Central nervous system medulloepitheliomas are extremely rare and malignant (World Health Organization Grade IV) primitive neuroectodermal tumors (PNETs) that arise in childhood. Unlike other PNETs, medulloepitheliomas have a dismal prognosis, with only 2 reported cases in the literature in which the patient survived beyond 5 years after treatment. The authors report on the third known case of a child who survived longer than 5 years. A review of all the published cases of medulloepithelioma is also presented, and alternative treatment strategies for PNET tumors, including high-dose chemotherapy with stem-cell rescue, are discussed.
A female neonate with diffuse hemangiomatosis and hepatic hemangiomas had cardiac insufficiency develop and had failure to thrive. Her disease was unresponsive to prednisone. She received two courses of cyclophosphamide 10 days apart and a final course 2.5 weeks later. Twelve days after the second course of cyclophosphamide, her liver was significantly smaller. She is now 6-years-old, well-developed, and has no signs of hepatomegaly, malnourishment, or heart failure. Cyclophosphamide appears to be a safe, effective, and rapid treatment of life-threatening hemangiomas of infancy.
Peripheral blood stem cells (PBSCs) are being used as an alternative to autologous marrow rescue for hematopoietic reconstitution after high- dose chemotherapy in patients with neuroblastoma and other solid malignancies. Use of PBSCs is preferred by some because of the belief that there is less risk of tumor contamination. Because tumor stem cell contamination is thought to be one contributing cause of relapse after myeloablative therapy and autologous reconstitution, we examined the potential risk of reinfusing circulating neuroblastoma cells by in vitro evaluation of their clonogenicity. Immunocytologic and tumor cell clonogenic analyses were performed on 74 blood samples obtained from 56 children with advanced-stage neuroblastoma. Concurrently drawn bone marrow specimens were evaluated in 30 instances. Circulating neoplastic cells were detected in 19 of 74 (26%) for all specimens and by immunologic techniques (26%). Using a clonogenic assay, 13 grew identifiable tumor colonies. Comparing results with the two techniques showed tumor colony growth in 10 of the 19 positive specimens by immunocytology. However, 3 of 53 samples (6%) that were negative by immunocytology were positive by the clonogenic assay. Of the 11 positive blood samples, 9 concurrent marrows contained neuroblastoma cells; of the 19 negative blood specimens, 3 concurrent marrows had metastatic disease. We conclude that circulating neuroblastoma cells are present in peripheral blood and have clonogenic properties in vitro. This supports the view that tumor cell contamination may well be one cause of relapse after autologous reconstitution. Consequently, PBSC collections should also undergo meticulous monitoring for tumor contamination before autologous reinfusion.
Transient myeloproliferative disease (TMD) is often associated with a trisomy 21 cell line, but it is not always associated with clinical signs of Down syndrome. We report on a phenotypically normal newborn boy who presented with a high white blood cell count, undifferentiated blasts, and cutaneous leukemic infiltrates and compare this patient with the literature on TMD and trisomy 21. Chromosome analysis of bone marrow, and subsequently of skin fibroblasts, documented constitutional mosaicism for trisomy 21. A decrease in the frequency of blast cells paralleled a decrease in cells demonstrating trisomy 21 in hematopoietic tissues, and a complete clinical recovery was seen without the use of chemotherapy. Recognition of this transient form of congenital leukemia is important to prevent the unnecessary use of toxic chemotherapeutic agents in such patients.
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