The COVID-19 pandemic has surprised the entire population. The world has had to face an unprecedented pandemic. Only, Spanish flu had similar disastrous consequences. As a result, drastic measures (lockdown) have been adopted worldwide. Healthcare service has been overwhelmed by the extraordinary influx of patients, often requiring high intensity of care. Mortality has been associated with severe comorbidities, including chronic diseases. Patients with frailty were, therefore, the victim of the SARS-COV-2 infection. Allergy and asthma are the most prevalent chronic disorders in children and adolescents, so they need careful attention and, if necessary, an adaptation of their regular treatment plans. Fortunately, at present, young people are less suffering from COVID-19, both as incidence and severity. However, any age, including infancy, could be affected by the pandemic. Based on this background, the Italian Society of Pediatric Allergy and Immunology has felt it necessary to provide a Consensus Statement. This expert panel consensus document offers a rationale to help guide decision-making in the management of children and adolescents with allergic or immunologic diseases.
To evaluate the incidence of second malignant tumors in a cohort of subjects previously treated for childhood cancer, we analyzed data from the Off-Therapy Registry (OTR) of the Italian Association of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology, which collects information on children treated for Hodgkin's disease, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, Wilms' tumor, acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and acute non-lymphatic leukemia and who had been removed from treatment in the absence of clinical signs of disease, i.e. the off-therapy stage. Second malignant tumors (SMT), diagnosed before December 31, 1988, were identified through a special enquiry to the 36 institutions cooperating in the registry. Observed cases were compared to expected numbers estimated from age- and sex-specific incidence rates derived from the Cancer Registry of the Province of Varese. In a total of 3,310 study subjects, 27 SMTs have been registered. The Cumulative Risk (CR) of SMT was 2.9% 15 years after the end of treatment and the Standard Incidence Ratio (SIR) was 10.8. The ALL sub-cohort had the highest risk of SMT (SIR 13.6) and 9 cases of CNS tumor occurred in this group (SIR 58.9). All 9 had received prophylactic cranial radiotherapy (CRT) and 5 had been treated on one protocol, characterized by low-dose intrathecal methotrexate (IT MTX) given monthly for 2 years after CRT. The Off-Therapy Registry has unique criteria for inclusion; direct comparisons with similar studies are therefore somewhat problematic. However, our data suggest that the risk of SMT in childhood ALL cancer survivors may be greater than previously reported, and that CNS tumors are the most common SMT in this group. The administration schedule of IT MTX may be an important risk factor.
The outcome of 171 children with ALL who relapsed for the first time after elective cessation of therapy (1-86 mo) and followed over 10 years (median 60 mo; range 1-232 mo) has been evaluated. One hundred and three patients relapsed in the bone marrow (BM), 29 in the testis (T), 21 in the central nervous system (CNS), 14 in the BM plus another site and 4 in other sites. Second remission was achieved in 97% of patients (97% BM, 100% T, 90% CNS, respectively) with reinduction schedules including three or more drugs. All but 4 out of 100 patients who relapsed in the BM received cranial reprophylaxis with intrathecal CT alone or CT plus radiotherapy. Seven patients in second CR underwent allogeneic bone marrow transplantation from an HLA matched sibling. The overall survival was 34% and disease-free survival (DFS) probability at 100 years was 22%. A second relapse was observed in 73% of patients. Forty children are alive in second continuous remission and 24 are alive after a second or subsequent relapse. Patients with isolated T relapse showed a significant better outcome than those with BM or CNS involvement. Most patients (62%) with isolated BM relapse showed a further disease recurrence in BM, and DFS was shorter when relapse occurred within 12 months from off-therapy. Eighty-two patients in second CR stopped the treatment a second time and showed a survival and DFS probabilities, respectively, of 69% and 43%. Thus, children with ALL who relapse after cessation of therapy still have a high risk of further late relapses and should be treated with intensive chemotherapy and CNS reprophylaxis. BMT must be considered for all patients relapsing in the BM within 12 months from off-therapy.
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