Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027819 (neuroblastoma)
27,800 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Wiedemann-Beckwith syndrome (WBS) may be associated with abdominal tumors, including Wilms tumor, adrenocortical carcinoma, hepatoblastoma, gonadoblastoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, and neuroblastoma. We report on a newborn infant with WBS and a congenital teratoma of the stomach. This is the sole report of any teratoma being associated with WBS and also the first report of a tumor present at birth and visible prenatally in WBS. At birth this infant boy had the diagnostic findings of WBS with macroglossia, ear lobule creases and pits, nevus flammeus, and omphalocele, and an abdominal mass. Abnormalities were detected prenatally when ultrasound examination showed placental overgrowth, polyhydramnios, omphalocele, and posterior abdominal calcifications. Resection of the mass and partial gastrectomy were performed at age 10 days; histologic study showed an immature grade-II teratoma containing a mixture of mature and immature tissues from all germ layers. Results of cytogenetic studies of blood and teratoma were normal (46,XY). This congenital gastric teratoma in a newborn boy with classical WBS may represent either a tumor or an included twin. We discuss its implications for the association of WBS with neoplasia and monozygotic (MZ) twinning, review various neoplasias associated with WBS, and consider pathogenetic mechanisms.
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PMID:Congenital gastric teratoma in Wiedemann-Beckwith syndrome. 201 33

A revolution in cure rates has occurred in the treatment of childhood cancer in the past 3 decades. Although scientific and technical improvements in surgery, anesthesia, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy have occurred in this time period, these striking improvements are also due to overall management approaches, such as the concept of multidisciplinary consultation prior to definite management, which have been pioneered in the pediatric patient. Using improvements in the treatment of rhabdomyosarcoma and neuroblastoma as examples, this paper reviews some of these approaches that have been of particular importance and have, in many instances, been exported to the adult clinic with success. The role that pediatric oncology has served in increasing our knowledge of cancer and the potential that pediatric cancer serves as a model for future gains in our understanding of cancer is also discussed.
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PMID:ASTRO (American Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology) keynote address: Contributions of pediatric oncology: examples derived from advances made in the treatment of rhabdomyosarcoma and neuroblastoma. 204 92

Rhabdomyoblasts demonstrating immunoreactivity for muscle-specific actin, desmin, and myoglobin were identified in smears obtained by aspiration from a large retroperitoneal mass in a 14-mo-old girl. Following a tentative diagnosis of a rhabdomyogenous neoplasm, retroperitoneal exploration and adrenalectomy demonstrated a stromal poor neuroblastoma with extensive rhabdomyogenous differentiation. The presence of a subpopulation of rhabdomyoblasts was not diagnostic of rhabdomyosarcoma when obtained by fine-needle aspiration from a retroperitoneal tumor composed predominantly of primitive small round cells.
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PMID:Rhabdomyosarcomatous differentiation in a neuroblastoma: a potential pitfall in the cytologic diagnosis of small round-cell tumors of childhood. 206 76

Activation of peripheral blood lymphocytes from a neuroblastoma patient by co-cultivation with autologous neuroblastoma cells in a mixed lymphocyte-tumor cell culture (A-MLTC) resulted in the generation of cytotoxic activity against the autologous neuroblastoma cell line HNB-MS. A-MLTC was set up in the presence of recombinant human interleukin-2 (IL-2). HNB-MS stimulator was treated with recombinant human interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) prior to A-MLTC. CTL generated in short-term culture effectively lysed HNB-MS, while they had no effect on an Epstein-Barr virus transformed autologous B-cell line EB-MS. Moreover, CTL lysed 3 different allogeneic neuroblastoma cell lines, but not a rhabdomyosarcoma cell line RBB. Recombinant human tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and interleukin-4 (IL-4) enhanced and suppressed CTL generation, respectively, when added to the A-MLTC from the beginning of culture. CD3+ CD4- CD8+ T cells were the major anti-tumor effectors. Furthermore, 111indium-labeled CTL clearly accumulated in metastatic sites. These results indicate that CTL can be used for adoptive immunotherapy in neuroblastoma.
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PMID:Autologous tumor-specific cytotoxic T-lymphocytes in a child with neuroblastoma. 208 62

Studies were made on the appearance of second malignant tumors (SMT) in children followed in a pediatric hospital at metropolitan Santiago, Chile, between years 1968 and 1987. A retrospective analysis identified SMT in 7 of 430 patients who survived a childhood cancer (incidence 1.62%). An 8th patient was added, whose first neoplasm was treated in another hospital. The initial diagnosis in the affected children were medulloblastoma, neuroblastoma, Wilm's tumor retinoblastoma, Ewing's sarcoma, Hodgkin's disease and, in two cases, acute lymphocytic leukemias. The age range was 6 months to 11 years. Treatment was done by surgery in 5/8, chemotherapy in 7/8 and radiotherapy in all patients. The latent period between the diagnosis of the first cancer and the diagnosis of the SMT was 3.5 to 12 years (median 8.5 years). Osteosarcomas were the most frequent SMT (5/8). The other SMT were a rhabdomyosarcoma, a non Hodgkin lymphoma and an astrocytoma. The majority of SMT were located in the area of prior radiotherapy (6/8). In the other two cases, one had an osteosarcoma, after a bilateral retinoblastoma, which grew outside the previously treated area, and the last one consisted of a lymphoma which was identified 9 years after an acute lymphocytic leukemia. Only 3/8 SMT patients are alive after 14.21 and 34 months follow up. The other children died between 11 and 20 months after diagnosis of SMT. Notwithstanding these kinds of outcome, benefits of therapy for patients with primary tumors greatly outweight the later risk of cancer induction in a small proportion of them.
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PMID:[Second cancer in pediatric patients]. 213 86

