The clinical and pathologic features of 32 children and adolescents with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) are reviewed. Their average age at diagnosis was 9.7 years (range, 5 months to 21 years) and there was a slight predilection for males in a ratio of 1.7 to one. Of eight patients with associated or underlying abnormalities, five had cirrhosis, two had an antecedent (or coexisting) tumor fulfilling pathologic criteria for hepatic adenoma, and one developed HCC ten years after nephrectomy and radiation therapy for a Wilms' tumor. Our data reaffirm the high mortality associated with HCC (91%). Three of five tumors classified as fibrolamellar type were amenable to surgical resection while only 15% of the remaining HCC were operable. The average duration of disease for patients with conventional HCC was 4.2 months, while those with the fibrolamellar variant had a more lingering course (average, 28.5 months). Available data indicate that the fibrolamellar variant should be distinguished from HCC with more conventional histology because of greater resectability and improved overall survival.
One of the hallmarks of the hyperglycemic-hyperinsulinemic infant of the diabetic mother (IDM) is macrosomia and selective organomegaly. Primary hyperinsulinemia, with insulin levels similar to those observed in human IDMs at delivery, was produced in the fetal rhesus monkey during the last third of gestation. The effects of this physiologically relevant hyperinsulinemia, in the absence of hyperglycemia, on fetal growth were studied. Fetal macrosomia, with a 23% increase in total body weight, was observed in physiologically hyperinsulinemic fetuses. A similar 27% increase in weight was produced by fetal insulin levels that were 10 times higher. A logarithmic correlation was observed between fetal birth weight ratio and fetal plasma insulin concentration. In contrast to this increase in weight, skeletal growth, as measured by crown-heel length and head circumference, was not affected by hyperinsulinemia. Only cardiomegaly was found in the low-dose hyperinsulinemic fetuses, whereas cardiomegaly, hepatomegaly, and splenomegaly were produced by hyperinsulinemia in which insulin levels were in the highest range. Compositional analysis of heart and skeletal muscle indicated no differences in the protein, RNA and DNA concentration, or in the protein-to-DNA ratio in hyperinsulinemic fetuses. We interpret these data as indicating that fetal insulin plays the predominant role in controlling the normal, as well as the augmented, fetal weight characteristic of the human infant of the diabetic mother.
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