Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0027819 (
neuroblastoma
)
27,800
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The International Agency for Research on Cancer has coordinated a worldwide study of childhood cancer incidence, with data from over 50 countries. We present here the results for
neuroblastoma
. In predominantly white Caucasian populations the age-standardized rate was 7-12 per million, and 6-10% of all childhood cancers were neuroblastomas. Rates were highest in the first year of life (25-50 per million, 30% of total
neuroblastoma
incidence), and decreased with age to 15-20 per million (50% of the total) at age 1-4, 2-4 per million (15%) at 5-9 and 1-1.5 per million (5%) at 10-14. In the United States, black children had an incidence of 8.5 per million compared with 11.5 among Whites; Blacks tended to be older than Whites at diagnosis. The highest rate in Africa was in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe (8.0 per million) and the lowest in
West
Nile, Uganda, with no cases registered. Incidence in Israel was similar to that in many white populations, with Jews having a particularly high rate. In other parts of
West
Asia
neuroblastoma
had a low relative frequency, suggesting that incidence is low. Rates were also low throughout much of southern and eastern Asia, including India and China. Incidence in Japan was somewhat higher, though less than in Western countries, with the deficit most pronounced in the first year of life; these data relate to the period before mass screening of infants for
neuroblastoma
in the regions concerned. Incidence was generally higher in regions and among ethnic groups enjoying a higher standard of living, though previous studies within single countries had suggested that
neuroblastoma
is more common among less affluent groups. Blacks in Africa and the United States may have a weaker genetic predisposition to
neuroblastoma
, but some of the deficit in many developing countries is likely to be due to under-diagnosis.
...
PMID:International variations in the incidence of neuroblastoma. 851 61
The purpose of this study is to describe the incidence and survival of childhood cancer in the
West
Midlands for the period 1980-1984. Proportional breakdown by Asian subgroup is also considered. A total of 587 patients were registered, 49 of them of Asian origin. Breakdown to Asian versus non-Asian subgroups by diagnosis revealed comparatively high rates for Hodgkin's disease, retinoblastoma and
neuroblastoma
in the Asian patients. However, a deficit of cases was seen for CNS tumours. Comparison of overall age-standardized rates (ASR) for all cancers revealed a substantially lower value compared to that reported for the USA white population but a similar value to the USA black and UK white populations. Diagnostic breakdown revealed that the major difference between the
West
Midlands Regional Children's Tumour Research Group (WMRCTRG) and the USA white ASR was in the leukaemia and lymphoma group. Overall survival for the series was 56% at 5 years. The poorest prognosis was found in acute myeloid leukaemia, with only 23% of patients surviving at 5 years, against 62% in acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. CNS tumours also had a poor outcome, with an overall survival rate of 47%, although certain individual diagnoses were more favourable. We observed a 100% survival rate in Hodgkin's disease up to 5 years from diagnosis, and both Wilms' tumour and retinoblastoma had 90% survival rates.
...
PMID:Childhood cancer in the West Midlands: incidence and survival, 1980-1984, in a multi-ethnic population. 158 36
Nine children with poor prognosis
neuroblastoma
have been treated by continuous infusion of IL-2 and autologous LAK cells, as described previously by
West
et al. in adult patients. Six patients were in relapse after high-dose chemotherapy and autologous BMT and three presented with primary refractory disease after conventional therapy. Although patients were very young (median age 6 years; average weight 17 kg), infusion of IL-2, cytapheresis and reinjection of LAK cells appeared feasible with the usual and transient complications observed with IL-2. Haematological toxicity, although reversible, was more important than usually described and due to the presence of bone-marrow metastases in 8 of the 9 patients. Life-threatening toxicity was observed in only one of the admission centres and was probably due to the rapid reinjection of a very large number of activated cells. Two patients presenting with very active disease after high-dose chemotherapy and autologous or allogeneic BMT received IL-2 alone, at 120 days and at 90 days after the graft. The reactivation of grade-II GVHD was the major complication in the patient treated after an allograft, whereas no BMT-related toxicity was observed in the patient treated after the autologous BMT. Immunological modifications induced by IL-2 were very different between these patients. As expected, a preferential outgrowth of NK cells with both NK and LAK activity was observed in the patient treated just after the autograft. In contrast, in the patient treated after an allograft and in the 9 patients in relapse, T lymphocytes remained the major mononuclear cell population with a very large excess of CD8+ T cells. All patients progressed after the first induction cycle with the exception of the only patient treated after autologous BMT who reached a very good partial remission with disappearance of the local tumor and bone metastases. Although very preliminary, these data clearly show that the efficacy of IL-2 largely depends on the patient's immunological status with the optimal effect being observed when IL-2 is given in the first few months following an autograft.
