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Query: UMLS:C0035412 (
rhabdomyosarcoma
)
6,156
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Rhabdomyosarcoma
and other small round-cell neoplasms of infancy and childhood frequently involve the bone marrow. An unusual clinical presentation of diffuse bone marrow involvement as the sole manifestation of the disease represents a difficult diagnostic challenge. We report the case of an 18-year-old boy presenting with lower back pain, sternum tenderness, anemia, thrombocytopenia, leukoerythroblastic blood film, hypercalcemia, and renal failure. No
solid tumor
was found. A diagnosis of rhabdomyoblastic bone marrow metastatic involvement was initially suggested by the morphological picture, and later confirmed by the ultrastructural findings. Hypercalcemia and renal failure were controlled, initially, with furosemide and calcitonin. The patient was treated with intensive chemotherapy, including vincristine, actinomycin D, cyclophosphamide, and doxorubicin. A remission was achieved, lasting 5 months until relapse.
...
PMID:Rhabdomyosarcoma presenting with diffuse bone marrow involvement, hypercalcemia and renal failure. 335 35
As to the treatment of soft tissue tumor in children, we have performed intraarterial infusion chemotherapy in 3 children, two of whom had
rhabdomyosarcoma
and one of whom had infantile fibrosarcoma, at Sapporo National Hospital. The former two patients had large and unresectable
solid tumor
. In the latter case, an uncommon disease of childhood, local excision was considered while sacrificing a significant degree of function in the affected part. We describe here these three cases and the effectiveness of this therapy. Intraarterial chemotherapy reduced the tumor remarkably and facilitated second-look surgery. Although transient hematuria, slight articular contracture and vasculitis were observed in each case as side effects during the therapy, they were only minimal and tolerable. Unfortunately, one patient relapsed 6 months after surgery, but two patients are still in good health without recurrence. According to the results of our study, we believe that this method can be effective for controlling unresectable primary malignant soft tissue tumor.
...
PMID:[Intra-arterial chemotherapy of soft tissue sarcoma in children]. 377 63
A cooperative phase II study of vindesine, a new vinca alkaloid, was carried out in 16 major institutions. The selection of patients and evaluation of tumor response were based on the Criteria for the Evaluation of Tumor Response by Chemotherapy in
Solid Tumor
Patients by Koyama and Saito. Vindesine was administered by i.v. bolus injection at a dose of 3 mg per week. Out of 130 patients who entered into the study, 117 patients were evaluable. Partial responses were obtained in 16 (13.7%) out of 117 evaluable patients, including 7 (17.1%) out of 41 lung cancer, 3 (8.1%) out of 37 breast cancer, 2 (33.3%) out of 6 esophageal cancer, and one each of cervical cancer, liposarcoma,
rhabdomyosarcoma
, and embryonic tumor. Major side effects were leukopenia (less than 3000/cm) 60.2%, gastrointestinal disturbances 23.6%, neurotoxicity 25.2% and hair loss 14.2%.
...
PMID:[A cooperative phase II study of vindesine sulfate in patients with solid tumors]. 661 38
Primary, malignant, cardiac tumors are extremely rare in infants and children. Only a few cases of cardiac
rhabdomyosarcoma
have been reported in childhood. Echocardiography greatly increases the rate of correct diagnosis of cardiac tumors. There are some cases in the literature which were diagnosed by echocardiography and confirmed histopathologically. In this report, a 13-year-old girl with the clinical findings of cardiac tamponade and who was diagnosed as having a cardiac tumor by two-dimensional echocardiogram is presented An echodense,
solid tumor
with irregular borders extending especially toward the left ventricular cavity from the apex was demonstrated on echocardiography. The diagnosis was confirmed histopathologically on postmortem examination.
...
PMID:Cardiac rhabdomyosarcoma diagnosed by echocardiography. 750 65
Unilateral proptosis, dislocation of the globe and impairment of motility in childhood are known to be typical presenting signs of
rhabdomyosarcoma
of the orbit. In a retrospective analysis of 17 patients with
rhabdomyosarcoma
(1974-1993) only 8 patients presented with typical signs. 9 patients did never show the typical signs which initially lead to a wrong diagnosis in many cases. A 5-year-old boy complained of a conjunctival cyst in the lower fornix of the left eye. Two weeks later the cyst was replaced by a
solid tumor
. The tumor was not completely resectable, histology revealed an embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma. Presenting signs and symptoms of orbital
rhabdomyosarcoma
show a sometimes misleading variety including conjunctival cyst formation. In any recent onset of unilateral rapidly progressing alterations of the lid, the conjunctiva or the caruncle in childhood the physician should consider a rhabsomyosarcoma of the orbit.
