# Recurrence patterns in pediatric intracranial ependymal neoplasm: a systematic imaging work-up

**Authors:** Annika Stock, Judith Krumma, Gudrun Fleischhack, Stephan Tippelt, Lydia Rink, Torsten Pietsch, Martin Mynarek, Denise Obrecht-Sturm, Stefan Rutkowski, Stefan M. Pfister, Dominik Sturm, Kristian W. Pajtler, Ulrich Schüller, Beate Timmermann, Rolf-Dieter Kortmann, Brigitte Bison, Mirko Pham, Monika Warmuth-Metz

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s00234-025-03553-w · Neuroradiology · 2025-02-17

## TL;DR

This study examines how pediatric brain ependymal tumors recur, showing that recurrence patterns differ between tumor locations and can change in appearance on imaging.

## Contribution

The study provides a systematic analysis of recurrence patterns and imaging characteristics in supratentorial and posterior fossa ependymal neoplasms.

## Key findings

- Supratentorial EPNs often recur via intracranial dissemination, while posterior fossa EPNs frequently recur locally.
- Local recurrences can differ from primary tumors in MR signal characteristics, affecting diagnosis and treatment.
- Leptomeningeal spread is more common in supratentorial EPNs, while spinal spread is more frequent in posterior fossa EPNs.

## Abstract

Currently, the different types of ependymal neoplasm (EPN) are defined by anatomical localization and genetics. This retrospective multicenter study aimed to analyze the imaging patterns of both local and distant recurrences in supratentorial (ST) and posterior fossa (PF) EPN.

We exclusively evaluated patients with recurrent EPN. To form the basis for follow-up evaluations the imaging characteristics for ST-EPN and PF-EPN were assessed and compared to each other. Follow-up assessments included the idenTIFFication of local recurrent tumors, leptomeningeal dissemination, secondary intraparenchymal lesions, and extraneural metastases. MR-signal characteristics of local recurrent tumors were compared to the primary tumor.

The imaging series included 73 patients (median age at diagnosis 4.6 years; 56 PF-EPN). Recurrences were observed at up to five time points, with a total of 145 recurrence events documented. At first recurrence most PF-EPN recurred locally (29/56), while ST-EPN relapsed by intracranial dissemination (9/17). Local recurrent tumor grew fast and differed in up to one-fifth from the primary (13.2% lower T2-signal, 14.6% brighter T1-signal, 19% less contrast-enhancement). Leptomeningeal dissemination in ST-EPN is mainly restricted to intracranial (90.5%) while PF-EPN more frequently present with spinal spread (45.7%). Transient post-radiogenic lesions (n = 2) and secondary malignancies (n = 2) were rare. Extraneural metastases (n = 3) were found mainly near the surgical access.

Recurrences can occur multiple times in EPN patients, and the recurrence patterns differ between ST-EPN and PF-EPN. Imaging characteristics of local recurrences can differ from the primary tumor which is crucial for accurate diagnosis and treatment planning.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** ependymal neoplasm (MONDO:0003266)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** intracranial ependymal neoplasm (MESH:D001932), post (MESH:D000094025), metastases (MESH:D009362), EPN (MESH:D009369), PF-EPN (MESH:D015192), ST-EPN (MESH:D015173), radiogenic lesions (MESH:D009059)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

2 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12003593/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12003593