Survival rates of pediatric brain tumor patients have significantly improved over the years due to developments in diagnostic techniques, neurosurgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy, and supportive care. However, brain tumors are still an important cause of cancer-related deaths in children. Prognosis is still highly dependent on clinical characteristics, such as the age of the patient, tumor type, stage, and localization, but increased knowledge about the genetic and biological features of these tumors is being obtained and might be useful to further improve outcome for these patients. It has become clear that the deregulation of signaling pathways essential in brain development, for example, sonic hedgehog (SHH), Wnt, and Notch pathways, plays an important role in pathogenesis and biological behavior, especially for medulloblastomas. More recently, data have become available about the cells of origin of brain tumors and the possible existence of brain tumor stem cells. Newly developed array-based techniques for studying gene expression, protein expression, copy number aberrations, and epigenetic events have led to the identification of other potentially important biological abnormalities in pediatric medulloblastomas and ependymomas. Copyright 2008 by the Society for Neuro-Oncology.

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doi.org/10.1215/15228517-2008-059, hdl.handle.net/1765/30478
Neuro-Oncology
Erasmus MC: University Medical Center Rotterdam

de Bont, J. M., Packer, R., Michiels, E., den Boer, M., & Pieters, R. (2008). Biological background of pediatric medulloblastoma and ependymoma: A review from a translational research perspective. Neuro-Oncology (Vol. 10, pp. 1040–1060). doi:10.1215/15228517-2008-059