CancerFax
Pediatric Cancer ยท Brain Tumor

Medulloblastoma (Pediatric Brain Tumor)

Medulloblastoma is the most common malignant brain tumor in children, now classified into four molecular subgroups โ€” WNT, SHH, Group 3, and Group 4 โ€” with profoundly different outcomes and treatment intensities. SHH-activated tumors may respond to vismodegib, while Group 3 high-risk disease requires aggressive craniospinal radiation and chemotherapy. CancerFax helps families access molecular subgrouping, specialist pediatric neuro-oncology programs, and novel trials.

  • WNT/SHH/Group 3/4 molecular subgrouping
  • Craniospinal radiation, chemo & hedgehog inhibitor access
  • Pediatric neuro-oncology specialist & trial coordination
Most Common Pediatric Brain Tumor
~500 cases/year US
Median Age at Diagnosis
5-8 years
5-Year Overall Survival
~70-75%
Four Molecular Subgroups
WNT, SHH, G3, G4
WNT Subgroup Survival
>90%

What is Medulloblastoma

Types and Subtypes

Medulloblastoma is classified into four molecular subgroups based on the WHO 2021 classification. This molecular classification is critical for prognostic assessment and treatment planning. Each subgroup has distinct clinical characteristics, molecular features, and prognosis.

Symptoms and Signs

Medulloblastoma typically presents with progressive neurologic symptoms that develop over weeks to months. Symptoms result from the tumor mass itself and increased intracranial pressure from cerebrospinal fluid obstruction. Early recognition of symptoms is important for timely diagnosis and treatment initiation.

Causes and Risk Factors

Medulloblastoma arises from malignant transformation of cerebellar progenitor cells. The exact etiology is unknown, but specific genetic alterations characterize each molecular subgroup. Most medulloblastomas are sporadic; however, some are associated with inherited cancer syndromes.

Diagnosis and Investigations

Diagnosis of medulloblastoma requires imaging confirmation combined with tissue diagnosis and molecular classification. Accurate diagnosis and molecular subgrouping are essential for prognostic assessment and treatment planning. Metastatic workup is critical for staging and risk stratification.

Disease Staging and Risk Stratification

Medulloblastoma staging uses the Chang staging system based on metastatic status. Risk stratification combines clinical factors (age, metastatic status, residual tumor) with molecular features (subgroup, TP53 status, MYCN amplification). Molecular subgroup is the most important prognostic factor.

Standard Treatment Options

Standard treatment for medulloblastoma consists of three components: maximal surgical resection, craniospinal irradiation, and multi-agent chemotherapy. Treatment is risk-adapted based on molecular subgroup, age, metastatic status, and residual tumor. This multimodal approach has significantly improved outcomes, with 5-year survival rates of 70-75% overall.

Advanced & Emerging Therapies

Advances in medulloblastoma treatment include improved surgical techniques, refined radiation approaches, and emerging targeted therapies. Hedgehog pathway inhibitors for SHH subgroup, immunotherapy approaches, and reduced-dose radiation strategies are expanding treatment options and potentially reducing long-term toxicity.

  • Targeted Therapy

    Hedgehog Pathway Inhibitors

    Vismodegib and sonidegib inhibit Sonic Hedgehog signaling. Used for SHH-activated medulloblastoma, particularly TP53-mutant SHH. May allow reduced-intensity chemotherapy and radiation in some cases. Emerging therapy with promising results.

    Approved
  • Chemotherapy

    High-Dose Chemotherapy with Stem Cell Rescue

    Intensive chemotherapy followed by autologous stem cell transplantation. Used for high-risk medulloblastoma (metastatic, high-risk molecular features, residual tumor). Improves progression-free survival in high-risk patients. Associated with significant toxicity.

    Approved
  • Radiation Therapy

    Proton Therapy

    Advanced radiation technique that may reduce radiation dose to normal tissues compared to photon radiation. Potentially reduces long-term toxicity including cognitive impairment and secondary malignancies. Available at select centers.

    Approved
  • Radiation Therapy

    Reduced-Dose Craniospinal Irradiation

    Reduced-dose CSI (18 Gy instead of 23.4 Gy) in selected low-risk cases (WNT subgroup, some SHH cases). Maintains efficacy while reducing long-term toxicity. Particularly important for young children.

    Approved
  • Immunotherapy

    Checkpoint Inhibitors

    Investigational immunotherapy approaches including checkpoint inhibitors. Under investigation for medulloblastoma treatment. May enhance immune response to tumor.

    Investigational
  • Emerging Therapies

    Molecular-Targeted Approaches

    Emerging therapies targeting specific molecular alterations in each subgroup. Investigational agents targeting MYC pathway in Group 3, chromosome 11 alterations in Group 4. Clinical trials evaluating novel combinations.

    Investigational

Biomarkers & Molecular Features

Molecular and clinical biomarkers in medulloblastoma provide critical prognostic information and guide treatment decisions. Molecular subgroup is the most important prognostic factor, followed by TP53 mutation status, MYCN amplification, and clinical factors.

When to Seek a Second Opinion

Expert review is valuable in medulloblastoma given the complexity of diagnosis, molecular subgrouping, risk stratification, and multimodal treatment. Second opinion is recommended at multiple points in the treatment course.

Clinical Trials & Research

Prognosis & Outcome Factors

Prognosis for medulloblastoma varies dramatically by molecular subgroup and clinical risk factors. Overall 5-year survival is 70-75%, but ranges from >90% for WNT subgroup to 40-50% for Group 3. Modern multimodal therapy has significantly improved outcomes compared to historical data.

Supportive Care & Living With Medulloblastoma

Supportive care is an essential component of medulloblastoma treatment and long-term follow-up, addressing both the acute effects of treatment and long-term complications. Families need comprehensive support throughout the treatment course and beyond.

How CancerFax Helps You Explore Treatment Options

CancerFax assists families with medulloblastoma by coordinating expert review of diagnostic brain MRI, tissue biopsy pathology, molecular subgrouping (WNT, SHH, Group 3, Group 4), TP53 and MYCN status, CSF cytology, spinal imaging, and clinical presentation to confirm accurate diagnosis and disease extent. We connect families with pediatric neurosurgeons, pediatric neuro-oncologists, and radiation oncologists experienced in medulloblastoma management. We facilitate access to maximal surgical resection, craniospinal irradiation, multi-agent chemotherapy, targeted therapy (hedgehog inhibitors for SHH), high-dose chemotherapy with stem cell rescue, proton therapy, and clinical trial opportunities at major pediatric cancer centers globally, including specialized institutions in China.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Medulloblastoma is the most common malignant brain tumor in children, accounting for approximately 20% of all childhood brain tumors. It is a fast-growing embryonal tumor that arises from progenitor cells in the cerebellum, the part of the brain that controls movement, balance, and posture. Approximately 500 new cases are diagnosed annually in the United States, with a median age at diagnosis of 5-8 years.