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1.
Use of external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) for pediatric solid malignancies is generally limited by the tolerance of normal tissue in developing organs. Intraoperative electron radiotherapy (IOERT) allows a more focal delivery of radiation dose because vital organs can be displaced and avoided during treatment. From February 1983 to July 2003, 20 children underwent IOERT for treatment of locally advanced or recurrent malignancies of the extremity or abdominopelvic area. All patients underwent EBRT and received IOERT doses of 7.5 to 25 Gy with 6-MeV to 15-MeV electrons. At a median follow-up of 11.6 years (range, 2.1 to 25.5 y), 13 patients (65%) were alive and without evidence of disease. Patients who underwent gross total resection had better local control (88% vs. 67%) and survival (71% vs. 33%) than patients for whom the resection was not achieved. Among 7 patients, 11 grade 3 toxicity events were reported. No grade >3 toxicities or second malignancies were observed during follow-up. Use of IOERT in combination with surgery and EBRT in management of pediatric solid malignancies provides excellent local control with reasonable toxicity. IOERT should be considered as an integral part of a multimodality regimen for pediatric solid malignancies, especially for patients with abdominopelvic malignancies.  相似文献   

2.
BACKGROUND: To evaluate the efficacy of interstitial brachytherapy (BRT) in children undergoing combined modality treatment for soft tissue sarcomas (STS). PROCEDURE: From September 1984 to December 2003, 50 children (median age 13 years, range 1 to 18) with STS who received BRT as part of loco-regional treatment were included. There were 30 males and 20 females, the majority (68%) had primary lesions, synovial sarcoma (32%) was the most common histological type, and 26% had high-grade lesions. Treatment included wide local excision and BRT with or without external beam radiotherapy (EBRT). Thirty children (60%) received BRT alone. RESULTS: After a median follow-up of 51 months, the local control (LC), disease-free survival, and overall survival were 82%, 68%, and 71%, respectively. LC was superior in patients with tumor size 5 cm (96% vs. 67%, P = 0.04), symptom duration <2 months versus >2 months (100% vs. 73%, P = 0.05), and Grade I versus Grade II versus Grade III tumors (100% vs. 93% vs. 57%, P = 0.03). Children receiving a combination of BRT and EBRT had comparable LC to those receiving BRT alone (78% vs. 84%, P = 0.89). There was no significant difference in LC for patients receiving LDR versus HDR BRT (77% vs. 92%, P = 0.32, for BRT alone; and 67% vs. 100%, P = 0.17, for BRT + EBRT). CONCLUSION: Interstitial BRT with or without EBRT appears to result in satisfactory outcome in children with STS. Radical BRT alone, when used judiciously in select groups of children, results in excellent local control and functional outcome with reduced treatment-related morbidity.  相似文献   

3.
The administration of external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) has been an integral part of the successful treatment of childhood sarcomas. However, EBRT has severe late morbidity in the developing child. In an attempt to deliver adequate tumoricidal radiation while preserving bone growth and organ function, 13 children with diverse sarcomas were treated with high dose rate brachytherapy (HDR). Seven patients had rhabdomyosarcoma and six patients had other soft tissue sarcoma variants. All patients were treated with disease-appropriate chemotherapy, usually according to the Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study. Eleven patients received fractionated 36 Gy HDR alone at a mean of 3.5 months from diagnosis. Two patients received 10–12.5 Gy intraoperative HDR brachytherapy and additional 27 Gy EBRT. Nine of 11 patients in first remission have had no recurrences. One died of recurrent pulmonary metastases. The other patient that did recur is disease-free 21 months post-recurrence. Two additional patients were treated with HDR after tumor recurrence. One patient with recurrent Ewing's sarcoma, relapsed and died. The second is disease free 3 months after autologous bone marrow transplant. Grade 1 morbidity occurred in 46%, Grade 2 in 15%, and Grade 3 in 8% of the children, while relatively good bone and organ growth was maintained. The combination of conservative surgery, chemotherapy, and HDR offers the potential for disease control in young children while preserving bone growth and organ function. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

