Background: Hepatoblastoma is rare cancer that responds well to risk-based chemotherapy, and surgical treatment is needed to achieve complete remission and satisfactory survival rates in hepatoblastoma patients. In this study, we evaluated the clinical features and treatment outcomes of pediatric hepatoblastoma patients treated in our clinic. Methods: Eighteen patients with hepatoblastoma who were treated and followed up in our center between June 1999 and June 2020 were analyzed retrospectively. All patients were evaluated by a multidisciplinary team and managed using a risk-based protocol (SIOPEL-1 and SIOPEL-3). Results: The patients’ mean age at diagnosis was 38.33 ± 52.34 months. Sixteen patients (89%) received neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and 2 patients (11%) who underwent complete mass excision at diagnosis received adjuvant chemotherapy. After neoadjuvant therapy, the tumor was completely resected in 8 patients (45%), while liver transplantation was performed in 6 patients (34%) because complete resection of the tumor was not possible. Two patients died before surgical treatment. One patient relapsed with lung metastasis after salvage chemotherapy. She is alive without disease at 64 months. The mean follow-up time was 59.3 ± 49.8 months; 5-year overall and disease-free survival rates were 88.9% and 80.8%, respectively. The 5-year overall survival rate was 100% for both liver transplant and resected patients, whereas 5-year disease-free survival was lower in transplant patients (75% vs 100%, P < .001). Conclusion: Multidisciplinary follow-up is especially important for patients who may need liver transplantation. Some patients may benefit from new treatment options such as radiofrequency ablation and cyberknife treatment.
Objective: DUX4 is an embryonic transcription factor (TF) later silenced in somatic tissues, while active in germline testis cells. Re-expression in somatic cells has been revealed to be present in pathologic conditions such as dystrophy, leukemia, and other cancer types. Embryonic cells, cancer cells and testis cells that show DUX4 expression are pluri-multipotent cells. This lead us to question "Could DUX4 be a TF that is active in certain types of potent somatic cells?" As a perfect reflection of the potent cell pool, we aimed to reveal DUX4 expression in the bone marrow. Material and Method:Bone marrow aspiration materials of seven healthy donors aged between 3 and 32 (2 males/5 females) were investigated with qPCR analysis after RNA isolation for the presence of DUX4 full length mRNA expression. Samples have been investigated for protein existence of DUX4 via immunohistochemistry in two donors that had sufficient aspiration material.Results: DUX4 mRNA expression was present in all donors, with higher expression compared to B-actin. DUX4 positive stained cells were also detected by immunohistochemistry. Conclusion:With these results, novel expression for DUX4 in hematopoietic tissue is described. Further studies on the function of DUX4 in hematopoietic cells can shed light on DUX4-related pathways, and contribute to the treatment of DUX4-related diseases such as B-ALL, other cancers, and facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy.
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