Pharmacologic Management of Obesity in Neuro-Oncology: A Case Report.

IF 0.7 Q4 ONCOLOGY
Case Reports in Oncology Pub Date : 2024-12-17 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1159/000543178
Alexandra Lardieri, Vidhu Thaker, Kate Citron-Zafrin, James H Garvin, Stergios Zacharoulis, Elena J Ladas
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Abstract

Introduction: Brain tumors are the most common solid tumors in pediatric oncology. Advances in the treatment of childhood brain tumors have led to increased survival; however, treatment-related morbidity remains high. The risk of developing overweight/obesity or significant weight gain is commonly observed in children with a brain tumor often due to hypothalamic damage as a result of radiation therapy, surgery, or the tumor itself. This may be accompanied by endocrinopathies such as diabetes insipidus and central precocious puberty in survivors of a childhood brain tumor. Lifestyle intervention strategies are often ineffective in preventing and managing obesity. Patients have difficulty with adherence to dietary interventions due to prolonged exposure to high-dose steroids, compromised physical health due to the disease process, or limitations in mobility as a result of excessive weight gain or the sequelae of the tumor management. There are no effective interventions to prevent or manage obesity in this patient population.

Case presentation: We describe a case report of a 11-year-old female who underwent treatment for a ganglioglioma, WHO grade 1, and simultaneously experienced nearly 100-kg weight gain. After several unsuccessful attempts at lifestyle interventions, she was referred to endocrinology and prescribed a GLP-1 receptor agonist, semaglutide. Following treatment with semaglutide, significant weight loss was observed. Importantly, the patient reported enhanced quality of life and social activity.

Conclusion: Anti-obesity medications are promising treatment options for this vulnerable patient group. Additional research is warranted to examine their use for the prevention and treatment of obesity in children with a brain tumor.

简介脑肿瘤是儿科肿瘤中最常见的实体肿瘤。儿童脑肿瘤治疗的进步提高了患者的生存率,但与治疗相关的发病率仍然很高。患脑瘤的儿童通常有超重/肥胖或体重明显增加的风险,这通常是由于放疗、手术或肿瘤本身导致下丘脑受损。儿童脑肿瘤幸存者还可能伴有内分泌疾病,如糖尿病性尿崩症和中枢性性早熟。生活方式干预策略往往无法有效预防和控制肥胖。由于长期接触大剂量类固醇、疾病过程导致身体健康受损、体重增加过多或肿瘤治疗后遗症导致行动不便,患者很难坚持饮食干预。目前还没有有效的干预措施来预防或控制这类患者的肥胖:我们描述了一例 11 岁女性的病例报告,她在接受神经节胶质瘤(WHO 1 级)治疗的同时,体重增加了近 100 公斤。在多次尝试生活方式干预未果后,她被转诊到内分泌科,医生给她开了一种 GLP-1 受体激动剂--塞马鲁肽。使用塞马鲁肽治疗后,体重明显减轻。重要的是,患者表示生活质量和社交活动都得到了提高:结论:抗肥胖药物对这一易受影响的患者群体来说是很有前景的治疗选择。结论:抗肥胖药物对这一脆弱的患者群体来说是一种很有前景的治疗方案,有必要开展更多的研究,以探讨这些药物在预防和治疗脑肿瘤患儿肥胖症方面的应用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
12.50%
发文量
151
审稿时长
7 weeks
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