4.
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to determine the long-term local control, disease-free survival, and morbidity of fractionated high-dose-rate brachytherapy (F-HDR) in infants and children with soft tissue sarcomas. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Fifteen children (13 girls and 2 boys, ages 5-101 months) with soft tissue sarcomas were treated with chemotherapy, organ-preserving surgery, and F-HDR (36 Gy in 12 fractions) to post-chemotherapy volumes. External beam radiotherapy was not part of the primary treatment, although four patients (27%) subsequently received salvage external beam radiotherapy after treatment failure. Chemotherapy was administered to all patients based on their tumor histology and stage. RESULTS: After a median follow-up of 10 years (range 32-154 months), 12 patients (80%) were alive without evidence of disease. Ten-year overall survival and local control rates were both 80% (12/15 children). The overall survival was better (91%) for children with microscopic residual versus gross residual disease (75%). With longer follow-up, grade 3 to 4 brachytherapy-related late morbidities increased from 8% (1/12) to 20% (3/15) and included trismus/osteonecrosis, vaginal stenosis, and periurethral fibrosis. There were two late complications associated with puberty that occurred 8 to 10 years after the initial treatments. Acute toxicity occurred in five patients (38%) and consisted primarily of grade 1 to 3 skin and mucosal reactions. CONCLUSIONS: As the sole radiation modality, F-HDR achieved excellent local control and disease-free survival in properly selected children with soft tissue sarcomas while preserving normal bone and organ development. A significant percentage of patients experience adverse late sequelae as a result of this treatment.  相似文献   

5.
From September 1984 to December 1989, 38 patients of pediatric age with localized bone sarcomas received intraoperative radiotherapy (IORT) as part of a multidisci plinary treatment program. The age ranged from 6 to 21 years. The tumor histologies were 22 osteosarcomas and 16 Ewing's sarcomas. Thirty-four had initial primary disease (90%) and 4 were treated for local recurrence (10%). IORT was used on 32 untreated patients and in 6 previously treated with external beam radiotherapy (EBR). The IORT field included the surgically exposed tumor bed area. Single radiation doses ranging from 10 to 20 Gy were delivered, using 6–20 MeV electron beams. The median follow-up time for the entire group is 25 months (2–65+ months). The projected 5-year disease-free and overall survival rates are 65% and 69%, respectively. One patient developed a local recurrence in each histological group: one chondroblastic osteosarcoma and one cervical Ewing's sarcoma. Six patients died from metastatic progression: 3 initially recurrent tumors and three primary disease cases. Severe neuropathy and soft tissue necrosis were seen in some patients as IORT related complications. IORT is a feasible technique to be integrated in multidisciplinary programs that may promote local control in pediatric and adolescent patients with bone sarcomas. Peripheral nerves are dose-limiting tissue structures for IORT.  相似文献   

6.
A retrospective and prospective analysis is reported of epidemiological, clinical, and therapeutic aspects of 33 children with nasopharyngeal carcinoma who were treated in a single institution over a period of 10 years. Twenty-three male and 10 female children ranging from 9 to 17 years were referred to our center. Histopathology was WHO type 3 carcinoma in 21, WHO type 2 in 8, WHO type 1 in 1, and unclassified in 3 patients. Disease extent was T2a (n = 15), T2b (n = 2), T3 (n = 11), and T4 (n = 5); N1 (n = 5), N2 (n = 12), and N3a (n = 16). Five patients had base of skull invasion. Four patients had M1 disease on admission. Four patients were treated with irradiation only. Three patients received neoadjuvant, 4 patients received adjuvant, and 22 patients received neoadjuvant + adjuvant chemotherapy in addition to radiotherapy. Patients received 50-72 Gy to the primary tumor and involved nodes and 45-50 Gy to uninvolved regions. Chemotherapy consisted of combinations of cisplatin, fluorouracil or Adriamycin, vincristine, and cyclophosphamide. Twenty-nine patients (88%) attained locoregional control. Overall, 10 patients died with progressive disease or infectious complications, and 2 patients are still receiving therapy. Three patients are still living with multiple metastases and stable disease. Eight patients were lost to follow-up. Twelve patients are alive without relapse 3 and 63 months from diagnosis. Seven patients had 6 relapses at distant and 1 relapse at local site. The median time for first relapse was 8 months. Overall, the 5-year survival rate was 63% and disease-free survival rate was 53%. Although the locoregional control rate is high, long-term survival rates will be the real test of the impact of chemotherapy. Further studies are needed to confirm the optimal combination of effective chemotherapeutic agents and radiotherapy.  相似文献   

