RCC is a rare disease in children and adolescents. This neoplasm has a different clinical presentation in children compared with adults but the same outcome. In our experience, patients with localized disease could be cured by nephrectomy alone. Prospective studies in a larger number of patients are needed to confirm radiation therapy and biologic response modifiers as effective adjunct therapy in RCC stage III. The alternative therapy seems warranted in patients with advanced disease.
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.
PPB is an aggressive neoplasm. Total resection of PPB performed at any time of treatment appears to provide a better outcome, whereas extrapulmonary involvement at diagnosis worsens the prognosis.
The fact that anthracyclines are cardiotoxic seriously narrows their therapeutic index in cancer therapy. The cardiotoxic risk increases with the cumulative dose and may lead to congestive heart failure (CHF) and dilated cardiomyopathy in adults and in children. The prevention of anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity is particularly important in children who can be expected to survive for decades after being cured of their malignancy. Attempts to reduce anthracycline cardiotoxicity have been directed towards: (i) decreasing myocardial concentrations of anthracyclines and their metabolites by dose limitation and schedule modification; (ii) developing less cardio-toxic analogs; and (iii) concurrently administering cardioprotective agents to attenuate the effects of anthracyclines on the heart. As regards schedule modification, avoidance of anthracycline peak levels may reduce the pathologic and clinical cardiotoxicity, although this has not always been observed. The analogs of doxorubicin, such as idarubicin and epirubicin, have similar cardiotoxicity to that of doxorubicin when given in amounts of equivalent myelotoxicity. Liposomal anthracyclines are a new class of agents that may permit more specific organ targeting, thereby producing less systemic and cardiac toxicity, but more studies are required to assess the advantages, if any, of these preparations over classical anthracyclines. The cardioprotective agent, dexrazoxane, an iron chelator, is highly effective and provides short-term cardioprotection to most patients receiving even the most intensive doxorubicin-containing regimens. Its long-term benefits remain to be determined. In addition, data remain insufficient to make specific recommendations regarding current use of dexrazoxane in children. It is thought that subtle abnormalities, related to anthracycline treatment in childhood, can develop into more permanent myocardial disease resulting in cardiomyopathy, which may progress to CHF. As regards the therapy of patients with anthracycline cardiotoxicity, two different situations have, therefore, to be considered: (i) if the patient presents with cardiac abnormalities, such as a reduction in fractional shortening at echocardiogram, without cardiac symptoms; and (ii) if the patient has CHF. In the presence of CHF, recovery with digitalis-diuretic therapy alone seldom occurs, and in patients who have refractory hemodynamic decompensation, heart transplantation is indicated. In patients with CHF, therapy with ACE inhibitors induces improvement in left ventricular structure and function, but this improvement is transient. Randomized clinical trials are, therefore, necessary to determine the effects of ACE inhibitors in mild-to-moderate left ventricular dysfunction. The beneficial effects of beta-adrenoceptor antagonists (beta-blockers) on cardiac function in heart failure due to anthracyclines seem comparable with those observed in other forms of heart failure with systolic dysfunction. Many drugs are available to treat children with CHF due to anthracycline t...
The authors thank Dr. Gloria Tridello for her assistance with the statistical analysis and Ms. Ilaria Zecchini for her assistance with data management.The following institutions and investigators participated in the current
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