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Dive into the research topics where Patricia T. Molloy is active.

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Featured researches published by Patricia T. Molloy.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1997

Prognostic signs in the surgical management of plexiform neurofibroma: The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia experience, 1974-1994

Michael N. Needle; Avital Cnaan; James J. Dattilo; Jane Chatten; Peter C. Phillips; Stephen Shochat; Leslie N. Sutton; Sheila N. Vaughan; Elaine H. Zackai; Huaqing Zhao; Patricia T. Molloy

OBJECTIVES To estimate the rate of progression of plexiform neurofibroma after surgery and to identify prognostic factors that predict progression. STUDY DESIGN A retrospective review of the inpatient and outpatient records of 121 patients, who had 302 procedures on 168 tumors over a 20-year period at a single large pediatric referral center. Data on age, location, indication for surgery, and extent of resection was analyzed for prognostic significance. RESULTS The overall freedom from progression was 54%. Children < 10 years old had a shorter interval of tumor control than older children (p = 0.0004). Tumors of the head/neck/face fared worse than tumors of the extremities (p = 0.0003). Less extensive resection predicted shorter interval to progression (p < 0.0001). Indication for surgery was not of prognostic importance. In multivariable analysis older age and location in the extremities were predictors of a better outcome. CONCLUSIONS Tumor progression is a serious problem for children with plexiform neurofibroma. Younger children, children with tumors of the head/neck/face, and tumors that cannot be nearly completely removed are at particular risk. These data may be useful in helping clinicians decide which patients and which tumors are most likely to benefit from surgical intervention.


American Journal of Ophthalmology | 2001

Visual loss in children with neurofibromatosis type 1 and optic pathway gliomas: relation to tumor location by magnetic resonance imaging.

Laura J. Balcer; Grant T. Liu; Gordon Heller; Larissa T. Bilaniuk; Nicholas J. Volpe; Steven L. Galetta; Patricia T. Molloy; Peter C. Phillips; Anna J. Janss; Sheila Vaughn; Maureen G Maguire

PURPOSE To examine the potential for visual acuity loss, and its relation to extent and location of optic pathway gliomas in a cohort of children with neurofibromatosis type 1 studied with magnetic resonance imaging. METHODS We reviewed the neuro-ophthalmologic records and brain/orbital magnetic resonance imaging scans for 43 consecutive pediatric patients with neurofibromatosis type 1 and optic pathway gliomas who were followed at the Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia. The presence of visual loss, defined as abnormal visual acuity for age in one or both eyes, was determined. Optic pathway gliomas were classified by tumor extent and location according to involvement of the optic nerves, chiasm, and postchiasmal structures by magnetic resonance imaging. RESULTS Involvement of the optic tracts and other postchiasmal structures at tumor diagnosis was associated with a significantly higher probability of visual acuity loss (P =.048, chi-square test). Visual loss was noted in 20 of 43 patients (47%) at a median age of 4 years; however, three patients developed visual acuity loss for the first time during adolescence. CONCLUSIONS In pediatric patients with neurofibromatosis type 1 and optic pathway gliomas, the likelihood of visual loss is dependent on the extent and location of the tumor by magnetic resonance imaging and is particularly associated with involvement of postchiasmal structures. Furthermore, older age during childhood (adolescence) does not preclude the occurrence of visual loss. Close follow-up beyond the early childhood years, particularly for those with postchiasmal tumor, is recommended.


Pediatric Neurosurgery | 1997

Clinical Outcome of Pediatric Gangliogliomas: Ninety-Nine Cases over 20 Years

James Johnson; Subramanian Hariharan; Jacqueline Berman; Leslie N. Sutton; Lucy B. Rorke; Patricia T. Molloy; Peter C. Phillips

Gangliogliomas account for 1-4% of all pediatric CNS tumors. We reviewed the records of 123 patients treated at the Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia between 1974 and 1995. Ninety-nine patients were eligible for review with complete medical records. The mean age was 9.5 years with 52% females. The mean follow-up was 3.7 years. The most common presenting symptom was seizures (49%). The mean length of symptoms to diagnosis was 24.4 months. Complex partial seizure was the most frequent seizure type (60%). Electroencephalograms were abnormal in 36%. The majority of gangliogliomas were in the temporal lobes (38%), with other sites in the parietal (30%) and frontal lobes (18%). All patients had abnormal nonspecific neuroimaging studies. Nine received chemotherapy, and 21 were treated with radiotherapy. Postoperatively, 78% were seizure free on no medication, 18% had improvement of seizure control, and 4% had stable seizure events. Nine died of disease. Gangliogliomas are benign tumors that frequently present with seizure disorders and nonspecific electroencephalographic and neuroimaging studies. Complete surgical extirpation of these tumors provides improved seizure control in most patients and a short course of antiepileptic medical therapy. Adjuvant therapy including radiotherapy and chemotherapy is limited to recurrent disease not amenable to reoperation.