7.
External beam irradiation (EBRT) has been shown to improve response rates and event-free survival in children with neuroblastoma and regional lymph node metastases. Irradiation during surgical exposure (intra-operative radiotherapy, IORT) with displacement of adjacent radiosensitive organs out of the treatment field allows for more precise delineation of the target volume and significantly reduces the amount of normal tissue exposed to irradiation. We have incorporated IORT into the treatment regimen of 24 children with neuroblastoma between the years 1983–1991. IORT was directed to any residual tumor or the tumor bed; the median dose of radiation was 1,000 cGY, equivalent to 3,000 cGY of conventional EBRT. There were 11 males and 13 females. Two patients had stage II, 12 patients had stage III, and 10 patients had stage IV disease. Ten children received IORT for suspected recurrent or persistent neuroblastoma. Twelve patients were disease-free survivors following IORT with a median follow-up of 54 months. For those patients with stage III disease, seven children were disease-free survivors, while only three of 10 patients with stage IV disease survived (median follow-up 30 months). Disease-free Survival (DFS) correlated with the achievement of local tumor control in children with both stage III and IV neuroblastoma. There was limited morbidity and no episodes of obstructive uropathy were encountered. We conclude that IORT appears to be well tolerated and may have therapeutic benefit for a select group of patients with neuroblastoma. IORT merits future exploration by prospective study. Med. Pediatr. Oncol. 28:424–428, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

8.
From September 1984 to December 1989, 38 patients of pediatric age with localized bone sarcomas received intraoperative radiotherapy (IORT) as part of a multidisciplinary treatment program. The age ranged from 6 to 21 years. The tumor histologies were 22 osteosarcomas and 16 Ewing's sarcomas. Thirty-four had initial primary disease (90%) and 4 were treated for local recurrence (10%). IORT was used on 32 untreated patients and in 6 previously treated with external beam radiotherapy (EBR). The IORT field included the surgically exposed tumor bed area. Single radiation doses ranging from 10 to 20 Gy were delivered, using 6-20 MeV electron beams. The median follow-up time for the entire group is 25 months (2-65+ months). The projected 5-year disease-free and overall survival rates are 65% and 69%, respectively. One patient developed a local recurrence in each histological group: one chondroblastic osteosarcoma and one cervical Ewing's sarcoma. Six patients died from metastatic progression: 3 initially recurrent tumors and three primary disease cases. Severe neuropathy and soft tissue necrosis were seen in some patients as IORT related complications. IORT is a feasible technique to be integrated in multidisciplinary programs that may promote local control in pediatric and adolescent patients with bone sarcomas. Peripheral nerves are dose-limiting tissue structures for IORT.  相似文献   

9.
Approximately 20% of children with Ewing sarcoma (EWS) and rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) present with metastatic disease at initial diagnosis. Overall, the outcome is poor, with an event-free survival of < 20%. Local control at metastatic sites has not been previously reported. We reviewed control of metastatic sites in children with EWS and RMS that received curative intent radiation therapy to each metastatic site. In 13 children, at a median follow-up of 18 months, a single local failure was seen. Toxicity was minimal. Our data suggest that radiation therapy is effective and tolerable in children with metastatic EWS and RMS.  相似文献   

