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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (sepsis)
52,417 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The Childrens Cancer Study Group (CCSG) undertook a study (CCG-823F) to test the feasibility of administering continuous infusion doxorubicin (CI DOX) and cisplatin (CDDP) in patients with unresectable or incompletely resected hepatoblastoma (HB) or hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Chemotherapy consisted of CI DOX 20 mg/m2/d for days 1 to 4 and CDDP 100 mg/m2 on day 1 followed by a 21-day rest period. Second-look surgery was performed after the administration of four chemotherapy courses. Forty-seven (47) assessable patients were entered on study, 33 with HB and 14 with HCC; of these, 34 (26 HB and eight HCC) completed the initial four courses of chemotherapy. Of the 26 HB patients, 25 were evaluated as responding to chemotherapy before the scheduled second-look procedure and were considered surgically resectable at that time. Surgery was performed on 22 patients; three patients refused the second-look surgery. Nine patients had no evidence of residual malignant disease, seven underwent surgical resection of remaining tumor, four were left with microscopic residual disease, one had a partial resection with gross tumor left behind, and one remained unresectable. Nine HCC patients completed four chemotherapy courses. Eight patients achieved a partial remission and second-look surgery was attempted on seven. Only two had all malignant disease removed at the second procedure. Data from 225 courses of chemotherapy were evaluated for toxicity. Neutropenia (absolute granulocyte count less than 500/mL) was observed in 68 courses, and five of these episodes were associated with sepsis. Severe mucositis was documented in 21 courses, and hypomagnesemia (magnesium less than 1.2 mg) was noted in 30 patients. Two patients developed decreased left ventricular shortening fraction, which resolved when chemotherapy was discontinued. In summary, CI DOX plus CDDP is a well-tolerated and effective regimen in inducing surgical resectability in HB patients who are unresectable at diagnosis and significantly improves survival for this group of patients to 66.6%.
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PMID:Effective treatment of unresectable or metastatic hepatoblastoma with cisplatin and continuous infusion doxorubicin chemotherapy: a report from the Childrens Cancer Study Group. 172 Apr 52

Five observations of hepatoblastoma in boys of 10 months to 4 years of age are presented. Tumor mass in the right part of the abdominal cavity was detected 1--9 months before death. Three patients died of pulmonary cardiac insufficiency, 2 of cateterization sepsis and hepatic insufficiency. The liver weight varied from 840 to 3500 g. Two children had intrahepatic metastases, one of them also had extrahepatic metastases into the portal lymph nodes and lungs. In 2 observations hepatoblastoma was of an epithelial structure, in 3 cases of a mixed type. It is suggested that hepatoblastoma, as well as liver carcinoma in adults, occurs more frequently in males.
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PMID:[Hepatoblastoma in children]. 625 73

Rapidly growing mycobacteria are capable of causing several clinical diseases in both immunosuppressed and immunocompetent individuals. A previously unidentified, rapidly growing mycobacterium was determined to be the causative agent of central line sepsis in a child with underlying metastatic hepatoblastoma. Four isolates of this mycobacterium, three from blood and one from the central venous catheter tip, were studied. Phenotypic characterization, HPLC and genetic analysis revealed that while this organism most closely resembled members of the Mycobacterium fortuitum complex and Mycobacterium senegalense, it differed from all previously described species. Phenotypic tests useful in differentiating this species from similar rapidly growing mycobacteria included: growth at 42 degrees C, hydrolysis of acetamide, utilization of citrate, production of arylsulfatase (3-d), acidification of D-mannitol and i-myo-inositol, and susceptibility to erythromycin, vancomycin and tobramycin. The name Mycobacterium septicum is proposed for this new species. The type strain has been deposited in Deutsche Sammlung von Mikroorganismen und Zellkulturen as DSM 44393T and in the American Type Culture Collection as strain ATCC 700731T.
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PMID:Mycobacterium septicum sp. nov., a new rapidly growing species associated with catheter-related bacteraemia. 1075 63

In order to perform resections of tumors at critical sites in the liver in young children, liver resections in cardiac arrest and deep hypothermia under cardiopulmonary bypass have been developed. We report our experience with liver resection under cardiopulmonary bypass in three children with hepatoblastoma. In the first child the operation was performed under cardiac arrest and, the other two children were operated on under "low flow" conditions. The periods under cardiopulmonary bypass circulation were well tolerated. Extended right liver resections with vascular reconstructions were performed. The postoperative increase of liver enzymes was moderate. The increase in GOT was between 100 and 200 U/l. In spite of the extended tumor growth, reasonable long-term results were achieved by resection in combination with chemotherapy. One child has been living 8 years and another 10 months without tumor recurrence. The third child died due to sepsis during adjuvant chemotherapy, after she had recovered well from liver resection.
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PMID:[Extended liver resection in small children under circulatory arrest and "low-flow" cardiopulmonary bypass]. 1094 36

