6-Thioguanine-induced chronic hepatotoxicity is a significant complication in children treated with this agent for ALL. Children may present several months to years after discontinuation of 6-thioguanine. All children given maintenance treatment of ALL with this agent should be screened, and affected children require long-term surveillance.
Children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia in whom relapse in bone marrow occurs have a poor outlook when treated with chemotherapy alone. Twenty‐seven patients with childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia were treated for marrow relapse with high‐dose chemotherapy with or without total body irradiation followed by bone marrow transplantation (BMT). Twenty patients received allogeneic marrow from partially or completely matched histocompatible donors. In this group, nine patients (45%) were free of disease with a median follow‐up of 57 months (range, 22 to 126 months) after transplantation, four (20%) died from interstitial pneumonitis and seven (35%) died after a further relapse. Seven patients received autologous marrow collected while they were in remission. In this group, one patient died from infection and six died after a further relapse. We conclude that allogeneic BMT is more effective than autologous transplantation and results in long‐term disease‐free survival in a significant number of patients. New methods are needed to eradicate residual disease in the patient and to purge marrow ex vivo.
ObjectiveTo determine the survival for children with malignant disease diagnosed in the period 1964‐1987 and treated in a single paediatric oncology unit.
DesignRecords of patients treated by the Department of Haematology and Oncology at the Prince of Wales Children's Hospital were reviewed to determine the survival of children with cancer according to decade of diagnosis and diagnostic group.
PatientsPatients were eligible for the study if referred for treatment at or soon after diagnosis of malignancy. One thousand patients were treated during the study period. There were 363 with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL), 126 with tumours of the central nervous system (CNS), 86 with acute non‐lymphoblastic leukaemia (ANLL), 81 with lymphoma, 79 with neural crest tumours, 69 with renal tumours, 66 with bone sarcomas, 53 with soft tissue sarcomas, and 77 with various other diagnoses. Age range was one day to 20.75 years.
InterventionsTreatment included surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy in a variety of protocols.
ResultsTen‐year survival for the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s was 15%, 51% and 64% respectively (P < 0.001), excluding tumours of the CNS. From 1985 onwards, actual survival at five years has been 79%. Survival from Wilms' tumour and Hodgkin's disease remained high throughout the study period, and significant improvement in survival occurred with ALL, non‐Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) and osteogenic sarcoma. Survival remained poor with neuroblastoma and ANLL.
ConclusionsSignificant improvement in outcomes for childhood malignancy has been achieved over the last three decades, with five‐year survival currently at 79% (excluding tumours of the CNS). Some diagnostic groups have had only small improvements in outcome and require new strategies. (Med J Aust 1993; 159: 453‐458)
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