. The local Ethics Committee approved the protocol. We analyzed data from all the 159 patients admitted in the study period with suspected iron overload based on high TS (above 55% in men and 45% in women) and/or SF (> 322 ng/mL), who had undergone MRI-T2* for heart, liver, spleen, and/or pancreas iron overload and had been screened for the presence of HFE mutations by allele-specific PCR (polymerase chain reaction). The calculations of liver iron concentration (LIC) values were based on liver MRI-T2* measurements, using the Thalassemia-Tools software (Cardiovascular Imaging Solutions, London, UK).Mutations in the HFE gene were identified in 109/159 (68.6%) patients. The most common mutation in our sample was H63D, present in 91 patients (57.2%): 14 (8.8%) were homozygous, 69 (43.4%) heterozygous, and 8 (5%) compound heterozygous for C282Y/H63D. For the C282Y mutation, in contrast, only 5 patients (3.1%) were homozygous and 11 (6.9%) were heterozygous. The S65C mutation was detected in heterozygous state in 2 (2.5%) cases.All 159 patients underwent abdominal MRI-T2* and 126 underwent cardiac MRI-T2* too. Only 3 out of 126 cardiac MRIs had a positive T2* result, mild cardiac overload (T2*: 18.98, 19.14, and 19.8 ms). Of these, two patients had the H63D mutation (1 homozygous and 1 heterozygous) and one patient did not have any of the mutations studied. In the liver, 61 (38.4%) patients had iron overload (T2*: < 11.4 ms and LIC > 2.0 mg/g) of which 57 (35.8%) were light (T2*: 3.83-11.4 ms and LIC: 2.01-6.86 mg/g), and four (2.5%) moderate (T2*: 2.0-3.8 ms and LIC: 7.06-13.56 mg/g). Of these patients with liver overload, 27.9% were C282Y carriers (8.2% homozygous, 11.5% heterozygous, and 8.2% compound heterozygous C282Y/H63D), and 50.8% carried the H63D mutation (14.8% in homozygosis and 36.1% in heterozygosis). Only 12 (19.7%) patients with liver overload did not have the HFE mutation.The presence of C282Y mutation (in either homo or heterozygosis), compound heterozygous (C282/H63D), and H63D in homozygosis was significantly associated with a higher frequency of iron overload in the liver as measured by T2* (P 5 0.001). However, this was not true in patients with H63D in heterozygosis or absence of mutation (P 5 0.42), in which overload frequency was 68.4% and 29.1%, respectively.Pancreatic overload was diagnosed in 33 patients (21%), and 56 patients (35.7%) had splenic overload (Table I). The presence of the C282Y was associated with an overall higher frequency of iron overload. There was also a relatively high frequency (37.3%) of abnormal T2* values in H63D mutants both in the liver and in the spleen, and the frequency of splenic iron overload in H63D mutants was similar to that associated with the C282Y mutation.SF results were available for 152 patients. Median SF was 647 ng/mL (72-13,625), and in 138 patients (90.8%) SF was abnormally high. Overall, in 28 patients (18.2%) serum levels were higher than 1,000 ng/mL, in 80 patients (54%) they varied from 501 to 1,000 ng/mL and in 30 (20.3%) they ranged from 324...
BACKGROUNDPatients affected by neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) are at higher risk of developing soft‐tissue sarcomas (STS) than the general population. The clinical findings and outcome in 43 children and adolescents with NF1 treated for STS in the Italian protocols between 1988 and 2004 are reported.METHODSThe study included 37 patients with neurogenic sarcomas (36 malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors [MPNST], 1 triton tumor) and 6 cases of rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS). The prevalence of NF1 observed during the study period was 43% in the MPNST population and 1% in the RMS group.RESULTSMost patients with neurogenic sarcomas had large, invasive tumors. Five‐year event‐free and overall survival rates were 19% and 28%, respectively. Two of 16 patients with evaluable disease responded to chemotherapy. All 6 RMS patients were ≤3 years old and had embryonal subtype, 5 of 6 arising in the genitourinary tract or pelvis (paravesical); 4 were alive in first remission at the time of the analysis, 1 was alive in second remission after a local recurrence, and 1 died of disease.CONCLUSIONSThe occurrence of STS in pediatric patients with NF1 syndrome in Italy is discussed, confirming that NF1 patients have a high risk of developing STS, and particularly MPNST, often with an aggressive clinical presentation and poor outcome. Cases of RMS tended to have particular features (early age, embryonal histotype, genitourinary site) and their outcome seemed to resemble that of the general RMS population. Cancer 2007 © 2007 American Cancer Society.
Pearson syndrome (PS) is a very rare and often fatal multisystemic mitochondrial disorder involving the liver, kidney, pancreas, and hematopoietic and central nervous system. It is characterized principally by a transfusion-dependent anemia that usually improves over time, a tendency to develop severe infections, and a high mortality rate. We describe a group of 11 PS patients diagnosed in Italy in the period 1993-2014. The analysis of this reasonably sized cohort of patients contributes to the clinical profile of the disease and highlights a rough incidence of 1 case/million newborns. Furthermore, it seems that some biochemical parameters like increased serum alanine and urinary fumaric acid can help to address an early diagnosis.
Hepatopathy-thrombocytopenia syndrome (HTS) is a severe complication very similar to vein occlusive disease (VOD), also known as hepatic sinusoidal obstructive syndrome (SOS), characterized by fever, hepatopathy (hepatomegaly with abnormal liver function tests), ascites, weight gain, jaundice, and thrombocytopenia (platelet count less than 25 × 10(3)/μL). It has been generally observed in patients with Wilms tumor, and is commonly associated to administration of actinomycin D. We report three children with Wilms tumor, with severe HTS/SOS, but had a different outcome, in spite of vigorous supportive therapy.
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