Purpose of Review Chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting (CINV) is a common cause of acute morbidity that impacts quality of life in children receiving cancer treatment. Here, we review the evolution of CINV prophylaxis guidelines in children, with an emphasis on the literature published in the last 5 years, to bring the reader up to date. Recent Findings Recent studies have led to the adoption of the "triple therapy" regimen of antiemetic prophylaxis (a 5-HT3 antagonist, dexamethasone, and a neurokinin-1 antagonist) as the backbone of recommendations for the prevention of CINV in children. Areas of new data include the addition of aprepitant and inclusion of palonosetron as a non-inferior 5-HT3 antagonist. In addition, there are emerging pediatric data informing patient-derived risk factors associated with CINV risk and classification of antineoplastic drugs based on emetogenicity. Summary Several recent pediatric studies have shaped published guidelines for CINV prophylaxis in children. Keywords Nausea. Vomiting. Antiemetic. Chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting. CINV. Supportive care. Guidelines Classification of Drugs by Emetogenicity The inherent emetogenicity of a drug regimen is the basis of current guidelines addressing CINV prophylaxis in children. Cancer drugs are classified as either minimal, low, medium, or This article is part of the Topical Collection on Pediatric Oncology
Key Points Question In children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia receiving oral mercaptopurine, can an intervention consisting of education and daily text message reminders to prompt directly supervised therapy result in a higher proportion of patients with mercaptopurine adherence 95% or higher, compared with education alone? Findings In this parallel-group, unblinded, randomized clinical trial including 444 children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia, the proportion of patients with mercaptopurine adherence rates 95% or higher did not differ between the intervention and education groups. In exploratory analyses, children aged 12 years and older with baseline adherence less than 90% had higher mean adherence in the intervention group. Meaning This study provides evidence for limiting future trials to older children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia who have low baseline adherence to oral mercaptopurine.
Vitamin B12 deficiency is a known cause of megaloblastic anemia and bone marrow failure. Bone marrow biopsies are not frequently performed as part of the diagnostic workup and can demonstrate morphologic features that overlap with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and acute leukemia. We describe a case of a dysplastic bone marrow with increased bone marrow hematogones detected by flow cytometry in a child with vitamin B12 deficiency. Hematogones are normal B cell precursors, and hyperplasia has been described in a variety of often reactive conditions and also disease. Hematogones are not typically seen in MDS. The presence of hematogones may help differentiate the dysplastic changes seen in vitamin B12 deficiency from MDS.
10007 Background: We previously reported that > 40% of children with ALL are non-adherent to 6MP, and > 52% of ALL relapses are attributable to 6MP non-adherence. The most common barrier is forgetting to take 6MP; the most common facilitator is parental vigilance. These observations informed a randomized trial to enhance 6MP adherence (COG-ACCL1033, #NCT01503632; 89 COG sites). Results are described here. Methods: The Intervention Package (IP) consisted of: i) Education; ii) 6MP schedules; iii) daily personalized text message reminders from physician to patient and caregiver, to prompt iv) directly supervised therapy (DST), with text back response by patient/caregiver. Baseline adherence was measured for 4 wks, followed by intervention for 16 wks to examine the impact of IP vs. Edu (education) on 6MP adherence (measured electronically by MEMs Cap) in all patients, ≥12yo, < 12yo. Longitudinal binomial logistic regression using generalized estimating equations was used. Missing data were handled by multiple imputation. Results: 444 patients were randomly assigned to IP (n = 230) or Edu (n = 214). Baseline characteristics (age at study: 8.6y vs 7.5y; males: 67% vs 69%; non-Hispanic whites: 40% vs 42%) and adherence rates (92% vs 94%) were comparable (except paternal education: 49% vs 38%, p = 0.04). No study arm*time interaction was found; thus, the 16-week overall mean fitted adherence rates were compared between IP and Edu, adjusting for baseline adherence, time on study, parental education. All patients: Adherence rates were marginally higher on IP (94% vs 92.5%, p = 0.09). On IP, for times with a record of text response, adherence rates were higher (94%) when compared with times with no response (89%), p = 0.002. < 12yo: Adherence rates were comparable (IP: 94.4% vs Edu: 93.7%, p = 0.5). ≥12yo: Adherence rates were significantly higher on IP (93.1% vs 90.0%, p = 0.037). ≥12yo with baseline adherence < 90%: IP had the highest impact for this subgroup (83.4% vs 74.6%, p = 0.008). Conclusions: A 16-week comprehensive intervention resulted in higher 6MP adherence rates in children with ALL who were 12y or older at study. IP was most impactful in adolescents with baseline non-adherence. Clinical trial information: #NCT01503632.
HighlightsWe reported the first tuberous sclerosis patient with an ovarian yolk sac tumor.Although angiomyolipoma is a common benign tumor in TS patients, abdominal malignancies must be considered.
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