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Query: UMLS:C0027819 (
neuroblastoma
)
27,800
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Four major staging systems have been used to estimate the prognosis for children with local and
regional neuroblastoma
(
NBL
). Data obtained at diagnosis for 251
neuroblastoma
patients from two Childrens Cancer Study Group (CCSG) studies were analyzed according to staging systems of the CCSG, St Jude Children's Research Hospital, the Pediatric Oncology Group (POG), and the Union Internationale Contre le Cancer (UICC) tumor-nodes-metastasis (TNM) system. The most significant variables were found to be age, tumor stage, extent of tumor removal, transgression of the midline by tumor infiltration, and site of primary tumor. Involvement of lymph nodes per se was not a bad prognostic sign unless associated with extension beyond the midline, the latter being the single most important prognostic variable. All four staging systems had value for prognostication and all identified with accuracy the low stage patient (stage I, stage A) who fares well (greater than or equal to 87% survival). The CCSG definition of stages II and III disease discriminated prognostic groups best among the remaining patients, and was able to identify the child with local-regional
NBL
with poor survival. The estimated 5-year survival rates for children with regional tumor (stage III, IIIA[N]), according to the four systems were 44%, 74%, 74%, and 74% for the CCSG, St Jude, POG, and UICC methods, respectively. We conclude that all four staging systems effectively define good-prognosis patients with localized disease but that the CCSG staging system most accurately identifies patients with regional tumor who have a poor outcome.
...
PMID:A comparison of four staging systems for localized and regional neuroblastoma: a report from the Childrens Cancer Study Group. 198 68
Although precise anatomic staging is prognostically important in
neuroblastoma
, most widely employed staging systems remain incompatible. The International
Neuroblastoma
Staging System (INSS) was formulated to incorporate the basic elements of several systems to and define the significance of tumor resectability, anatomic "midline," and lymph node involvement. The authors sought to determine the applicability and value of the INSS compared with the classic Evans system. Between 1980 and 1992, 424 children with the diagnosis of local or
regional neuroblastoma
were entered in Childrens Cancer Group (CCG) clinical trials. The patients were assigned to Evans stage I, II, or III, by clinical and surgicopathologic assessment, and were treated uniformly by Group-wide therapy protocols. INSS stage 1, 2A, 2B, or 3, was applied, by retrospective analysis, to the children in the earlier studies, and by prospective evaluation of recent patients in the current studies. Survival and relapse-free survival (RFS) rates were determined and compared, based on age at diagnosis, extent of resection, and staging reassignment. All 87 Evans stage I patients were classified as INSS stage 1 and had a 92% 3-year RFS rate. Of the 144 Evans stage II patients, 65 also qualified as INSS stage 1 patients, with an 82% RFS rate. The other 79 stage II children remained in INSS stage 2A or 2B and had a 70% RFS rate (P = .10). Of the 193 Evans stage III patients, 24 were reassigned to INSS stage 1 (85% RFS rate) and 33 to stage 2A or 2B (65% survival rate; 61% RFS rate).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Surgical management and outcome of locoregional neuroblastoma: comparison of the Childrens Cancer Group and the international staging systems. 773 53
We analysed the 2-year event-free survival (EFS) of 49 patients 1 year of age and older, with stage 2B or 3
neuroblastoma
, treated on Pediatric Oncology Group protocols 8742 and 9244, with respect to the degree of tumour resection at diagnosis. The 2-year EFS rate for 21 children whose tumours were completely resected at diagnosis was 85% (SE = 10%) compared with an EFS rate of 70% (SE = 9%) for the 28 children whose tumours were incompletely resected at diagnosis. Despite the observed trend in favour of complete resection, these EFS curves were not statistically significantly different (P = 0.259). Patients with favourable Shimada histology tumours had an EFS rate of 92% (SE = 7%) compared with a rate of 58% (SE = 15%) for patients with unfavourable histology tumours. EFS curves for the two histologic groups were significantly different (P = 0.009). The impact of aggressive surgery and adjuvant chemotherapy on the outcome of patients with biologically favourable
regional neuroblastoma
is still unclear.
...
PMID:Event-free survival of children with biologically favourable neuroblastoma based on the degree of initial tumour resection: results from the Pediatric Oncology Group. 951 66