Presenting symptoms in children with neurofibromatosis type 2

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Presenting symptoms in children with neurofibromatosis type 2. / Gugel, Isabel; Grimm, Florian; Teuber, Christian; Zipfel, Julian; Tatagiba, Marcos; Mautner, Victor-Felix; Schuhmann, Martin Ulrich; Kluwe, Lan.

in: CHILD NERV SYST, Jahrgang 36, Nr. 10, 10.2020, S. 2463-2470.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Gugel, I, Grimm, F, Teuber, C, Zipfel, J, Tatagiba, M, Mautner, V-F, Schuhmann, MU & Kluwe, L 2020, 'Presenting symptoms in children with neurofibromatosis type 2', CHILD NERV SYST, Jg. 36, Nr. 10, S. 2463-2470. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00381-020-04729-w

APA

Gugel, I., Grimm, F., Teuber, C., Zipfel, J., Tatagiba, M., Mautner, V-F., Schuhmann, M. U., & Kluwe, L. (2020). Presenting symptoms in children with neurofibromatosis type 2. CHILD NERV SYST, 36(10), 2463-2470. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00381-020-04729-w

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{aa2b559522374a9388417272902af312,
title = "Presenting symptoms in children with neurofibromatosis type 2",
abstract = "PURPOSE: The hallmark of neurofibromatosis type 2 (NF2) is the presence of bilateral vestibular schwannomas (VS) which however have not yet developed or grown to large size in children and young adolescents. Therefore, early diagnosis in pediatric patients without family history of NF2 has to be made by signs and symptoms not related to VS which will be reviewed in this study.METHODS: A total of 70 children diagnosed for NF2 at an age of < 18 years were identified from our patient cohort. Age and symptoms, signs and pathology at symptom onset, age at NF2 diagnosis and symptoms leading to diagnosis as well as genetic findings were retrospectively reviewed.RESULTS: The average age at symptom/sign onset was 8 ± 6 (range 0-17) years and 11 ± 5 (range 1-17) years at time of diagnosis. Fifteen children had a positive family history and were diagnosed upon additional clinical symptoms. The most frequent first presenting symptom/signs were ophthalmological abnormalities (49%), followed by cutaneous features (40%), non-VS-related neurological deficits (33%), and symptoms attributable to VS (21%). VS were not only the most common symptomatic neoplasm but also the most frequent pathological evidence for the diagnosis (72%). In 42 patients with available genetic testing results, pathogenic mutations were most frequently identified (n = 27).CONCLUSION: The presenting symptoms in NF2 children appear {"}unspecific{"} or less specific for classical NF2 compared with adult NF2 patients, posing a challenge particularly for cases without family history. In children, ophthalmological and cutaneous features should raise clinical suspicion for NF2 and referral to an NF2 specialized center is recommended.",
author = "Isabel Gugel and Florian Grimm and Christian Teuber and Julian Zipfel and Marcos Tatagiba and Victor-Felix Mautner and Schuhmann, {Martin Ulrich} and Lan Kluwe",
year = "2020",
month = oct,
doi = "10.1007/s00381-020-04729-w",
language = "English",
volume = "36",
pages = "2463--2470",
journal = "CHILD NERV SYST",
issn = "0256-7040",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Presenting symptoms in children with neurofibromatosis type 2

AU - Gugel, Isabel

AU - Grimm, Florian

AU - Teuber, Christian

AU - Zipfel, Julian

AU - Tatagiba, Marcos

AU - Mautner, Victor-Felix

AU - Schuhmann, Martin Ulrich

AU - Kluwe, Lan

PY - 2020/10

Y1 - 2020/10

N2 - PURPOSE: The hallmark of neurofibromatosis type 2 (NF2) is the presence of bilateral vestibular schwannomas (VS) which however have not yet developed or grown to large size in children and young adolescents. Therefore, early diagnosis in pediatric patients without family history of NF2 has to be made by signs and symptoms not related to VS which will be reviewed in this study.METHODS: A total of 70 children diagnosed for NF2 at an age of < 18 years were identified from our patient cohort. Age and symptoms, signs and pathology at symptom onset, age at NF2 diagnosis and symptoms leading to diagnosis as well as genetic findings were retrospectively reviewed.RESULTS: The average age at symptom/sign onset was 8 ± 6 (range 0-17) years and 11 ± 5 (range 1-17) years at time of diagnosis. Fifteen children had a positive family history and were diagnosed upon additional clinical symptoms. The most frequent first presenting symptom/signs were ophthalmological abnormalities (49%), followed by cutaneous features (40%), non-VS-related neurological deficits (33%), and symptoms attributable to VS (21%). VS were not only the most common symptomatic neoplasm but also the most frequent pathological evidence for the diagnosis (72%). In 42 patients with available genetic testing results, pathogenic mutations were most frequently identified (n = 27).CONCLUSION: The presenting symptoms in NF2 children appear "unspecific" or less specific for classical NF2 compared with adult NF2 patients, posing a challenge particularly for cases without family history. In children, ophthalmological and cutaneous features should raise clinical suspicion for NF2 and referral to an NF2 specialized center is recommended.

AB - PURPOSE: The hallmark of neurofibromatosis type 2 (NF2) is the presence of bilateral vestibular schwannomas (VS) which however have not yet developed or grown to large size in children and young adolescents. Therefore, early diagnosis in pediatric patients without family history of NF2 has to be made by signs and symptoms not related to VS which will be reviewed in this study.METHODS: A total of 70 children diagnosed for NF2 at an age of < 18 years were identified from our patient cohort. Age and symptoms, signs and pathology at symptom onset, age at NF2 diagnosis and symptoms leading to diagnosis as well as genetic findings were retrospectively reviewed.RESULTS: The average age at symptom/sign onset was 8 ± 6 (range 0-17) years and 11 ± 5 (range 1-17) years at time of diagnosis. Fifteen children had a positive family history and were diagnosed upon additional clinical symptoms. The most frequent first presenting symptom/signs were ophthalmological abnormalities (49%), followed by cutaneous features (40%), non-VS-related neurological deficits (33%), and symptoms attributable to VS (21%). VS were not only the most common symptomatic neoplasm but also the most frequent pathological evidence for the diagnosis (72%). In 42 patients with available genetic testing results, pathogenic mutations were most frequently identified (n = 27).CONCLUSION: The presenting symptoms in NF2 children appear "unspecific" or less specific for classical NF2 compared with adult NF2 patients, posing a challenge particularly for cases without family history. In children, ophthalmological and cutaneous features should raise clinical suspicion for NF2 and referral to an NF2 specialized center is recommended.

U2 - 10.1007/s00381-020-04729-w

DO - 10.1007/s00381-020-04729-w

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 32537663

VL - 36

SP - 2463

EP - 2470

JO - CHILD NERV SYST

JF - CHILD NERV SYST

SN - 0256-7040

IS - 10

ER -