PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Central nervous system tumours profile at a referral center in the Brazilian Amazon region, 1997-2014.

  • Luis Eduardo Werneck de Carvalho,
  • Jonathan Souza Sarraf,
  • Aluízio Augusto Pereira Semblano,
  • Matheus Acácio Moreira,
  • Manuela Nascimento de Lemos,
  • Vanessa Jóia de Mello,
  • Moisés Hamoy,
  • Mario Hermes Nazareth Junior,
  • Fernando Mendes Paschoal Junior,
  • Fernando Adami

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0174439
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 4
p. e0174439

Abstract

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Tumours of the Central Nervous System (CNS) are an important cause of mortality from cancer. Epidemiological data on neoplams affecting the CNS are scarce in Brazil, especially in the Amazon region. The study aims at describing the histopathological profile of CNS tumours cases at a high-complexity referral cancer center. This study has described a 17-year-series profile of CNS tumours, registered at a high-complexity referral cancer center in Pará state, from January 1997 until July 2014 in the Brazilian Amazon Region. Data was gathered from histopathology reports kept in the hospital's cancer registry and 949 cases of CNS tumours were analyzed. The most common histopathology were neuroepithelial tumours (approx. 40%) and meningioma was the most frequent especific tumor histologic subtype (22.2%). Neuroepithelial tumours were more frequent in patients with ages ranging from less than a year to 19 years, whereas metastatic tumours were prevalent in patients over 40 years of age. It was not found temporal trends during the studied period. The knowledge of these tumours profile is valuable for the understanding of cancer epidemiology in the region, since its prevalence is currently underreported and more awareness on the disease is needed.