Medical and Pediatric Oncology | 1997

Phase II study of daily oral etoposide in children with recurrent brain tumors and other solid tumors

Michael N. Needle; Patricia T. Molloy; J. Russell Geyer; Alisa Herman-Liu; Jean B. Belasco; Joel W. Goldwein; Leslie N. Sutton; Peter C. Phillips

Pre-clinical data and adult experience suggests that topoisomerase targeted anti-cancer agents may be highly schedule dependent, and efficacy may improve with prolonged exposure. To investigate this hypothesis, 28 children with recurrent brain and solid tumors were enrolled in a phase II study of oral etoposide (ETP). Patients were prescribed ETP at 50 mg/m2/ day for 21 consecutive days. Courses were repeated every 28 days pending bone marrow recovery. Evaluation of response was initially performed after 8 weeks and then every 12 weeks either by CT or MRI. Three of 4 patients with PNET (primitive neuroectodermal tumor)/medulloblastora achieved a partial response (PR). Two of 5 with ependymoma responded, one with a complete response and one with a PR. Toxicity was manageable with only 1 admission for fever and neutropenia in 120 cycles of therapy. Five patients had grade 3 or 4 neutropenia. One had grade 4 thrombocytopenia and one grade 2 mucositis and withdrew as a result. One patient had grade 2 diarrhea. Two patients who achieved a PR had received ETP as part of prior combination chemotherapy regimens. Daily oral etoposide is active in recurrent PNET/medulloblastoma and ependymoma. Toxicity is manageable and rarely requires intervention. Daily oral etoposide in combination with crosslinking agents should be considered in future phase III trials. Determination of activity in glioma and solid tumors is not complete.


Clinical Endocrinology | 1997

Endocrine outcome in long-term survivors of low-grade hypothalamic/chiasmatic glioma

Paulo Collett-Solberg; Heidi Sernyak; Marta Satin-Smith; Lorraine E. Levitt Katz; Leslie N. Sutton; Patricia T. Molloy; Thomas Moshang

We have evaluated the frequency of endocrine abnormalities in a large group of patients with hypothalamic/chiasmatic glioma (H/CG) and its correlation with the different forms of therapy.


Neuroradiology | 1997

Neurofibromatosis type 1: brain stem tumours

Larissa T. Bilaniuk; Patricia T. Molloy; Robert A. Zimmerman; Peter C. Phillips; S. N. Vaughan; Grant T. Liu; Leslie N. Sutton; Michael N. Needle

Abstract We describe the clinical and imaging findings of brain stem tumours in patients with neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1). The NF1 patients imaged between January 1984 and January 1996 were reviewed and 25 patients were identified with a brain stem tumour. Clinical, radiographical and pathological results were obtained by review of records and images. Brain stem tumour identification occurred much later than the clinical diagnosis of NF1. Medullary enlargement was most frequent (68 %), followed by pontine (52 %) and midbrain enlargement (44 %). Patients were further subdivided into those with diffuse (12 patients) and those with focal (13 patients) tumours. Treatment for hydrocephalus was required in 67 % of the first group and only 15 % of the second group. Surgery was performed in four patients and revealed fibrillary astrocytomas, one of which progressed to an anaplastic astrocytoma. In 40 % of patients both brain stem and optic pathway tumours were present. The biological behaviour of brain stem tumours in NF1 is unknown. Diffuse tumours in the patients with NF1 appear to have a much more favourable prognosis than patients with similar tumours without neurofibromatosis type 1.


Children's Health Care | 2000

The Impact of Childhood Hypothalamic/Chiasmatic Brain Tumors on Child Adjustment and Family Functioning

Bernadette Foley; Lamia P. Barakat; Alisa Herman-Liu; Jerilynn Radcliffe; Patricia T. Molloy

The relation between the adjustment of children treated for hypothalamic/chiasmatic brain tumors and family functioning was examined. Participants were 29 children, ages 7 to 17 years, who were off treatment at least 6 months, and their mothers and fathers. Child adjustment was compared with 29 same-age survivors of other brain tumors and a normative sample. Results support the presence of increased behavior problems and decreased social and academic competence in these particular brain tumor survivors compared with the normative sample. They did not differ significantly from other brain tumor survivors based on mother ratings. Decreased competence and increased emotional and behavioral problems were related significantly to child, mother, and father reports of poorer family functioning. Older age at diagnosis, less perceived change in child due to tumor and treatment, and regular education placement were related to higher child competence and better behavior but not to family functioning. These findings highlight the need for working with families to provide resources and skills in dealing with the social and behavioral changes that result from brain tumors and their treatment.


Neurosurgery | 1998

Visual impairment associated with mutism after posterior fossa surgery in children.

