An 11-year-old boy with multiply relapsed lymphoblastic disease became transfusion dependent with myelodysplasia and chromosomal abnormalities after 5 years of aggressive therapy. At 5 years of age, he presented with transient idiopathic hypoplastic anemia and neutropenia that spontaneously resolved within a month. Three months later, he experienced lymphoblastic lymphoma in the left parotid region and subsequently experienced disease relapse in his testicles, bone marrow, and central nervous system during a 3-year period. He has received multiagent chemotherapy, autologous peripheral blood stem-cell transplantation, and testicular and whole neuraxis irradiation therapy. After craniospinal irradiation, he did not recover normal bone marrow function. His bone marrow was hypocellular, and he required platelet and erythrocyte transfusions and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor. Marrow cytogenetic studies revealed new multiple translocations. Within a month of the initiation of intravenous amifostine at 200 mg/m2/dose three times a week, his leukocyte count, neutrophil count, and hemoglobin level normalized. His platelet count also improved sufficiently to achieve transfusion independence. He has returned to school and engages in other normal activities for his age. Amifostine may improve hematopoiesis in secondary myelodysplastic syndromes in children.
Malignant mesothelioma (MM) is a highly aggressive malignancy that is extremely rare in children. This case report documents a 7-year-old male without previous asbestos exposure with peritoneal MM that initially responded to chemotherapy with cisplatin and gemcitabine but ultimately metastasized to his chest. He was diagnosed with MM based on histology, extensive immunohistochemical analyses, and an elevated serum CA-125 level. Cytogenetics and comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) analysis of his tumor identified a single extra copy number of chromosome 11 with few other changes noted.
A 17-year-old patient with sickle cell-beta thalassemia undergoing treatment with home iron chelation therapy inadvertently received ten times the recommended dose of intravenous deferoxamine. Acute renal failure (ARF) developed within hours. Immediate treatment with high-efficiency hemodialysis resulted in the prompt return of renal function after only one hemodialysis session. No long-term nephrotoxic effects of the deferoxamine overdose developed after more than 1 year of follow-up. Children with sickle cell disease who are on intravenous deferoxamine and their parents should be cautioned about the possibility of ARF with overdose due to malfunction of the pump and/or inadequate monitoring during treatment. ARF, should it occur in such children, appears to respond well to treatment with highefficiency hemodialysis.
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