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Query: UMLS:C0027819 (
neuroblastoma
)
27,800
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The majority of the common pediatric cancers are managed on clinical protocols and are treated in pediatric oncology centers. For this reason these neoplasms are being staged by a variety of protocols depending on the protocol study. Examples of the evaluation and currently used staging systems for Wilms' tumor,
neuroblastoma
, and
rhabdomyosarcoma
are presented. The goal is to develop a nationally accepted staging system for these common pediatric tumors that is broadly accepted for treatment planning, determining prognosis, and comparing institutional end results. It is obvious that, if a nationally accepted staging system is to evolve, the leadership of the existing national clinic research trials must be part of the process.
...
PMID:Staging of pediatric cancers: problems in the development of a national system. 131 8
Primitive neuroectodermal tumor (PNET) is a small round cell malignancy arising in soft tissue and bone, predominantly in older children and adolescents. We report the cytomorphologic features and findings of ancillary studies of eight fine needle aspiration (FNA) biopsies from three patients (7-year-old male, 12-year-old female, 9-year-old female). Two of the biopsies suggested the initial diagnosis of PNET of the chest wall, while the remaining six documented recurrent or metastatic disease. In one of these cases the primary diagnosis made by FNA biopsy enabled the pediatric oncologists to give specific therapy for the unresectable tumor and achieve remission. Local recurrences included the chest wall (two cases), pleura (one case) and pericardium (one case), while metastatic disease involved the supraclavicular lymph node and breast. All the cases consisted of small malignant cells with a high nuclear/cytoplasmic ratio and hyperchromatic nuclei without prominent nucleoli. Homer Wright rosettes were seen in only two of the aspirates, and neuropil and ganglion cells were not present. Ancillary studies, including electron microscopy (two cases), immunocytochemistry (four aspirates from two cases) and cytogenetics (11/22 translocation, one case) performed on the aspirated material were aids in making a specific diagnosis and excluded other small round cell tumors of childhood, such as malignant lymphoma,
rhabdomyosarcoma
and Ewing's sarcoma. The differential diagnosis between PNET and
neuroblastoma
can be difficult on the basis of an FNA biopsy alone, although light microscopic morphologic differences exist. Clinical features (e.g., age, primary site, metastatic patterns), catecholamine levels, electron microscopy and cytogenetics are necessary in establishing the correct diagnosis.
...
PMID:Fine needle aspiration cytology of primitive neuroectodermal tumors. A report of these cases. 132 99
Neuroblastoma
(NB), primitive neuroectodermal tumor (PNET), Ewing's sarcoma and
rhabdomyosarcoma
(RMS) are solid malignant tumors in childhood. Microscopically these tumors are grouped as small-round-cell tumors, and a different diagnosis is sometimes difficult. Cell surface membrane antigen, cytoskeletal protein and N-myc amplification and over-expression were analyzed in these cell lines and tumor tissues for the accurate diagnosis. NB and PNET could be distinguished from Ewing's sarcoma and RMS by the panel of monoclonal antibodies against cell surface membrane antigens. The cytoskeletal protein analysis is useful for the diagnosis of RMS and leiomyosarcoma. Alpha-smooth muscle actin and/or desmin were demonstrated in the S-type (epithelial-like) cells in 3 NB cell lines, suggesting the differentiation pathway of NB into smooth muscle cells. N-myc amplification and over-expression were observed in NB cell lines as well as one RMS cell line. The occurrence of N-myc amplification and over-expression in the RMS cell line cautions us against using N-myc as a distinguishable marker for NB.
...
