitsch Jörg , Müller Hermann L.

Background: Cerebral infarction (CI) is a known vascular complication following treatment of suprasellar tumors. The purpose of our study was to determine the incidence of cerebral infarction (CI) in a cohort of 244 German childhood-onset craniopharyngioma (CP) patients recruited between 2007 and 2019 with a high degree of completeness in the prospective, randomized trial KRANIOPHARYNGEOM 2007 (Clinical Trial No. NCT01272622). Up to now, risk factors for CI, i...

hrp0092p1-99 | Pituitary, Neuroendocrinology and Puberty | ESPE2019

Eating Behavior and Oxytocin in Childhood-onset Craniopharyngioma Patients: An Exploratory Study

Daubenbüchel Anna M. , Özyurt Jale , Warmuth-Metz Monika , Eveslage Maria , Müller Hermann L.

Background: Childhood-onset craniopharyngioma patients (CP) often suffer from tumor or treatment-related hypothalamic lesions (HL). These lesions may alter production of oxytocin, which plays a major role in the regulation of eating behavior and body composition.Objective: In CP with different degrees HL, we investigated associations between HL, eating behavior/eating attitudes, and oxytocin saliva concentrations (OSC).<...

hrp0082p1-d3-83 | Diabetes (2) | ESPE2014

DKA During Diabetes Therapy: Multinational Comparison with 59 191 Pediatric Patients from England, Wales, The United States, Austria and Germany

Warner Justin , Hermann Julia , Kapellen Thomas , Hofer Sabine , Dubose Stephanie , Schatz Des , Beck Roy , Schweiger Claudia , Maahs David , Holl Reinhard

Background: DKA in children and adolescents with established type 1 diabetes (T1D) is a major problem with considerable cost to patients, families and health care systems. Many consider it as a quality of care indicator and a failure of relationship between the care provider and the family/patient. Considerable variability in rates are recognized. We analyzed multicenter registry and audit data from five countries with similarly advanced, yet differing, health care systems.</p...

hrp0082p1-d3-195 | Pituitary | ESPE2014

Childhood Craniopharyngioma: Changes of Treatment Strategies in Multinational Trials During the Last 12 Years

Hoffmann Anika , Warmuth-Metz Monika , Gebhardt Ursel , Pietsch Torsten , Pohl Fabian , Kortmann Rolf-Dieter , Calaminus Gabriele , Muller Hermann L

Background: Despite high survival rates in childhood craniopharyngioma, prognosis is frequently impaired due to sequelae. Radical surgery was the treatment of choice for several decades. However, even at experienced surgical facilities radical surgery can result in hypothalamic disorders such as severe obesity.Objective and hypotheses: We analyzed, whether treatment strategies for childhood craniopharyngioma patients recruited in German studies (KRANIOPH...

hrp0084p2-509 | Pituitary | ESPE2015

Survival, Hypothalamic Obesity, and Neuropsychological/Psychosocial Status after Childhood-Onset Craniopharyngioma: Newly Reported Long-Term Outcomes

Sterkenburg Anthe S , Hoffmann Anika , Gebhardt Ursel , Warmuth-Metz Monika , Daubenbuchel Anna M M , Muller Hermann L

Background: Quality of life and long-term prognosis are frequently, often severely impaired in craniopharyngioma (CP) patients.Objective and hypotheses: Knowledge of risk factors for long-term outcome is important for optimisation of treatment.Method: Overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS), BMI, neuropsychological status (EORTCQLQ-C30, MFI-20), and psychosocial status were analysed in 261 patients with childhood-...

hrp0084p2-514 | Pituitary | ESPE2015

Hydrocephalus and Hypothalamic Involvement in Paediatric Patients with Craniopharyngioma or Cysts of Rathke’s Pouch: Impact on Long-term Prognosis

Daubenbuchel Anna M M , Hoffmann Anika , Gebhardt Ursel , Warmuth-Metz Monika , Sterkenburg Anthe S , Muller Hermann L

Background: Paediatric patients with sellar masses such as craniopharyngioma (CP) or cyst of Rathke’s pouch (CRP) frequently suffer disease- and treatment-related sequelae.Objective and hypotheses: We analysed the impact and prognostic relevance of initial hydrocephalus (HY) and hypothalamic involvement (HI) on long-term survival and functional capacity (FC) in children with CP or CRP.Method: Using retrospective analysis of pa...

hrp0094fc8.4 | Neuroendocrinology | ESPE2021

Cerebral infarction in childhood-onset craniopharyngioma patients: results of KRANIOPHARYNGEOM 2007

Boekhoff Svenja , Bison Brigitte , Genzel Daniela , Eveslage Maria , Otte Anna , Friedrich Carsten , Flitsch Jorg , Muller Hermann L. ,

Background: Cerebral infarction (CI) is a known vascular complication following treatment of suprasellar tumors. Risk factors for CI, incidence rate, and long-term prognosis are unknown for patients with childhood-onset craniopharyngioma (CP).Methods: MRI of 244 CP patients, recruited between 2007 and 2019 in KRANIOPHARYNGEOM 2007, were reviewed for CI. Risk factors for CI and outcome after CI were analyzed.<p class=...

hrp0095rfc4.3 | Fat, Metabolism and Obesity | ESPE2022

Phospholipid scramblase 4 regulates adipocyte differentiation via PIP3-mediated AKT activation

A.G. Barth Lisa , Nebe Michèle , Kalwa Hermann , Velluva Akhil , Kehr Stephanie , Kiews Wieland , Le Duc Diana , Garten Antje , S. Kirstein Anna

Background and aim: PTEN hamartoma tumor syndrome (PHTS) is caused by germline mutation in the phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) gene. PTEN is a tumor suppressor gene and antagonist of the growth and survival signalling Phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K)/AKT/mammalian target of Rapamycin (mTOR)- cascade. Patients with PHTS, amongst other symptoms, develop lipomas, for which the underlying mechanism is not completely understood. To investigate the role of PTE...

hrp0092p1-398 | Pituitary, Neuroendocrinology and Puberty (2) | ESPE2019

Postoperative Quality of Life in Children and Adolescents with Craniopharyngioma – Results of the Prospective Multicenter Trial KRANIOPHARYNGEOM 2007

Eveslage Maria , Calaminus Gabriele , Warmuth-Metz Monika , Kortmann Rolf-Dieter , Pohl Fabian , Timmermann Beate , Schuhmann Martin , Flitsch Jörg , Faldum Andreas , Müller Hermann L.

Background: Craniopharyngioma is an embryonic tumor of low-grade malignancy. Children and adolescents with this diagnosis are analyzed concerning quality of life (QoL) and (progression-free) survival within the project KRANIOPHARYNGEOM 2007.Methods: The prospective, multi-center project consists of a randomized, unblinded substudy with adaptive design and an observational study. The randomized substudy for incompletely r...