Cancer in neonates and infants is a rare but challenging entity. Treatment is complicated by marked physiological changes during the first year of life, excess rates of toxicity, mortality, and late effects. Dose optimisation of chemotherapeutics may be an important step to improving outcomes. Body sizeebased dosing is used for most anticancer drugs used in infants. However, dose regimens are generally not evidence based, and dosing strategies are frequently inconsistent between tumour types and treatment protocols. In this review,
Low grade gliomas (LGG), including pilocytic astrocytoma (PCA), are the commonest paediatric brain tumours and their behaviour is well understood, typically following a benign course. BRAF fusion is common, particularly in PCA of the cerebellum and optic pathway. Here we present two patients whose LGG behaved in an unusual fashion. The first patient who was treated 6 years previously on LGG2 with vincristine and carboplatin for a tectal plate lesion was identified on routine imaging to have local tumour progression and underwent completion staging. This showed a new enhancing soft tissue abnormality within the spinal cord at the level of L2. Due to radiological dubiety both lesions were biopsied for histological and molecular analysis, confirming LGG of the tectal plate and finding the spinal lesion to be a myxopapillary ependymoma. The second patient presented with acute hydrocephalus following a 2 year history of neurocognitive impairments. He was found to have a large, complex tumour centred in and expanding the bodies of both lateral ventricles with significant mass effect. Radiologically this was most in keeping with a central neurocytoma but histological analysis confirmed it to be a PCA with KIAA1549-BRAF fusion. The first case demonstrates the utility of molecular analysis in confirming two distinct tumour types in one patient, in a situation where metastasis would not be expected and would significantly alter treatment and prognosis. The second is an example of how imaging can be misleading in a KIAA1549-BRAF fused PCA presenting as an intraventricular mass.
Infantile myofibroma is a rare, benign tumour of infancy typically managed surgically. In a minority of cases, more aggressive disease is seen and chemotherapy with vinblastine and methotrexate may be used, although evidence for this is limited. Chemotherapy dosing in infants is challenging, and vinblastine disposition in infants is unknown. We describe the use of vinblastine therapeutic drug monitoring in four cases of infantile myofibroma. Marked inter-and intrapatient variability was observed, highlighting the poorly understood pharmacokinetics of vinblastine in children, the challenges inherent in treating neonates, and the role of adaptive dosing in optimising drug exposure in challenging situations.
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