Skip to main content
Ari-Ellman-and-mom2-e1574879468695

Insights

Pediatrics November 27, 2019

Two-year-old becomes youngest patient to have giant brain tumor removed through nasal cavity

By Erin Digitale

A first of its kind surgery removed a problematic tumor from the brain of two-year-old Ari Ellman, allowing him to return to his life as a busy preschooler.

Recently, a team of surgeons at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital Stanford made history when they removed a two-year-old's deep-buried brain tumor from the root, making their patient the youngest ever to receive such a surgery.

After planning the delicate surgery with virtual reality programs and hours of practice, the team, led by pediatric neurosurgeon Gerald Grant, MD, used endoscopic tools to take the tumor out through the patient's nose. The surgery spared Ari Ellman from serious side effects associated with other treatments.

In August 2018, after experiencing uncontrolled vomiting and a seizure, Ari was diagnosed with a craniopharyngioma near the base of his brain. The tumor was not cancerous, meaning it could not spread to other locations. But it was growing quickly and endangering several key brain structures, including Ari's hypothalamus, pituitary stalk, visual pathways and important blood vessels.

A 16-hour surgery, the first of its kind, removed a life-threatening tumor from the brain of Ari Ellman.

The standard options for treating these tumors — brain radiation and open surgery from the top of the brain — could have severe side effects. But an endonasal removal had never been tried in a child younger than 5.

A story on the Stanford Children's website explains how the team planned the unusual surgery:

Preparations for Ari began long before the surgery. An MRI-and-CT-scan-derived image of Ari's brain was loaded into a new 3-D virtual reality tool called Surgical Theater, allowing the team to map, rehearse, and perfect an approach that would maximize the amount of tumor removed while protecting critical structures... A resin model of Ari's skull base was also 3-D printed, on which realistic approaches could be tested and further rehearsed. 'A 2-year-old's sinuses are only 15 to 20 mm wide, or narrower. And you're removing a tumor that may be wider than the nasal passage,' says Peter Hwang, MD, the ENT surgeon on the team and an expert in endoscopy. 'It's like getting a ship out of a bottle; you have to figure out how to take it apart and bring it out through this very narrow corridor. That's why these additional technologies can play such an important role in pediatric skull base surgery in particular.'

Ari and his mom, Na'ama, in the hospital.Ari and his mom, Na'ama, in the hospital.

Fortunately, the plan devised by Grant, Hwang and skull-base surgeon Juan Carlos Fernandez-Miranda, MD, worked perfectly. On the evening of February 8, after 16 hours of surgery, Ari's tumor had been completely removed, and all of his important brain structures were undamaged.

That has allowed Ari, now 3, to return to life as a happy, playful preschooler.

Photo of Ari and his mother, Na'ama, courtesy of the Ellman family

About Stanford Medicine

Stanford Medicine is an integrated academic health system comprising the Stanford School of Medicine and adult and pediatric health care delivery systems. Together, they harness the full potential of biomedicine through collaborative research, education and clinical care for patients. For more information, please visit med.stanford.edu.

Senior science writer

Erin Digitale

Erin Digitale, PhD, is a senior science writer in the Office of Communications. She earned a bachelor’s of science in biochemistry from the University of British Columbia and a doctorate in nutrition from the University of California, Davis, where she helped develop a new animal model of Type 2 diabetes. She holds a certificate in science writing from UC Santa Cruz and writes for the Stanford Medicine about pediatrics, obstetrics and gynecology, nutrition, and children’s health policy. Erin’s writing has been recognized with several national-level awards from the Association of American Medical Colleges and the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education. When she isn’t settling down at her desk with a pile of scientific studies and a large cup of tea, you can find her swimming, experimenting in the kitchen or going on hikes with her kids.