PMID:[Analysis of surface membrane antigens, cytoskeletal proteins and N-myc oncogene in pediatric solid malignant tumors, their diagnostic usefulness and relevant problems]. 132 30
Childhood cancer is the leading cause of death from disease in children between 1 and 15 years of age. Since the introduction of modern multimodality therapy, the prognosis for solid tumors has improved dramatically, with 50% to 60% cure rates. Advances in cytogenetic and molecular genetic techniques are now being used for risk-based treatment in various tumors, including
neuroblastoma
and
rhabdomyosarcoma
. Further use of these research tools may lead to a better understanding of oncogenic molecular events, permitting treatment targeted to specific genetic lesions. This article focuses on the clinical features, treatment, and potential future research directions for this diverse group of diseases.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and treatment of the most common solid tumors in childhood. 133 64
P-Glycoprotein (P-gp), the product of the mdr-1 gene, is implicated in the development of chemoresistance in a variety of, mostly adult, cancers. Its role in paediatric tumours, most of which are non-epithelial in origin, has yet to be fully elucidated. A study was undertaken to investigate reactivity of two P-gp monoclonal antibodies (MAbs), JBS-1 and MRK16, recognising cytoplasmic and surface epitopes, respectively, of the P-gp molecule, in a variety of newly diagnosed and relapsed childhood cancers. P-gp was not expressed in any of 36 tumours examined (
neuroblastoma
13, nephroblastoma 12,
rhabdomyosarcoma
6, lymphoma 3, teratoma 1, Ewings 1), 14 of whom had chemoresistant disease. Reactivity to both MAbs was also investigated in patients with acute leukaemia. Out of 10 diagnostic acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) samples, a positive reaction with JSB-1 was observed in 1 patient who failed to remit on standard induction therapy and in 3 of 6 patients in ALL relapse, only 1 of whom showed low grade positivity with MRK16. Both MAbs reacted positively in 1 patient with acute non-lymphocytic leukaemia (ANLL) at diagnosis who achieved remission with teniposide and cytosine arabinoside, but relapsed 7 months later and was again positive with both Mabs. JSB-1 also showed varying degrees of positivity in 4 out of 4 other patients in ANLL relapse. It would therefore appear that P-gp is unlikely to mediate chemoresistance in most solid tumours of childhood, but may well play a major role in the development of chemoresistance in acute leukaemia.
...
PMID:Reactivity of P-glycoprotein monoclonal antibodies in childhood cancers. 135 71
Nine patients who had an osteosarcoma that had developed as a second malignant neoplasm in a previously irradiated site were managed at a major center for the treatment of tumors in children. The doses of radiation had averaged 4144 centigray (range, 2300 to 8000 centigray) and chemotherapy had been administered, when appropriate, for the primary malignant lesion (Ewing sarcoma, malignant fibrous histiocytoma, Hodgkin lymphoma,
neuroblastoma
, neurofibrosarcoma,
rhabdomyosarcoma
, and Wilms tumor). The interval between the initial treatment and the diagnosis of the secondary sarcoma averaged ten years and one month (range, five years and ten months to twenty-one years and nine months). Three patients were alive, two of them with active disease, at the time of writing. The other six had died within three years (average, fifteen months) after the second diagnosis. The prevalence of secondary osteosarcoma is increasing as the survival of children who have a malignant lesion increases. Plans for tumor therapy should take into account the risk of this complication, which is usually fatal.
...
PMID:Osteosarcoma as a second malignant neoplasm in children. 152 94
Cultured human
neuroblastoma
cells can be classified morphologically into 3 types: neuroblastic (N), intermediate (I) and substrate adherent (S).
Neuroblastoma
cells of all types were found to attach and display distinct morphological characteristics on fibronectin, with S-type cells attaching better than N-type cells. Studies of the expression of integrin fibronectin receptors (alpha 3 beta 1, alpha 4 beta 1, alpha 5 beta 1 and alpha V beta 1) were carried out using a total of 26 morphologically distinct cell lines and their subpopulations. Fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) analysis and immunoprecipitation revealed that all S-type cells expressed abundant alpha 5 beta 1, while N-type cells barely expressed this molecule. Although alpha 3 beta 1 expression of S-type cells was also higher than that of N-type cells, some N-type cells had significantly increased levels of this molecule. alpha 4 beta 1 was found to be randomly expressed. All cell lines tested expressed alpha V beta 1. Human
neuroblastoma
cells, the majority of which are N-type cells with very low alpha 5 beta 1 expression, are also contrasted with other childhood cancer cells (
rhabdomyosarcoma
, Ewing's sarcoma, and glioma), all of which expressed high levels of alpha 5 beta 1. The characteristic expression of integrin fibronectin receptors may account for the clinically unique tumor behavior, and the immunohistochemical staining for integrins may become a useful alternative to conventional histology in differential diagnosis and a marker for prognosis in
neuroblastoma
.