10.
BACKGROUND: As an alternative to high-dose irradiation, limited surgery and low-dose irradiation have been investigated as a means to achieve local control. We retrospectively examined the clinical characteristics, treatment, and outcome for 25 patients with Ewing sarcoma treated with limited surgery and low-dose irradiation. PROCEDURE: The records of 25 patients (age 4-48 years) were reviewed who were treated between 1979 and 1996 at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. At the time of diagnosis, 21 of the 25 patients had prognostically unfavorable tumors including the presence of metastatic disease (n = 12), an axial primary (n = 17), and a tumor measuring greater than 8 cm (n = 18). The primary tumor was completely resected (wide local excision) in 13 patients, incompletely resected (marginal excision) in 7 patients, and biopsied only in the remaining 5 patients. The median dose of irradiation to the primary site was 30 Gy. RESULTS: With a median follow-up of 67 months (range 16-189 months) for the surviving patients, 28% failed distantly, and an additional 28% suffered from the progression of previously established metastatic disease. No patient failed locally. The median overall survival was 43 months. The actuarial overall survival at 5 years was 39% (+/-11%) for all patients and 60% (+/-14%) for patients with localized disease. CONCLUSIONS: Limited surgery and postoperative irradiation are one strategy that promises to balance the goal of achieving local control with the goal of diminishing late effects. Apart from the scenario in which radiation therapy is absolutely unnecessary, low-dose irradiation may be appropriate after considering the risk for local recurrence and overall prognosis.  相似文献   

11.
A retrospective and prospective analysis is reported of epidemiological, clinical, and therapeutic aspects of 33 children with nasopharyngeal carcinoma who were treated in a single institution over a period of 10 years. Twenty-three male and 10 female children ranging from 9 to 17 years were referred to our center. Histopathology was WHO type 3 carcinoma in 21, WHO type 2 in 8, WHO type 1 in 1, and unclassified in 3 patients. Disease extent was T2a (n = 15), T2b (n = 2), T3 (n = 11), and T4 (n = 5); N1 (n = 5), N2 (n = 12), and N3a (n = 16). Five patients had base of skull invasion. Four patients had M1 disease on admission. Four patients were treated with irradiation only. Three patients received neoadjuvant, 4 patients received adjuvant, and 22 patients received neoadjuvant + adjuvant chemotherapy in addition to radiotherapy. Patients received 50-72 Gy to the primary tumor and involved nodes and 45-50 Gy to uninvolved regions. Chemotherapy consisted of combinations of cisplatin, fluorouracil or Adriamycin, vincristine, and cyclophosphamide. Twenty-nine patients (88%) attained locoregional control. Overall, 10 patients died with progressive disease or infectious complications, and 2 patients are still receiving therapy. Three patients are still living with multiple metastases and stable disease. Eight patients were lost to follow-up. Twelve patients are alive without relapse 3 and 63 months from diagnosis. Seven patients had 6 relapses at distant and 1 relapse at local site. The median time for first relapse was 8 months. Overall, the 5-year survival rate was 63% and disease-free survival rate was 53%. Although the locoregional control rate is high, long-term survival rates will be the real test of the impact of chemotherapy. Further studies are needed to confirm the optimal combination of effective chemotherapeutic agents and radiotherapy.  相似文献   

12.

Introduction

Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) of the chest wall presents unique management challenges and local control considerations. The benefit of complete excision is uncertain and must be weighed against potential surgical morbidity. Our aim was to assess factors, including local control modality, associated with clinical outcomes in children with chest wall RMS.

Methods

Forty-four children with RMS of the chest wall from low-, intermediate-, and high-risk Children's Oncology Group studies were reviewed. Predictors of local failure-free survival (FFS), event-free survival (EFS), and overall survival (OS) were assessed, including clinical characteristics and staging, primary tumor anatomic locations, and local control modalities. Survival was assessed by Kaplan–Meier analysis and the log-rank test.