Involvement of the inferior vena cava (IVC) by hepatic tumors, although uncommon, is considered to be unresectable by standard surgical techniques. Recent advances in hepatic surgery have made combined hepatic and vena caval resection possible. The purpose of this study is to describe the surgical techniques and early results of combined resection of the liver and IVC. From 1997 to 2000, 11 patients underwent resection of the IVC along with four to seven liver segments. Resections were carried out for hepatocellular carcinoma (four); colorectal metastases (four); and hepatoblastoma, gastrointestinal stromal tumor metastases, and squamous cell carcinoma in one patient each. Ex vivo procedures were performed twice, and total vascular isolation was used in the nine other cases. The IVC was reconstructed with ringed Gore-Tex tube graft (five), primarily (five), or with Gore-Tex patches (one). There were two early deaths: one from liver failure at 3 weeks and one from sepsis secondary to a perforated segment of small bowel 4 months postresection. One patient with a gastrointestinal stromal tumor died at 32 months of recurrent tumor and one patient with hepatocellular carcinoma is alive with recurrent tumor at 16 months. The remaining patients are alive and disease free with follow-up ranging from 3 to 40 months without evidence of IVC occlusion. Combined resection of the liver and IVC is a formidable undertaking with substantial surgical risk. However, this aggressive surgical approach offers a chance for cure in patients with tumors involving the IVC that would otherwise have a dismal prognosis.
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PMID:Resection of the inferior vena cava for hepatic malignancy. 1173 Feb 25

Sirolimus is a promising immune suppressive agent, with the potential to reduce calcineurin inhibitor associated nephrotoxicity, halt progression of chronic rejection and prevent tumor proliferation. The aim of this study was to review the experience using sirolimus in pediatric liver transplant recipients at a single center. Database and medical charts of all pediatric liver transplant recipients receiving sirolimus at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto were reviewed. Eight patients received sirolimus between October, 2000 and September, 2002. Indications for using sirolimus were post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease (PTLD) (n = 6) and hepatoblastoma (n = 2). Two patients with PTLD concurrently had renal impairment and chronic rejection. Sirolimus dosages ranged between 1.5 and 5 mg once daily. Median duration of follow-up was 17 months. Persistently elevated liver transaminase levels in the two children with chronic rejection decreased during sirolimus therapy. Recurrence of PTLD occurred in one patient. Two patients were diagnosed with acute cellular rejection after transition to maintenance sirolimus monotherapy. Resolution of adverse effects including mouth sores (n = 3), leg swelling (n = 2) and hyperlipidemia (n = 3) occurred either spontaneously or with dose reduction. Sirolimus was discontinued in four patients because of persisting bone marrow suppression, interstitial pneumonitis, life-threatening sepsis and refractory diarrhea. Children with PTLD or hepatoblastoma may benefit from immune suppression with sirolimus after liver transplantation. Further multi-center, prospective, randomized controlled trials will be instrumental to further the knowledge of long-term efficacy, safety and tolerability of sirolimus for selected children following liver transplantation.
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PMID:Sirolimus for pediatric liver transplant recipients with post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease and hepatoblastoma. 1517 61

We report a 30-month-old female with intrauterine growth retardation, postnatal failure to thrive, pancytopoenia and myelodysplasia with monosomy 7 in the marrow. The child succumbed to overwhelming sepsis, following a bone marrow transplant to facilitate chemotherapy for metastatic hepatoblastoma--a tumour that has not been previously reported in myelodysplasia syndromes. Cytogenetic, molecular and microarray analysis of peripheral blood, skin fibroblasts and bone marrow revealed unusual results, suggestive of somatic chromosome instability. A normal peripheral blood karyotype was documented in infancy. Monosomy 7 was found in the bone marrow. Molecular (microsatellite marker) results for a later peripheral blood specimen were suggestive of partial maternal isodisomy 7q, and this was supported by microarray data on single-nucleotide polymorphisms. Microarray data on gene copy number, collected for the same blood specimen, indicated cryptic mosaicism for the monosomy 7 cell line, with the monosomic line lacking the paternal copy. In fibroblasts, cytogenetic data showed mosaic partial trisomy for distal 7p.
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PMID:Chromosome 7 aberrations in a young girl with myelodysplasia and hepatoblastoma: an unusual association. 1631 99