...
PMID:Unique expression of integrin fibronectin receptors in human neuroblastoma cell lines. 153 85
Human neural-crest-derived tumor cell lines, including three neuroblastomas, an astrocytoma, a glioblastoma, a
rhabdomyosarcoma
and a melanoma were screened for the expression of the integrin alpha 4 beta 1 (VLA-4). The neuroblastomas IMR-32 and SK-N-SH, the astrocytoma 131-INI, the glioblastoma Fogerty and the
rhabdomyosarcoma
TE-671 expressed alpha 4 beta 1 as determined by cytofluorometry and immunoprecipitation. Another
neuroblastoma
line, LA-N-1, did not express alpha 4 beta 1. Analysis of immunoprecipitated alpha 4 beta 1 showed that the alpha 4 subunit from the various cell types differed in relative molecular weight (M(r)). The variability in the observed M(r) could be accounted for by differences in the levels of N-linked glycosylation. The observed variability in M(r) did not appear to affect function since intact cells and solubilized alpha 4 beta 1 bound to a synthetic peptide identical in sequence to the CS-1 region of the alternatively spliced IIICS domain of fibronectin, a known alpha 4 beta 1 ligand.
...
PMID:Expression and ligand-binding function of the integrin alpha 4 beta 1 (VLA-4) on neural-crest-derived tumor cell lines. 153 75
Ewing's sarcoma is the second most common bone tumor in childhood, with an overall 5-yr survival of 40%. It is one of the poorly differentiated small spherical cell tumors frequently requiring distinction from
rhabdomyosarcoma
,
neuroblastoma
, osteosarcoma, primitive neuroectodermal tumor, and lymphoma. The majority of rhabdomyosarcomas, neuroblastomas, and osteosarcomas are aneuploid, whereas Ewing's sarcomas are usually diploid. To determine whether there is any correlation between DNA content, morphology, site, and survival in Ewing's sarcoma and extraosseous Ewing's sarcoma, 21 tumor samples were studied retrospectively (3 extraosseous Ewing's and 18 Ewing's sarcomas). The DNA analysis was performed on disaggregated paraffin-embedded tissue nuclei by flow (FCM) and image (IC) cytometry and correlated with the histology and clinical history. The DNA ploidy by FCM on 17 of 18 Ewing's sarcoma samples was 12 diploid, 1 aneuploid, and 4 tetraploid. By IC, the DNA ploidy on 16 samples was 13 diploid, 1 aneuploid, and 2 tetraploid. Three samples were nonevaluable (1 by FCM and 2 by IC). The agreement between FCM and IC was 12 of 16 (75%). The extraosseous Ewing's sarcoma tumors were 2 diploid and 1 aneuploid by IC. In this study there was no correlation between the DNA ploidy and either the histology, site, or survival.
...
PMID:Flow and image cytometric DNA analysis in Ewing's sarcoma. 154 36
A series of fine-needle aspiration biopsies performed in 635 children were reviewed. The diagnoses rendered in these patients included malignant lymphoma in 139 (21.9%); Hodgkin's disease, 25 (3.9%);
neuroblastoma
, 58 (9.1%); Wilms' Tumor, 37 (5.8%); Ewing's sarcoma, 32 (5.0%);
rhabdomyosarcoma
, 25 (3.9%); retinoblastoma, 22 (3.5%); leukemia infiltrate, 33 (5.2%); and miscellaneous tumors, 52 (8.2%). In 171 patients (26.9%), the biopsy was nondiagnostic. The cytomorphological characteristics of these lesions are briefly described and illustrated. Salient morphological features are further correlated with histological and ultrastructural appearances. Immunocytochemical patterns of these tumors are also discussed briefly.
...
PMID:Fine-needle aspiration biopsy of pediatric neoplasms: correlation between electron microscopy and immunocytochemistry in diagnosis and classification. 160 83
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