Medulloblastoma

What is Medulloblastoma ?

Medulloblastoma is a type of brain tumor that starts in the cerebellum, which controls balance and other complex motor and cognitive functions. While medulloblastoma often grows quickly and may spread to other parts of the body, it usually responds well to treatment.

While it is rare, it is the most common pediatric malignant (cancerous) brain tumor. Approximately 20% of childhood brain tumors are medulloblastomas.

There are four known subtypes of childhood medulloblastoma. The exact subtype can impact a patient’s treatment plan in some situations.In adults, medulloblastoma represents only 1% of all malignant brain tumors. It typically affects younger adults (between 20 and 40 years of age).

Facts about Medulloblastoma:

Only about 200 adults are diagnosed with medulloblastoma each year in the United States. Doctors have identified three subtypes of adult variant. As with the childhood ones, different subtypes may call for different treatment plans.

This brain tumor start in the cerebellum, in the region of the brain at the base of the skull called the posterior fossa. This is the part of the brain that controls balance and other complex motor and cognitive functions.

While it often grow quickly and can spread to other parts of the nervous system and the body, especially the bones or bone marrow, they usually respond well to treatment.

Risk Include:

Anything that increases the chance of developing it is a risk factor. Although the cause  is not known, certain things may increase the risk.

Age: Most cases are diagnosed before age 16, and usually between the ages of 3 and 8. In adults, it is rarely seen after the age of 40.
Gender: It is more common in boys than girls. In adults, it is also more common in men than in women.
Genetic conditions: People with cancer predisposition syndromes like Li-Fraumeni syndrome, Turcot syndrome and Nevoid basal cell carcinoma syndrome (Gorlin syndrome) are more likely to develop medulloblastoma.

In rare cases,It can be passed down from one generation to the next. Genetic counseling may be right for you.

What ACH provides you:

Although this type of tumor may look similar under the microscope, but research shows there are four subtypes of childhood medulloblastoma. ACH has a team of leading neuro-oncologists, neurosurgeons, radiation oncologists, neuropathologists and neuroscientists that work together to develop treatment plans based on each patient’s tumor. This increases the chances for successful treatment. These plans may include access to clinical trials for newly diagnosed and recurrent medulloblastoma.

Our physicians, including neuro-oncologists, neurosurgeons, radiation oncologists, neuropsychologists, neuropathologists and neuroradiologists, have the experience and expertise to treat patients who develop medulloblastoma later in life. They work together to create treatment plans for each adult medulloblastoma patient and to develop new experimental therapies for the disease.