Radiotherapy, laminectomy, and chemotherapy showed comparable ability to relieve or improve SCC. However, patients treated with chemotherapy usually did not require additional therapy, whereas patients treated either with radiotherapy or laminectomy commonly did. No patient presenting with (or developing) severe motor deficit recovered or improved. Sequelae were documented in 44% of surviving patients.
Background. Infants (age 0–11 months) with disseminated neuroblastoma are known to have a better prognosis than older children with the disease, but there is little information regarding factors that influence the outcome of the disease in these patients.
Methods. The authors report a series of 110 infants with disseminated neuroblastoma with disease diagnosed between March 1976 and February 1991 in 21 institutions participating in the Italian Cooperative Group on Neuroblastoma (ICGNB). Of the 110 infants, 34 had Stage IV disease, and 76 had Stage IV‐S disease.
Results. The 5‐year survival probability was 77% for all patients, 71% for those with Stage IV disease, and 81% for those with Stage IV‐S disease. Of the 34 infants with Stage IV disease, the 9 who were 5 months or younger at the time of disease diagnosis are all alive (1 with active disease) at 7–143 months after diagnosis, whereas of the 25 infants who were 6–11 months of age at the time of disease diagnosis, 10 have died. Of the 76 infants with Stage IV‐S disease, 12/64 who were 5 months of age or younger at the time of disease diagnosis died (mostly of massive hepatomegaly); 9 of these deaths occurred in infants with disease diagnosed before they were 2 months old, whereas 1 death occurred in the 12 infants with disease diagnosed when they were 6–11 months old. Four infants with Stage IV‐S disease achieved complete disease remission and subsequently had relapse of disease. High levels of serum LDH and low urinary excretion of vanillylmandelic acid were associated with worse prognosis.
Conclusions. The authors suggest that infants older than 6 months of age who have Stage IV disease require aggressive therapy. For infants with disease diagnosed before they are 2 months old, Stage IV‐S disease may have a worse prognosis than Stage IV disease.
In children with unresectable neuroblastoma, risk categories can be defined by age and primary tumor site. HD chemotherapy should be investigated for the poor-risk category age 1 to 15 years with an abdominal primary tumor.
This report deals with a randomized prospective multicentric clinical trial in childhood rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) conducted to evaluate the toxicity and the effectiveness of dactinomycin (ACT-D) administered as high, single doses v five-day, divided doses administered in combination with vincristine (VCR) and cyclophosphamide (CYC). Fifty-five group III evaluable patients (pts) less than 15 years of age with tumor size greater than 5 cm in diameter, without high-risk features of CNS involvement, and 15 group IV RMS pts were randomized to receive VAC as primary chemotherapy (CT): VCR, 1.5 mg/m2 intravenously (IV) days 1 and 8; CYC, 275 mg/m2 IV days 1 through 5; and ACT-D, 0.45 mg/m2 IV days 1 through 5 every 28 days for three cycles (33 pts), or VAC-M: CYC, 150 mg/m2 intramuscularly (IM) days 1 through 7; VCR, 2.0 mg/m2 IV day 8; and ACT-D, 1.7 mg/m2 IV day 8 every 21 days for four cycles (37 pts). Major responses (complete plus partial responses [PR]) were obtained in 67% of the VAC pts and in 70% of the VAC-M pts. Toxic effects were low, and no increased toxicity was observed in pts treated with high, single-dose ACT-D. These results confirm the effectiveness and feasibility of single, high doses of ACT-D with the advantage of requiring less pt hospitalization.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.