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Eye (Lond)May 20252 citations

Early ophthalmological tumour signs and diagnostic interval in children with brain tumours.

Christiansen Jacob, Mathiasen René, Heegaard Steffen, Kjeldsen Sia, Schmiegelow Kjeld, Siersma Volkert, von Holstein Sarah Linea


AI Summary

This study found over half of children with brain tumors had pre-diagnosis eye signs, associated with longer diagnostic intervals and increased mortality, highlighting critical ophthalmological assessment for earlier diagnosis.

Abstract

Background

Children with brain tumours often suffer from late diagnosis, impacting cure rates and risk of permanent sequelae. Ophthalmological symptoms are common, and we aimed to investigate the frequency, diagnostic interval, and prognostic value of early-onset ophthalmological brain tumour signs.

Methods

The study is based on data from national Danish health registries and medical files from hospitals and private ophthalmologists collected from all children diagnosed with a primary brain tumour in Denmark during 2007-2017.

Results

Among 437 included children, 51.7% (n = 226) had ophthalmological tumour signs prior to diagnosis, and 10.8% (n = 47) had ophthalmological symptoms as their initial tumour manifestation. The most common ophthalmological signs in total before diagnosis were reduced visual acuity (n = 73; 16.7%), diplopia (n = 65; 14.9%), abnormal optic nerve (n = 59; 13.5%), and strabismus (n = 50; 11.4%). The median time from initial symptom onset to diagnosis was 12.6 weeks for all children, 15.9 weeks for those with ophthalmological symptoms as their initial tumour sign (p = 0.28), and 12.5 weeks for those with ophthalmological tumour signs at any time before diagnosis (p = 0.71). Children with ophthalmological signs before diagnosis had a higher risk of death (HR: 2.11; 95% CI: 1.32-3.39; p = 0.002).

Conclusions

Ophthalmological tumour signs are frequent in children with brain tumours, and the diagnostic interval is long regardless of ophthalmological tumour signs being present or not. Taken together with the higher risk of death in the group with ophthalmological tumour signs, this study emphasises the importance of the ophthalmological assessment to ensure timely diagnosis.


MeSH Terms

HumansBrain NeoplasmsMaleFemaleChildChild, PreschoolDenmarkInfantRegistriesAdolescentVisual AcuityRetrospective StudiesDelayed DiagnosisPrognosis

Key Concepts5

Among 437 children diagnosed with a primary brain tumour in Denmark during 2007-2017, 51.7% (n = 226) had ophthalmological tumour signs prior to diagnosis.

EpidemiologyCohortRetrospective Cohort Studyn=437 childrenCh22

Among 437 children diagnosed with a primary brain tumour in Denmark during 2007-2017, 10.8% (n = 47) had ophthalmological symptoms as their initial tumour manifestation.

EpidemiologyCohortRetrospective Cohort Studyn=437 childrenCh22

The most common ophthalmological signs in children with brain tumours before diagnosis were reduced visual acuity (n = 73; 16.7%), diplopia (n = 65; 14.9%), abnormal optic nerve (n = 59; 13.5%), and strabismus (n = 50; 11.4%) among 437 included children.

DiagnosisCohortRetrospective Cohort Studyn=437 childrenCh5Ch6Ch7Ch22

The median time from initial symptom onset to diagnosis was 12.6 weeks for all 437 children with brain tumours, 15.9 weeks for those with ophthalmological symptoms as their initial tumour sign (p = 0.28), and 12.5 weeks for those with ophthalmological tumour signs at any time before diagnosis (p = 0.71).

DiagnosisCohortRetrospective Cohort Studyn=437 childrenCh22

Children with brain tumours who presented with ophthalmological signs before diagnosis had a higher risk of death (HR: 2.11; 95% CI: 1.32-3.39; p = 0.002) compared to those without ophthalmological signs, among 437 included children.

PrognosisCohortRetrospective Cohort Studyn=437 childrenCh22

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