Results

Tumors were localized in 25 (57%) and metastatic in 19 (43%), and they involved the intercostal region (52%) or superficial muscle alone (36%). Clinical group was I (18%), II (14%), III (25%), and IV (43%), and ultimately 19 (43%) patients had surgical resection (upfront or delayed), including 10 R0 resections. Five-year local FFS, EFS, and OS were 72.1%, 49.3%, and 58.5%, respectively. Univariate factors associated with local FFS included age, International Rhabdomyosarcoma Study (IRS) group, extent of surgical excision, tumor size, superficial tumor location, and presence of regional or metastatic disease. Other than tumor size, the same factors were associated with EFS and OS.

Conclusions

Chest wall RMS has variable presentation and outcome. Local control is a significant contributor to EFS and OS. Complete surgical excision, whether upfront or after induction chemotherapy, is usually only possible for smaller tumors confined to the superficial musculature but is associated with improved outcomes. While overall outcomes remain poor for patients with initially metastatic tumors, regardless of local control modality, complete excision may be beneficial for patients with localized tumors if it can be achieved without excess morbidity.  相似文献   

13.
A retrospective series of pediatric patients with localized malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors (MPNST) treated during a 20-year period at one institution is reported. Between 1976 and 1996, 24 consecutive children were treated by a multimodality approach. Conservative surgery was the treatment of choice: primary radical surgery was performed in 10. Postoperative radiotherapy was administered in 12 and adjuvant chemotherapy in 19. Eight patients were alive without evidence of disease, six in first complete remission and two in second complete remission, after a median follow-up of 230 months. The 10-year event-free survival (EFS) and survival were 29% and 41%, respectively. Survival was 80% for the patients who underwent radical surgery, and 14% for the others; 71% for patients with tumors smaller than 5 cm, and 29% for those with tumors 5 cm or larger. Local recurrence was the major cause for treatment failure (13 of 17; 76%); the rate of local relapse was 33% v 75% in patients who either received or did not receive radiotherapy. Complete surgical excision remains the most effective treatment for MPNST and represents the main prognostic factor along with tumor size. Radiotherapy seems to play a role in achieving local control, whereas the role of chemotherapy is uncertain.  相似文献   

14.
OBJECTIVE: To assess the efficacy and toxicity of local radiotherapy in achieving local control in patients with stage 4 or high-risk stage 3 neuroblastoma treated with induction chemotherapy and tandem stem cell transplants. METHODS: Fifty-two children with stage 4 or high-risk stage 3 neuroblastoma were treated on a standardized protocol that included five cycles of induction chemotherapy, surgical resection of the primary tumor when feasible, local radiotherapy, and then consolidation with tandem myeloablative cycles with autologous peripheral blood stem cell rescue. Local radiotherapy (10.5-18 Gy) was administered to patients with gross or microscopic residual disease prior to the myeloablative cycles. Thirty-seven patients received local radiotherapy to the primary tumor or primary tumor bed. Two patients with unknown primaries each received radiotherapy to single, unresectable, bulky metastatic sites. The second of the myeloablative regimens included 12 Gy of total body irradiation. RESULTS: Of the 52 consecutively treated patients analyzed, 44 underwent both transplants, 6 underwent a single transplant, and 2 progressed during induction. Local radiotherapy did not prolong recovery of hematopoiesis following transplants, did not increase peritransplant morbidity, and did not prolong the hospital stay compared with patients who had not received local radiotherapy. Local control was excellent. Of 11 patients with disease recurrence after completion of therapy, 9 failed in bony metastatic sites 3 to 21 months after the completion of therapy, 1 recurred 67 months following therapy in the previously bulky metastatic site that had been irradiated, and 1 had local recurrence concurrent with distant progression 15 months following the second transplant. The three-year event-free survival was 63%, with a median follow-up of 29.5 months. The actuarial probability of local control was 97%. CONCLUSIONS: The use of induction chemotherapy, aggressive multimodality therapy for the primary tumor, followed by tandem myeloablative cycles with stem cell transplant in patients with stage 4 or high risk stage 3 neuroblastoma has resulted in acceptable toxicity, a very low local recurrence risk, and an improvement in survival.  相似文献   

