Cerebellar astrocytomas (CA) are one of the most common posterior fossa tumors in children. The vast majority is low grade, and prognosis for long-term survival is excellent.
The most common type of astrocytoma in the posterior fossa is the pilocytic astrocytoma, which is typically benign and slow-growing. However, other types like diffuse astrocytomas can also occur, which may vary in their growth rate and malignancy.
The differential diagnosis for cerebellar astrocytoma, particularly in pediatric or young adult populations, involves considering other cerebellar masses or lesions. These include:
### 1. Pilocytic Astrocytoma (WHO Grade I)
### 2. Medulloblastoma
### 3. Ependymoma
### 4. Hemangioblastoma
### 5. Brainstem Glioma
### 6. Metastatic Tumors
### 7. Infectious/Inflammatory Lesions
### 8. Other Posterior Fossa Tumors
### Key Radiologic Features for Differentiation
### Clinical Factors
### Definitive Diagnosis
Surgical resection remains the first-line treatment with complete removal of the tumor the goal. However, even when only subtotal resection has been achieved, there is a significant chance that the tumor will remain stable or will regress spontaneously. Adjuvant chemotherapy is reserved for those tumors that progress despite surgery, and more personalized chemotherapy is being pursued with better understanding of the molecular genetics of this tumor. Radiotherapy has generally not been recommended, but stereotactic radiotherapy and conformal proton beam radiotherapy may be reasonable options in the setting of relapse or progression. In the long term, permanent neurologic deficits, mainly cerebellar dysfunction, are common, but quality of life and cognitive function are generally good 1).
40 children with low-grade cerebellar astrocytoma, who underwent surgical treatment and 40 healthy controls matched with regard to age and sex. Visuospatial perception were tested using the spatial WISC-R subtests (Block Design and Object Assembly), Rey-Osterrieth Complex Figure, Benton Judgment of Line Orientation Test, PEBL Mental Rotation Task, and Benton Visual Retention Test. To exclude general diffuse intellectual dysfunction, the WISC-R Verbal Intelligence IQ, Performance IQ, and Full-Scale IQ scores were analysed. Post-surgical medical consequences were measured with the International Cooperative Ataxia Rating Scale. Compared to controls, the cerebellar group manifested problems with mental rotation of objects, visuospatial organization, planning, and spatial construction processes which could not be explained by medical complications or general intellectual retardation. The intensity of visuospatial syndrome highly depends on cerebellar lesion side. Patients with left-sided cerebellar lesions display more severe spatial problems than those with right-sided cerebellar lesions. In conclusion, focal cerebellar lesions in children affect their visuospatial ability. The impairments profile is characterized by deficits in complex spatial processes such as visuospatial organization and mental rotation, requiring reconstruction of visual stimuli using the imagination, while elementary sensory analysis and perception as well as spatial processes requiring direct manipulation of objects are relatively better preserved. This pattern is analogous to the one previously observed in adult population and appears to be typical for cerebellar pathology in general, regardless of age 2).