...
PMID:[The initial clinical manifestations of rhabdomyosarcoma]. 765 15
The therapeutic effects of Factor XIII (F XIII) concentrate against drug-induced hemorrhagic cystitis (HC) was investigated. HC occurred in 4 children with malignant disease during anti-cancer chemotherapy. Two (CML and T-ALL) of 4 patients developed HC after the administration of high dose cyclophosphamide as conditioning for allo bone marrow transplantation or peripheral blood stem cell autografts, and the other 2 patients (
rhabdomyosarcoma
, Wilm's tumor) developed HC after the administration of ifosfamide for relapse. When F XIII concentrate at a dose of 20 to 230 U/kg was administrated immediately after the onset of HC, the symptoms, i.e., bladder irritability and macrohematuria disappeared within a few days. The F XIII serum levels of those patients were low (27-57%), and the levels increased (63-230%) after administration of F XIII concentrate. The two patients with relapsed
solid tumor
showed no symptoms of HC during subsequent ifosfamide treatment when F XIII concentrate was administrated to maintain a normal F XIII range. These results suggest that the administration of F XIII concentrate may be useful for the prophylaxis and treatment of drug-induced HC in patients with a low F XIII level.
...
PMID:[The clinical effect of factor XIII on drug-induced hemorrhagic cystitis]. 815 49
While the incidence of cancer is increasing among both children and adults, mortality rates have decreased for children, while they have increased for adults. Of children diagnosed with cancer today, 80% are predicted to be long-term survivors. Although there are differences between children and adults with respect to the tumor types, biology, and outcome, there are common lessons which we can learn from our children regarding the genetics of cancer, its management and treatment, and the importance of longitudinal studies of the survivors. Specific pediatric cancers, such as retinoblastoma, have led to the recognition of tumor suppressor genes, now also observed among adult tumors including sarcomas, breast, lung, and bladder cancer. The presence of the tumor suppressor gene provides an understanding for the incidence of second malignant tumors among patients with heritable diseases. Furthermore, cancer prone families, such as those with the Li-Fraumeni syndrome, also carry the p 53 tumor suppressor gene; the presence of which greatly increases the risk of developing invasive cancer. Childhood cancer is rare; it represents only 1% of the total US cancer problem. However, 53% of all children with cancer, but only 2% of all adults, are studied via the NCI cooperative group mechanism. For some specific childhood tumors such as
rhabdomyosarcoma
and Wilms' tumor, as many as 70-85% of all cases are managed via NCI sponsored trials. Essentially all pediatric cancer is treated by interdigitating radiation with surgical resection and systemic chemotherapy. This approach has contributed to high cure rates. Finally, our understanding of the late effects of being a cancer survivor have come from longitudinal studies of children. The most severe long-term effects related to radiation in childhood pertain to growth and development, infertility, and second malignant tumor induction. Here the children treated for Hodgkin's disease have taught us the dose and volume effects on axial skeletal and soft tissue growth. Infertility issues are also treatment-related and may often be obviated by using gonadal shielding. The risk of secondary leukemia is related to dose and class of specific chemotherapeutic agents administered; it is 5.5% among children receiving 6 cycles of MOPP. There is a 22-fold risk at 30 years of age of
solid tumor
induction following radiotherapy for children with Hodgkin's disease. These serious concerns have been offset by current therapeutic approaches of using lower doses and smaller volumes of radiation with fewer cycles of less toxic chemotherapeutic agents. Childhood cancer ranks high among number of person-years of potential life saved annually.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Lessons from our children. 834 41
In in vivo allogeneic bone marrow transplantation studies with the Brown Norway (BN) rat as recipient and the WAG/Rij rat as allogeneic donor a significant graft-versus-leukemia (GVL) effect is observed. Studies were performed to investigate whether lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells play a role in this GVL effect. Splenocytes from WAG/Rij and BN rats were activated in vitro by recombinant human interleukin-2 (rhIL-2) for 5-6 days. The cytolytic activity of these LAK cells was tested on four rat
solid tumor
cell lines, i.e. an ureter carcinoma, a
rhabdomyosarcoma
, and two lung tumors, and on leukemic cells derived from the BN rat acute myelocytic leukemia (BNML) and the WAG/Rij acute lymphocytic leukemia (L4415). The panel of target cells also included the murine cell lines P815 and YAC. Both WAG/Rij and BN LAK cells were not capable of lysing the leukemic cells in contrast to significant cytolytic activity on the rat
solid tumor
cell lines and P815 and YAC. BNML cells showed to be resistant to lysis by human NK cells. Phenotypical analysis of the rat LAK population revealed a decrease in the CD4/CD8 ratio compared to the unstimulated splenocyte population. Rat LAK cells displayed no antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) on the leukemic cells, whereas IL-2-stimulated human peripheral blood cells showed moderate ADCC activity on the leukemic cells. To investigate whether cytokines play a role in lysis of leukemic target cells, graded numbers of LAK cells and leukemic cells were co-cultivated for seven days in an agar-based colony culture system. This resulted in moderate suppression of leukemic colony formation. From the current in vitro studies it appears that the graft-versus-leukemia observed in in vivo allogeneic bone marrow transplantation studies is probably not due to a direct leukemic cell kill by LAK cells.