15.
Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is the most common soft tissue sarcoma in children. Outcome of patients treated on standard protocols, in a multidisciplinary cancer center setting outside of clinical trials, is not well reported. We reviewed characteristics and outcome of 23 pediatric patients treated at a single, multidisciplinary cancer center in Lebanon, between April 2002 and December 2010. Median follow-up was 41 months. The most commonly affected primary site was the head and neck (48%, n = 11). Nineteen tumors (82.6%) were of embryonal histology. Tumor size was ≥5 cm in eight (34.8%) patients. Sixteen patients (69.6%) had localized disease, and one (4.4%) had metastatic disease. Fifteen (65.2%) had Group III tumors. All patients received chemotherapy, for a duration ranging 21–51 weeks. Upfront surgical resection was performed in 10 patients (43.5%). Eighteen patients (78.3%) received radiation therapy. The 5-year overall and disease-free survival rates were 83% and 64%, respectively. Relapse correlated with absence of surgery. Treatment of childhood RMS in a multidisciplinary cancer center in Lebanon results in similar survival to that in developed countries when similar protocols are applied. There was a higher incidence of local relapse, but those were salvageable with further therapy and surgical local control.  相似文献   

16.
We reviewed the clinical courses of 43 patients with localized and regional rhabdomyosarcoma primary in the head or neck treated according to three sequential plans of combined-modality therapy to identify independent contributions of surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy to disease control, survival and development of central nervous system (CNS) involvement. In the majority of patients complete surgical resection was not feasible by vitrue of tumor location or extent of disease. Combinations of vincristine, cyclophosphamide, and dactinomycin with or without adriamycin were used simultaneously or sequentially with irradiation to induce tumor regression. Radiation doses ranged from 35 to 55 Gy. In the sequential treatment group, six of 22 patients with measurable disease had complete responses to chemotherapy. Ten of 11 partial responders and 2 of 5 non-responders to chemotherapy attained complete responses with addition of radiotherapy (82% overall CR). Simultaneous chemotherapy and irradiation induced complete responses in 4 of 9 patients. Local control of minimal residual disease was uniformly achieved with radiation dose of < 50 Gy, but similar doses were effective in only 11 of 26 patients with gross residual disease. Twenty-three percent of patients developed CNS involvement as a consequence of uncontrolled or recurrent primary tumors. Although local tumor control was achieved in 79% of patients, it could not be maintained in more than 63%. Twenty-four patients (56%) have been surviving disease-free for 2.5 to 15.5 years (median 7.5 years). We conclude that a 6-week course of chemotherapy preceding radiotherapy does not result in loss of short term disease control of unresectable primary tumor. Radiation doses < 50 Gy appear adequate for eradication of minimal residual disease but inadequate for gross disease.  相似文献   

17.
Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is the most common soft tissue sarcoma in children. Outcome of patients treated on standard protocols, in a multidisciplinary cancer center setting outside of clinical trials, is not well reported. We reviewed characteristics and outcome of 23 pediatric patients treated at a single, multidisciplinary cancer center in Lebanon, between April 2002 and December 2010. Median follow-up was 41 months. The most commonly affected primary site was the head and neck (48%, n = 11). Nineteen tumors (82.6%) were of embryonal histology. Tumor size was ≥5 cm in eight (34.8%) patients. Sixteen patients (69.6%) had localized disease, and one (4.4%) had metastatic disease. Fifteen (65.2%) had Group III tumors. All patients received chemotherapy, for a duration ranging 21-51 weeks. Upfront surgical resection was performed in 10 patients (43.5%). Eighteen patients (78.3%) received radiation therapy. The 5-year overall and disease-free survival rates were 83% and 64%, respectively. Relapse correlated with absence of surgery. Treatment of childhood RMS in a multidisciplinary cancer center in Lebanon results in similar survival to that in developed countries when similar protocols are applied. There was a higher incidence of local relapse, but those were salvageable with further therapy and surgical local control.  相似文献   

