Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Clear cell sarcoma of kidney (CCSK) is a rare but distinct tumor of childhood frequently confused with Wilms' tumor (nephroblastoma). It has a characteristic histology, a marked predilection for metastasis to bone, and an aggressive clinical course with a high relapse rate in spite of surgical excision, chemotherapy and radiotherapy. We report the first histologically proven CCSK in a Malaysian patient. This was an 8-mth-old Malay boy who was clinically diagnosed to have stage I Wilms' tumor. Despite treatment, he developed multiple metastases 10 mths after initial presentation and died soon after. Emphasis is placed on recognizing this entity in view of (1) its naturally aggressive behaviour and (2) the prospect of improving prognosis with currently recommended intensified chemotherapeutic regimes. Its immunohistochemical profile of vimentin-positivity and negativity for epithelial membrane antigen, cytokeratin and Factor-8 related antigen is more in favour of a mesenchymal or glomerular origin than a tubular or vascular origin.
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PMID:Clear cell sarcoma of kidney: report of the first Malaysian case. 137 51

We present a 7-month-old male infant with stage I Wilms tumor who unexpectedly died from a catastrophic intracerebral hemorrhage, 4 months after completion of chemotherapy and complete surgical resection of the tumor. The precise etiology underlying the fatal event remains unclear as postmortem was refused, but we postulate spontaneous hemorrhage from an underlying cerebral vascular malformation as the most likely cause, which led to the child's unfortunate demise. Although extremely rare, cerebral vascular anomalies have previously been reported in children with Wilms tumor. The coexistence of the 2 uncommon disorders may be related to their congenital origin. Wilms tumor diagnosed in very young infants have clinical and morphologic attributes that do not pertain in older children and the risk of associated congenital anomalies is also much higher among those discovered in the first year of life. This raises the question whether routine magnetic resonance imaging should not be performed in infants less than a year with Wilms tumor, as part of the initial evaluation, to exclude cerebral metastases and underlying vascular malformations.
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PMID:Catastrophic intracerebral hemorrhage in a young infant with Wilms tumor. 1748 5