...
PMID:In vitro resistance of the brown Norway rat acute myelocytic leukemia (BNML) to lymphokine-activated killer activity. 848 27
Rhabdomyosarcoma
(RMS), a high-grade, malignant, skeletal muscle tumor, represents approximately 5% of neoplasms in children. The poorly differentiated forms of RMS are often not easily diagnosed and classified. Among the four histologic variants, alveolar RMS is the least frequently reported subtype. A poorly differentiated solid variant of alveolar RMS occurred on the right hand of a 16-year-old girl. Because of the tumor size, local invasiveness, and occurrence of cutaneous and breast metastases at presentation, the clinical staging was group IV (T2/NO/M1). Surgical excisions of the primary and metastatic locations were performed and chemotherapy with vincristine, dactinomycin, cyclophosphamide, and doxorubicin was administered. Light and electron microscopy studies revealed a solid proliferation with a focal alveolar pattern of monomorphous, small, round neoplastic cells without easily detectable muscular morphologic features. The skeletal muscle origin was revealed by the positive immunostaining for desmin, alpha-sarcomeric actin, muscle-specific actins, and enolase, and confirmed by immunoblotting for desmin. Despite the age of our patient, which is considered by some authors an independent predictor of outcome, all prognostic variables were unfavorable. However, a disease-free interval during three years of follow-up underlines the importance of multidisciplinary regimens for the treatment of this rare
solid tumor
of childhood and adolescence.
...
PMID:Solid alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma of the hand in adolescence: a clinical, histologic, immunologic, and ultrastructural study. 874 83
Treatment of episodes of fever and neutropenia in pediatric hematology-oncology patients includes hospitalization and administration of intravenous antibiotics until the patient is afebrile and no longer neutropenic. The present analysis characterizes retrospectively febrile episodes in neutropenic pediatric hematology-oncology patients with regard to frequency of documented infections, organisms associated with these infections, efficacy of a standardized antibiotic regimen, and safety of early antibiotic discontinuation under defined conditions. A total of 149 pediatric febrile neutropenic episodes were identified during a 4-year period between 1990 and 1994. These occurred in 47 male and 19 female patients, of a mean age of 7.6 years (range 0.5-15). The most frequent diagnoses were leukemia (41% of patients), lymphoma (21%),
rhabdomyosarcoma
(7%), soft tissue sarcoma (5%), Ewing's sarcoma (5%), and osteosarcoma (4%). Infection was certain in 36% of febrile episodes, probable in 14%, and not determined in 50%. Patients with severe neutropenia (absolute neutrophil count < 100) had a slightly, although not significantly higher incidence of documented and probable infection (57%). Patients with
solid tumor
had documented infection in 40% of their febrile episodes, and the detection rate in the children with leukemia was 31% (P < .20) Blood cultures were positive in 21 (14%) of 149 episodes. Staphylococci (both coagulase-negative and coagulase-positive strains) and Pseudomonas were the organisms most frequently isolated (six episodes each). Mouth and throat (11), lungs (10), and skin (10) were the next most frequent sites of localized infection. Initial treatment consisted of piperacillin and amikacin or of vancomycin and amikacin when the source of fever was thought to be an infected central line catheter, with addition of amphotericin B by the seventh day of treatment when fever with neutropenia persisted or upon clinical suspicion of underlying fungal infection. There was a single fatality, of a patient with Burkitt's lymphoma. Antibiotics were discontinued when initial blood cultures had no growth after at least 48 hours and no source of infection was found, the blood count was improving, and if the patient became afebrile and clinically well. No patient needed readmission during the fortnight that followed discontinuation of antimicrobial therapy. Patients with negative blood cultures under defined conditions, as described above, could safely be discharged early, thus shortening the duration of intravenous antibiotic therapy and hospital stay.
...
PMID:Fever and neutropenia in children with malignant disease. 894 Jul 33
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