18.
BACKGROUND: The prognosis for young children suffering from brain tumors is, as many authors report, generally poor. The probability of late complications in young children is also high, and their quality of life is significantly worse than that of older children. This study presents the experience of one center in management of central nervous system tumors in children in aged 1-3 years with radiation therapy. PROCEDURE: From 1981 to 1990, 52 children (aged 1-3 years) with CNS tumors were treated at the First Radiotherapy Department in the Center of Oncology in Warsaw, Poland. These patients represented 18% of the total number of 293 children with brain and spine tumors treated in this period. The radiation treatment policy for young children was similar to that applied to older children, but total doses and doses per fraction were lower and did not exceed 50 Gy to the tumor site and 30 Gy to the CNS axis. RESULTS: Overall 5-year survival was 52%, and disease-free survival was 50%. These results were similar to those obtained in older children (53% and 50%, respectively). Serious mental retardation (IQ < 70) was observed in 30% of young children in comparison to 7% of older patients, but in 62% these symptoms were noted even before the start of radiotherapy. CONCLUSIONS: The results obtained in this series did not confirm the hypothesis of more aggressive biology of CNS tumors in younger children. The proportion of children with serious psychological disturbances in this group is apparently high, although in most cases these symptoms were observed before the start of radiotherapy and were a result of tumor mass effects.  相似文献   

19.

Background

Children with WT1 gene‐related disorders such as Denys–Drash syndrome (DDS) and Frasier syndrome (FS) are at increased risk of Wilms tumor and end‐stage renal disease. We investigated whether Wilms tumors in these patients displayed a specific phenotype or behavior and whether nephron‐sparing surgery was beneficial.

Procedure

We retrospectively studied all patients with DDS, FS, or other WT1 mutations treated at our institutions between 1980 and 2007.

Results

We identified 20 patients, of whom 18 had benign or malignant tumors. Wilms tumors occurred in 15 patients, being unilateral in 10 and bilateral in 5 (20 tumors). Median age at Wilms tumor diagnosis was 9 months. No patients had metastases. According to the International Society of Pediatric Oncology Working Classification, there were 19 intermediate‐risk tumors and one high‐risk tumor; no tumor was anaplastic. In patients with nephropathy who underwent unilateral nephrectomy for Wilms tumor or nephron‐sparing surgery for bilateral Wilms tumor, mean time to dialysis was 11 or 9 months, respectively. Other tumors included three gonadoblastomas (in two patients), one retroperitoneal soft‐tissue tumor, and one transitional cell papilloma of the bladder. Two patients, both with stage I Wilms tumor, died from end‐stage renal disease‐related complications. The median follow‐up time for the 18 survivors was 136 months (range, 17–224 months).

Conclusion

Most Wilms tumors in children with WT1‐related disorders were early‐stage and intermediate‐risk tumors, with a young age at diagnosis. In patients without end‐stage renal disease, nephron‐sparing surgery should be considered for delaying the onset of renal failure. Pediatr Blood Cancer 2009;52:55–59. © 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

20.
Ependymomas comprise about 10% of all pediatric brain tumors. The most consistent prognostic factor for cure has been the extent of surgical resection. Radiation therapy is considered the standard adjuvant treatment, although there has been no randomized trial comparing surgery alone to surgery and postoperative radiotherapy. Craniospinal irradiation has been used in the past to treat these tumors; however, current data indicate that the most common pattern of failure is an isolated local relapse. Furthermore, prophylactic spinal irradiation has not been shown to prevent spinal dissemination. For this reason, most radiation oncologists currently employ localized radiotherapy fields. Available data indicate that doses greater than 45-50 Gy are needed and associated with better local control. Preliminary data using hyperfractionated radiotherapy doses of greater than 65 Gy indicate an improvement in progression-free survival for subtotally respected ependymoma. Chemotherapy can be used to delay institution of radiotherapy in children less than 3 years of age. The role of chemotherapy in older children needs to be further defined.  相似文献   

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