Hepatic resection is the main treatment modality for hepatic tumors in childhood. Advances in diagnostic technique, preoperative preparation, surgical technique, and postoperative management increased the success rate. The aim of this study is to report our experience in hepatic lobectomy, which is relatively rare procedure in childhood. Medical records of 25 patients who underwent hepatic lobectomy between January 1977 and June 2002 were reviewed retrospectively. Age, gender, diagnosis, physical examination findings, results of preoperative laboratory investigations, radiological examination, resectability criteria, preoperative biopsies, chemotherapies, radiotherapies, postoperative pathological results, incisions, operation technique, intraoperative transfusions, drains used, antibiotic prophylaxes, and intraoperative and postoperative complications were evaluated for all patients. Out of 25 patients with hepatic tumor seven patients with hepatoblastoma and four patients with hepatocellular carcinoma were given 5.7 +/- 0.3 cycles of chemotherapy before the operation. Right lobectomy (n = 12), left lobectomy (n = 5), extended left lobectomy (n = 4), and extended right lobectomy (n = 3) and right lobectomy with enucleation of two masses from left lobe (n = 1) were performed. Intraoperative blood transfusion of 30.7+/-6.0 ml/kg body weight was necessary. Pathological examination of resected tumors revealed hepatoblastoma (n=11), mesenchymal hamartoma (n = 5), hepatocellular carcinoma (n = 4), hemangioendothelioma (n=1), malignant mesenchymal tumor (n = 1), hemangioma (n = 1), cyst adenoma (n = 1), and metastasis of cellular mesoblastic nephroma (n = 1). Patients were observed in the intensive care unit for 3.4 +/- 0.3 days. Postoperative complications were sepsis (n = 1), disseminated intravascular coagulation (n = 2), fever (n = 3), jaundice (n = 3), intraabdominal abscess (n = 3), ileus (n = 2), and subdiaphragmatic abscess with pleural effusion (n = 1). Hepatic lobectomy is a major operation, which is feasible yielding curative results in children. Safe hepatic resections with acceptable blood loss can be performed by a technique relying on good anatomic dissection and surgical control.
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PMID:Hepatic lobectomies in children: experience of a center in the light of changing management of malignant liver tumors. 1639 9

Posttransplant lymphoproliferative disease was first reported in 1968. Posttransplant lymphoproliferative disease encompasses a range of abnormalities from benign infectious mononucleosis-like illnesses to non-Hodgkin's lymphomas with nodal and extranodal site involvement. We evaluated five children who had posttransplant lymphoproliferative disease after liver transplantation. Since 2001, we have performed 118 liver transplantations in 115 children. Five children (4.6%), including three girls and two boys of overall mean age, 3.9 year, developed posttransplant lymphoproliferative diseases. The indications for liver transplant were hepatoblastoma in one recipient and cholestatic liver disease in the remaining four subjects. Posttransplant lymphoproliferative disease was diagnosed at 6, 11, 17, 22, and 27 months after the liver transplantation. Imaging modalities identified generalized lymphadenopathy in one, multiple liver masses in one, a large portal mass in one, multiple stomach ulcers in one, and a large mediastinal mass in one recipient. At diagnosis, the recipient with the large mediastinal mass displayed cough; the remaining four recipients were asymptomatic. Histological findings showed B-cell lymphomas in three recipients and T-cell lymphomas in two. The results of in situ hybridization for Epstein-Barr virus were negative in one recipient and positive in four. Four recipients were treated with chemotherapy; the remaining recipient was treated with anti-CD20 monoclonal antibodies. The one recipient who had a large mediastinal mass died at 2 months after receiving the diagnosis of chemotherapy-related sepsis; the remaining four children are alive at 9, 11, 18, and 34 months after treatment. Our rate of posttransplant lymphoproliferative disease was similar to that in the literature. From a few months to several years after liver transplantation, radiologists must be alert to the possibility of posttransplant lymphoproliferative disease. Thorough imaging is required to detect the wide variety of potential presentations.
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PMID:Posttransplant lymphoproliferative disease in pediatric liver transplant recipients. 1976 63

Hepatoblastoma is the most common liver malignancy in children, typically diagnosed before age 2. The survival rate for hepatoblastoma has increased dramatically in the last 30 years, but the typical chemotherapeutic agents used for treatment are associated with significant toxicity. In this report, the authors present two cases of hepatoblastoma treated with surgical resection and a novel biotherapeutic regimen that included opioid growth factor (OGF). Case #1 is an infant diagnosed with a large mass on prenatal ultrasound. After subsequent diagnosis of hepatoblastoma, she was treated with one course of neoadjuvant chemotherapy at approximately 1 week of age. Following significant complications from the chemotherapy (neutropenic fever, pneumonia and sepsis), the patient's parents declined further chemotherapy, and the infant was treated with surgical resection and opioid growth factor (OGF)/low dose naltrexone (LDN). She is currently at close to 10 years disease-free survival. Case #2 is a child diagnosed with a liver mass on ultrasound at 20 months of age, later biopsy-proven to represent hepatoblastoma. Due to existing co-morbidities including autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease and hypertension, and indications from the biopsy that the tumor might be insensitive to chemotherapy, the parents elected not to proceed with neoadjuvant chemotherapy. The patient was treated with surgical resection and OGF/LDN, and is currently at more than 5 years disease-free survival. This case series highlights the need for less toxic treatment options than conventional chemotherapy. Modulation of the OGF-OGF receptor axis represents a promising safe and therapeutic avenue for effective treatment of hepatoblastoma.
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PMID:Opioid growth factor (OGF) for hepatoblastoma: a novel non-toxic treatment. 2327 62


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