Our study showed that whole-body FDG-PET is an efficient and useful method for the initial staging of children with HD. FDG-PET in combination with lung CT should be recommended as a screening method prior to other conventional imaging modalities to plan a rational staging protocol. Large multicentre prospective studies are necessary to verify this conclusion.
The objective of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of 2-chlorodeoxyadenosine (2-CdA), a purine nucleoside analog, in treating recurrent Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH) in children. This study retrospectively analysed the clinical records of 13 patients who were seen in the department for recurrent LCH. These patients were treated consecutively with 2-CdA chemotherapy between July 1997 and May 2005. Median age at diagnosis was 4 years 7 months and median pre-treatment duration of disease was 16.4 months. Four children received 0.1 mg kg-1 per day for 7 days and nine patients 5 mg m-2 per day for 5 days, repeated every 21 days. The maximum number of courses of 2-CdA per patient was limited to six. Seventy-six courses of 2-CdA were administered without difficulty. All 13 patients (100%) had a clinical response documented by radiographic investigation. Nine patients did not require additional therapy and remain in complete remission (CR). Four remaining children are currently disease-free after receiving other therapy as irradiation (two cases) or maintenance chemotherapy (vinblastine, prednisone and 6-mercaptopurine) (one case) or chemotherapy (vinblastine) + irradiation (one child) ( Table I). Hematologic toxicity was minimal and no infectious complications were documented. Median follow-up after initiation of 2-CdA treatment was 4 years 3 months (range 7 months - 8 years 2 months). This experience confirms the reported efficacy of 2-CdA in the treatment of LCH. However, further studies are needed to determine the role of this agent in high-risk patient who did not achieve complete remission after 2-CdA administration.
Childhood rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) has two major histological subtypes: alveolar (aRMS) and embryonal. The aim of the study was to monitor minimal disseminated disease (MDD) using real-time quantitative reverse-transcription PCR (RQ-RT-PCR) of the PAX3-FKHR, PAX7-FKHR fusion genes and myoD1 gene. We prepared an assay using RQ-RT-PCR for a quantitative assessment of MDD in aRMS by using hydrolysis probe for quantification of PAX3-FKHR, PAX7-FKHR and myoD1 genes and beta-2-microglobulin housekeeping gene. Primary tumor samples (44), samples of local recurrences (26) from 48 patients with aRMS were examined by nested RT-PCR and RQ-RT-PCR techniques. Additionally, bone marrow samples (115), peripheral blood progenitor cell samples (27), and peripheral blood samples (25) from 33 aRMS patients were tested. PAX3/7-FKHR and myoD1 transcripts proved to be a sensitive tool for detection of MDD in RMS. We were able to identify 15/25 patients with bone marrow (BM) involvement at the time of presentation using RQ-RT-PCR. We analyzed PAX3-FKHR or PAX7-FKHR expression during the course of the disease. The RQ-RT-PCR results correlated well with nested RT-PCR results (p < 0.0001). The presence of metastases is the most adverse prognostic factor in RMS, and bone marrow is a frequent site of the tumor dissemination in RMS, especially in aRMS. Our results detecting the fusion transcripts or myoD1 transcript in the BM or peripheral blood suggest that patients with positive findings are at high risk of the tumor progression.
Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH) affecting child vulva alone is a very rare disease. Only 13 cases of primary vulvar LCH have been previously reported in the medical literature. We describe an additional case in which the LCH was confined to the vulva, with review of the literature. A 16.5-year-old girl presented with papulous and ulcerative lesions on her labia majora and minora. The biopsy revealed a typical histopathologic finding consistent with LCH. A metastatic work-up did not reveal any evidence of the disease except on the vulva. Treatment was carried out according to LCH II protocol. The patient was diagnosed with a recurrent disorder in the vulva 8 months after the completion of primary chemotherapy. For this reason, she underwent second line treatment with 2-chlorodeoxyadenosine. Eighteen months after the second line chemotherapy, the patient has no signs of a local or systemic recurrence. Primary LCH of vulva is very unusual, but we have to keep in mind this possibility when an adolescent girl presents with an atypical chronic lesion on the vulva. This patient appears to be the first case of adolescent 16.5 year old having a solely cutaneous lesion of the vulva.
Rhabdomyosarcoma is the most common soft tissue sarcoma of childhood. There are two major histopathological types of RMS – embryonal (eRMS) and alveolar (aRMS). A molecular study of Igf2, MyoD1 and Myogenin was performed to determine the expression profiles and to assess the possible utility of these genes as potential treatment targets. Patients with RMS showed up to 100-fold increase of Igf2 transcription in comparison with normal skeletal muscle. Our data suggest that overexpression of Igf2 occurs in RMS of both histological subtypes. No correlation between the results of Igf2 mRNA expression and LOH at the 11p15 region (p= 0.12) was observed, but there was a trend of a higher expression of Igf2 mRNA in RMS samples with LOH. We observed a high level of MyoD1 mRNA in both aRMS and eRMS, and we detected a similar level of MyoD1 mRNA in RMS and normal skeletal muscles. There was a correlation between the results of MyoD1 mRNA expression and LOH at the 11p15 region.We did not observe any statistical difference in the level of Myogenin mRNA in the subgroups of RMS. Analogous to MyoD1, we observed a similar level of Myogenin mRNA in RMS and normal skeletal muscles.
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