...
PMID:A phase-II study of adoptive immunotherapy with continuous infusion of interleukin-2 in children with advanced neuroblastoma. A report on 11 cases. 267 Feb 9
A retrospective analysis of 26 children with neuroblastic tumours treated at the University Hospital of the
West
Indies (UHWI) between 1970 and 1991 was undertaken to evaluate factors affecting prognosis. The peak incidence was between 48 months and 60 months of age, and 75% of the deaths occurred in children older than 3 years. The abdomen was the most common site of the tumours 79% of which were from the adrenal gland and carried a dismal outcome. Other sites were thoracic, pelvic and cervical. Extra-adrenal tumours have a good outcome even when the histology is unfavourable; 92% of the tumours were in Stages III or IV at the time of initial presentation. Stage IV disease accounted for all but one of the deaths. Of the 8 children with favourable histology (ganglioneuroma or well-differentiated ganglioneuroblastoma), only one (12.5%) died, wheras of the remaining 18 cases with unfavourable histology (
neuroblastoma
and undifferentiated ganglioneuroblastoma), eleven (61.1%) died. When managed by surgery alone or with adjuvant chemo- and/or radio-therapy, only 36.4% succumbed while all 4 children with chemotherapy only died. Ten children are alive without disease for more than three years post-therapy. A scoring system was designed which takes into account the factors influencing the outcome in neuroblastic tumours, namely, age, location, stage and histological types of the tumours and therapy. All the children with a score of 21 or less survived, whereas all those with scores of 22 or above succumbed. This underlines the multifactorial influences on the final outcome of neuroblastic tumours.
West
Indian Med J 1994 Sep
PMID:Prognosis of neuroblastic tumours in children. 781 44
Several H-2 defined cell lines were examined for their ability to support infection and replication of Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) before their use in in vitro and in vivo stimulation protocols for generating cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) against JEV. Among 11 different cell lines tested, two H-2d macrophage tumour lines (P388D1, RAW 264.7), an H-2d hybridoma (Sp2/0), an H-2KkDd
neuroblastoma
(Neuro 2a), and H-2k fibroblast cell line (L929) were found to support JEV infection and replication. These cell lines were used to generate anti-JEV CTLs by using in vivo immunization followed by in vitro stimulation of BALB/c mice. We observed that not only syngeneic and allogeneic infected cells but also JEV-infected xenogeneic cells could prime BALB/c mice for the generation of JEV-specific CTLs upon subsequent in vitro stimulation of splenocytes with JEV-infected syngeneic cells. Although infected xenogeneic cells were used for immunization, the anti-JEV effectors that were generated lysed infected syngeneic targets but not JEV-infected xenogeneic or allogeneic target cells in a 5 h 51Cr release assay. These anti-JEV effectors recognized syngeneic target cells infected with
West
Nile virus to a lesser extent and were shown to be Lyt-2.2+ T cells. The results of unlabelled cold target competition studies suggested alterations in the cell surface expression of viral antigenic determinants recognized by these CTLs. We further demonstrate that the JEV-specific CTLs generated could virtually block the release of infectious virus particles from infected P388D1 and Neuro 2a cells in vitro.
...
PMID:Cytotoxic T lymphocytes raised against Japanese encephalitis virus: effector cell phenotype, target specificity and in vitro virus clearance. 815 Dec 96
This paper describes a retrospective population-based study of
neuroblastoma
in the
West
Midlands Health Authority Region--childhood population 1.12 million (OPCS, census 1981)--in which 239 cases were diagnosed between 1st January 1957 and 31st December 1988. The age standardised rate of tumour incidence has remained constant at 7.2 cases per million children per year. The median age at diagnosis was 2 years with 18% of children presenting before the age of 6 months. Fifty children (21%) presented before the age of one year, and for this group of children, the prognosis has improved significantly over the 32-year period (10 year survival increasing from 63% in 1957-67 to 87% in 1978-88), whereas for the 189 (79%) children who presented after one year of age, the prognosis has remained very poor during the study period (10 year survival 1957-67 = 9.5%, 1978-88 = 8.5%). This study supports the need for a prospective study of mass screening at several intervals rather than only at 6 months of age.