Grant T. Liu; Peter C. Phillips; Patricia T. Molloy; Michael N. Needle; Steven L. Galetta; Laura J. Balcer; Luis Schut; Ann-Christine Duhaime; Leslie N. Sutton

OBJECTIVE To report four children with visual impairment associated with mutism after posterior fossa surgery. Mutism after posterior fossa surgery is a well-described phenomena, but to our knowledge, visual impairment has not been reported in association with it. METHODS Record review of four children (age range, 3-7 yr) who underwent posterior fossa surgery (via suboccipital craniotomies) for removal of a medulloblastoma (three patients) or ependymoma (one patient). Each presented with headache, ataxia, or nausea and vomiting, but none had preoperative visual complaints other than diplopia. Postoperatively, all patients were mute, and because of apparent visual loss, neuro-ophthalmic consultation was requested. Postoperative scans and examinations were also reviewed. RESULTS Each child was awake but appeared withdrawn without verbal output. No child blinked to threat or fixed or followed. In each case, pupillary reactivity was normal, and funduscopic examinations revealed only papilledema. One child reached for money. Within weeks or months postoperatively, the mutism spontaneously resolved, and visual behavior in general improved, roughly in parallel. During the follow-up period, papilledema resolved and the disc color was normal in each case. Magnetic resonance images obtained postoperatively revealed nothing remarkable, except surgical defects, without lesions in the retrogeniculate pathway. CONCLUSION Impaired visual behavior, mimicking cortical visual loss, may be associated with mutism after posterior fossa surgery in children. The prognosis for recovery is excellent and parallels the return of normal speech. The mechanism is unclear.


Neurosurgery | 1997

Proton Spectroscopy of Suprasellar Tumors in Pediatric Patients

Leslie N. Sutton; Zhiyue J. Wang; Suzanne Wehrli; Sunil Marwaha; Patricia T. Molloy; Peter C. Phillips; Robert A. Zimmerman

OBJECTIVE Magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography provide good anatomic detail of suprasellar tumors in pediatric patients but are not able to predict histology in many cases. Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy provides metabolic data that may add to diagnostic specificity. We preoperatively performed localized proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy on pediatric patients with suprasellar tumors and correlated the results with the histological findings. Cyst fluid obtained from patients with craniopharyngiomas was studied with high-resolution magnetic resonance spectroscopy to better understand the in vivo data. METHODS Nineteen patients aged 1 to 21 years underwent spectroscopy. Surgical pathological samples were obtained from 14 patients. In each of five patients, the presence of a solid chiasmatic mass in addition to clinical evidence of neurofibromatosis Type I allowed the presumptive diagnosis of chiasmatic astrocytoma. Thus, the study population included 6 patients with craniopharyngiomas, 10 with chiasmatic/hypothalamic astrocytomas, and 3 with pituitary adenomas. The data obtained were compared with those of healthy brain from age-matched participants. RESULTS Spectroscopy was specific for the diagnosis. All craniopharyngiomas showed a dominant peak at 1 to 2 ppm, consistent with lactate or lipids, with trace amounts of other metabolites. This was confirmed using high-resolution spectroscopy. Chiasmatic gliomas showed a profile of choline, N-acetylaspartate, and creatine, and the choline:N-acetylaspartate ratio was 2.6 +/- 1.3, compared with 0.7 +/- 0.3 for samples of healthy brain (t test, P = 0.0003). Pituitary adenomas showed only a choline peak or no metabolites at all. CONCLUSION Proton spectroscopy may be helpful in supplementing standard imaging for the preoperative diagnosis of three types of suprasellar tumors that are common in pediatric patients.


Neurology | 1996

Gangliogliomas involving the optic chiasm

Grant T. Liu; Steven L. Galetta; Lucy B. Rorke; Larissa T. Bilaniuk; D. D. Vojta; Patricia T. Molloy; Peter C. Phillips; M. Needle; Ann-Christine Duhaime; Leslie N. Sutton; Nicholas J. Volpe

We report three patients with gangliogliomas involving the optic chiasm via distinct mechanisms.The ganglioglioma in one patient likely originated in the temporal lobe and spread medially to involve the chiasm, and diffuse spinal cord dissemination also occurred. Chiasmal involvement in this manner and dissemination at presentation are unusual for gangliogliomas. The tumor in a second patient was intrinsic to the hypothalmus and chiasm, while in the third patient, it involved both optic tracts, and a cyst compressed the chiasm laterally. Two patients developed severe bilateral visual loss, while the other had a stable bitemporal hemianopsia. Two patients received radiotherapy, but one continued to lose vision. Although gangliogliomas rarely involve chiasm, the mechanisms by which they produce chiasmal visual loss may be diverse, and the long-term visual prognosis is variable. NEUROLOGY 1996;46: 1669-1673

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Peter C. Phillips

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Leslie N. Sutton

University of Pennsylvania

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Michael N. Needle

University of Pennsylvania

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Lucy B. Rorke

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Robert A. Zimmerman

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Grant T. Liu

University of Pennsylvania

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Joel W. Goldwein

University of Pennsylvania

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Beverly J. Lange

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Alisa Herman-Liu

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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