One hundred forty-three patients who received radiation therapy for childhood tumors, and survived to the age of skeletal maturity, were studied by retrospective review of oncology records and roentgenograms. Diagnoses for the patients were the following: Hodgkin's lymphoma (44), Wilms's tumor (30), acute lymphocytic leukemia (26), non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (18), Ewing's sarcoma (nine), rhabdomyosarcoma (six), neuroblastoma (six), and others (four). Age at the follow-up examination averaged 18 years (range, 14-28 years). Average length of follow-up study was 9.9 years (range, two to 18 years). Asymmetry of the chest and ribs was seen in 51 (36%) of these children. Fifty (35%) had scoliosis; 14 had kyphosis. In two children, the scoliosis was treated with a brace, while one developed significant kyphosing scoliosis after laminectomy and had spinal fusion. Twenty-three (16%) patients complained of significant pain at the radiation sites. Twelve of the patients developed leg-length inequality; eight of those were symptomatic. Three patients developed second primary tumors. Currently, the incidence of significant skeletal sequelae is lower and the manifestations are less severe than reported in the years from 1940 to 1970. The reduction in skeletal complications may be attributed to shielding of growth centers, symmetric field selection, decreased total radiation doses, and sequence changes in chemotherapy.
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PMID:Skeletal sequelae of radiation therapy for malignant childhood tumors. 213 23

During the last 5 years massive chemotherapy and autologous bone marrow transplantation have been increasingly explored in the treatment of pediatric solid tumors, mainly for neuroblastoma, Ewing's sarcoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, Wilms' tumor, germ cell tumors, osteosarcoma, and retinoblastoma. Although the disease course could be changed successfully in most instances, the long-term survival has not yet been improved much over the best available conventional treatments. Despite this, in responding relapsed patients this approach seems promising and may represent the only chance of cure. New and better induction regimens are needed.
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PMID:Autologous bone marrow transplantation in pediatric solid tumors. 216 30

Chromosome abnormalities found in pediatric solid tumors include deletions, translocations, homogeneously staining regions (hsr)/double minutes (dms), and ploidy abnormalities. The discovery of a 13q14 deletion found in lymphocytes of patients with retinoblastoma and developmental delay has led to the cloning of the retinoblastoma gene. Likewise the discovery of an 11p13 deletion in lymphocytes of patients with Wilms' tumor and aniridia has led to the cloning of the Wilms' tumor gene. Chromosome deletions found in tumor cells are considered to play a role on the homologous deletion of cancer suppressor genes. Recently, various translocations have been found mostly in soft tissue sarcomas; i.e. t(11;22) in Ewing's sarcoma, t(2;13) in alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma, t(3;8) in pleomorphic adenoma, t(3;12) in lipoma, t(12;16) in liposarcoma, t(12;14) in leiomyosarcoma, and t(X;18) in synovial sarcoma. These translocations provide important information on the difficult diagnosis of soft tissue sarcomas, and on the selection of chemotherapy protocol. Tumor cells in advanced stage neuroblastomas often show hsr/dms, in which N-myc amplification occurs. While near triploidy was regularly found in early-stage neuroblastomas, near-diploidy or near-tetraploidy was usually found in advanced stage tumors. Among various prognostic factors, N-myc copy numbers and tumor cell ploidies had the largest influence on the prognosis of neuroblastoma patients. Cytogenetic and molecular genetic analyses on tumor cells are becoming increasingly important for the diagnosis of pediatric solid tumors, and the prediction of the patients' prognosis.
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PMID:[Cytogenetics in pediatric solid tumors]. 217 98

Survival rates were analysed for a population-based series of over 15,000 childhood cancers registered in Great Britain during 1971-85. There were highly significant improvements (P less than 0.001 for trend) in survival for many major diagnostic groups. Between 1971-73 and 1983-85 the actuarial 5-year survival rates increased from 37% to 70% for acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, from 4% to 26% for acute non-lymphoblastic leukaemia, from 76% to 88% for Hodgkin's disease, from 22% to 70% for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, from 61% to 72% for astrocytoma, from 24% to 42% for medulloblastoma, from 15% to 43% for neuroblastoma, from 58% to 79% for Wilms' tumour, from 17% to 54% for osteosarcoma, from 26% to 61% for rhabdomyosarcoma, from 59% to 94% for malignant testicular germ-cell tumours and from 43% to 77% for malignant ovarian germ-cell tumours. These increases in population-based survival rates reflect the substantial advances in treatment of a wide range of childhood cancers since 1970. The two principal diagnostic groups for which there was no evidence of any trend were retinoblastoma, which already had an excellent prognosis with a 5-year survival rate of over 85%, and Ewing's sarcoma, for which the survival rate remained below 45%.
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PMID:Trends in survival for childhood cancer in Britain diagnosed 1971-85. 217 43

Owing to the recent progress of chemotherapy, a concept of surgical intervention to the malignant tumor in childhood needs to be changed. Surgical approach has not always been a sole way to the cure of the disease anymore. I discussed the surgical approach in neuroblastoma, Wilms' tumor, hepatoblastoma, rhabdomyosarcoma and malignant teratoma, stressed especially on how to combine surgery with chemotherapy and on intensiveness of surgery. Since most of the children with malignant tumor can be cured and survive, surgeons have to choose the operative procedure, taking their functional quality into consideration.
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PMID:[Recent surgical approach for pediatric malignant tumor]. 217 75


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