...
PMID:Neuroblastoma: a 32-year population-based study--implications for screening. 843 85
All patients referred to the Institute of Radiotherapy and Nuclear Medicine in Peshawar (IRNUM) during 1990 to 1994 were analyzed. There were 1655 children with biopsy-proven cancers; 1290 were from the North
West
Frontier Province (NWFP), and the remaining 365 were Afghan refugees. Male children from the NWFP were 67% and females were 33%. Among Afghan children, 69% were males and 31% were females. Patients whose histopathologies were doubtful or not available were excluded from the study. The most common tumors in children in the NWFP were lymphoid leukemia, lymphoma, myeloid leukemia, Wilms tumor, tumors of the central nervous system (CNS), soft tissue sarcoma, bone tumors, retinoblastoma,
neuroblastoma
, and testicular tumors. Among Afghan children the most common cancers were lymphoma, lymphoid leukemia, myeloid leukemia, Wilms tumor, retinoblastoma, tumors of soft tissue, bone tumors, CNS tumors, testicular tumors, and
neuroblastoma
.
...
PMID:Pediatric tumors in north west Pakistan and Afghan refugees. 959 35
Three unusual cases of
Neuroblastoma
with metastasis to the skull and orbit are presented. The bizarre clinical features which make diagnosis and subsequent management difficult are highlighted, suggesting the need for a multi-disciplinary approach.
West
Afr J Med
PMID:Orbitocephalic metastases from neuroblastoma: report on three cases. 992 Nov
Neuroblastoma
is one of the childhood cancers included in two recent population-based case-control studies in
West
Germany. Altogether, 183 children under the age of 8 with
neuroblastoma
diagnosed in 1988-1994 and 1785 control children sampled from population registration files participated. Information on potential risk factors was obtained from the children's parents by a self-administered questionnaire and subsequent telephone interview. We observed positive associations with the use of oral contraceptives or other sex hormones during pregnancy (particularly with male offspring), a shorter gestational duration, lower birth weight, and maternal alcohol consumption during pregnancy. While the association with maternal use of oral contraceptives or sex hormones was strong for stages I/II (odds ratio 4.5, 95% confidence interval 1.2-16.5), the associations with shorter gestation duration (odds ratio 3.4, 95% confidence interval 1.7-6.7) as well as maternal alcohol consumption during pregnancy (>7 glasses/week odds ratio 5.2, 95% confidence interval 1.3-20.6) were observed only for the unfavourable advanced stages. It is notable that the associations in our study were either observed only for the advanced stages of disease or only for the less advanced stages, but not for both subgroups. This adds to evidence for the hypothesis that
neuroblastoma
consists of at least two distinct disease entities, which differ in clinical stage at the time of diagnosis.
...
PMID:Risk factors for neuroblastoma at different stages of disease. Results from a population-based case-control study in Germany. 1143 11
A 10-year retrospective survey of childhood malignancies in eastern Nigeria was carried out based on data from the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital Cancer Registry. The aim was to discover the current pattern of paediatric malignancies in the study area. A total of 313 children aged less than 15 years, diagnosed with cancer by means of histological or cytological examination during the study period (January 1989-December 1998) were analyzed. The male-to-female ratio was 1.6:1. The lymphomas constituted the highest prevalence (38.3%) with Burkitt's lymphoma being the commonest (65.8%) of all the lymphomas. These were followed by sarcomas (14.7%), nephroblastoma (14.4%), retinoblastoma (12.1%) and leukaemias (8.6%). The less common ones were teratomas (2.9%) and
neuroblastoma
(1.9%). Comparison of two clinicopathological studies of childhood cancer in Enugu between 1976-1980 and 1989-1998 showed an increase in the relative frequencies of sarcomas, retinoblastoma, leukaemias and a decline in the frequencies of Burkitt's lymphoma, nephroblastoma, teratomas and
neuroblastoma
. Further epidemiological studies are necessary in order to determine whether these changes actually reflect the distribution of childhood cancer in the general population and also to elicit the possible mechanisms of carcinogenesis.
West
Afr J Med
PMID:Spectrum of paediatric malignancies in eastern Nigeria (1989-1998). 1208 38
1
2
3
4
5
Next >>