Early Findings from the Multicenter RAPID Consortium on Papillary Craniopharyngiomas

  • Michael P. Catalino
  • , Duy Pham
  • , Robert C. Rennert
  • , William T. Couldwell
  • , James J. Evans
  • , Calen Callopy
  • , Won Kim
  • , Donato Pacione
  • , Carter M. Suryadevara
  • , Albert Kim
  • , Julie Silverstein
  • , Michael Chicoine
  • , Paul A. Gardner
  • , Garni Barkhoudarian
  • , Juan C.Fernandez Miranda
  • , Carolina Benjamin
  • , Varun R. Kshettry
  • , Gabriel Zada
  • , Jamie J.Van Gompel
  • , Sandhya R. Palit
  • Nathan Zwagerman, Stephanie Cheok, Daniel Prevedello, Kyle C. Wu, Adam Mamelak, Mark Pacult, Andrew Little, Michael Karsy

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background Craniopharyngiomas are rare parasellar tumors, and papillary craniopharyngiomas (PCPs) represent 8 to 20% of cases. Design Interim analysis of retrospective data collected from the Registry of Adenomas of the Pituitary and Related Disorders (RAPID). Setting Fourteen U.S.-based academic skull base centers between 2011 and 2023. Participants Patients with PCPs. Main Outcome Measures Demographic, imaging, surgical, and outcome variables. Results Ninety-nine patients with PCPs were included. The mean age was 51.8 ± 14.7, and 57.6% were male. Most tumors showed mixed cystic/solid components (67.5%), were transinfundibular (50.0%), and were treated with an endoscopic endonasal approach (74.5%), with 51.1% demonstrating gross total resection (GTR). Pituitary stalk was preserved in 51.9%. Permanent arginine vasopressin deficiency was seen in 67.1% and was associated with pituitary stalk sacrifice (p = 0.003). Cerebrospinal fluid leak was the most common nonendocrine postsurgical, 30-day complication (9.1%), reason for return to the operating room (3.1%), and reason for 90-day readmission (8.1%). Most patients (63.9%) received no adjuvant therapy; GTR was associated with decreased radiotherapy use (p = 0.0001). BRAF V600E mutation was detected in 64/69 tumors tested, although only one patient was treated with a BRAF inhibitor. A mean follow-up of 12.3 ± 14.6 months was seen for the group. Conclusions RAPID consortium enabled the largest real-world clinical information dataset for PCPs. Early findings support that GTR and stalk preservation are important to outcomes. Iterative analysis and discussion of data led to the generation of a framework for future studies to fully leverage the capabilities of multicenter registries.

Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Neurological Surgery, Part B: Skull Base
DOIs
StateAccepted/In press - 2025

Keywords

  • RAPID
  • endocrinology outcomes
  • extent of resection
  • multicenter
  • outcomes
  • papillary craniopharyngioma
  • registry
  • stalk preservation
  • surgery

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