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Solid Tumors of Childhood

Solid Tumors of Childhood. Prof. Dr. Cengiz Canpolat. CNS Tumors. Most common solid tm of childhood. There are inherited disorders that are associated with brain tms: Cowden’s Synd ( PTEN, cerebellar dysplastic gangliocytoma ) Li-Fraumeni (p53, MB/astrocytoma)

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Solid Tumors of Childhood

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  1. Solid Tumors of Childhood Prof. Dr. Cengiz Canpolat

  2. CNS Tumors • Most common solid tm of childhood. • There are inherited disorders that are associated with brain tms: • Cowden’s Synd (PTEN, cerebellar dysplastic gangliocytoma) • Li-Fraumeni (p53, MB/astrocytoma) • NF-1 (neurofibromin, astrocytoma, optic glioma) • NF-2 (NF2, schwannoma, meningioma) • Nevoid Basal Cell Carcinoma (PTCH, MB) • Tuberous Sclerosis (TSC1-2, Astrocytoma) • Turcot’s Synd (Adenomatosis Poliposis Coli-DNA mismatch tamir gen defekti, MB) • von Hippel Lindau’s Synd (VHL-DNA replikasyonu, hemangioblastoma)

  3. Approximate Incidence of Common CNS Tms in Children

  4. pathology Supratentorial Lesions 1. Cerebral hemisphere: low- and high-grade glioma, ependymoma, meningioma, primitive neuroectodermal tumor (PNET). 2. Sella or chiasm: craniopharyngioma, pituitary adenoma, optic nerve glioma. 3. Pineal region: Pineoblastoma, pineocytoma, germ cell tumors, astrocytoma.

  5. pathology • Infratentorial Lesions • 1-Posterior fossa: medulloblastoma, glioma (low more frequent than high grade), ependymoma, meningioma. • 2-Brain stem tumors: low- and high grade glioma, PNET • Ventricular Lesions: Choroid plexus papilloma, choroid plexus carcinoma, neurocytoma.

  6. CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS • Symptoms and signs are related to the location, size and growth rate of tumor: • • Slow-growing tumors produce massive shifts of normal structures and may become quite large by the time they first become symptomatic • • Rapidly growing tumors produce symptoms early and present when they are relatively small.

  7. Clinical manifestations • 1. Headache. In young children headache can present as irritability. Often worse in themorning, improving throughout the day. • 2. Vomiting. • 3. Disturbances of gait and balance. • 4. Hemiparesis. • 5. Cranial nerve abnormalities. • 6. Impaired vision • a. Diplopia (6th nerve palsy) • b. Papilledema from increased ICP may present as intermittent blurred vision • c. Parinaud syndrome (failure of upward gaze and setting-sun sign, large pupils and decreased constriction to light).

  8. Clinical manifestations (continued) • 7. Mental disturbances – somnolence, irritability, personality or behavioral change, or change in school performance. • 8. Seizures – usually focal. • 9. Endocrine abnormalities: Midline supratentorial tumors may cause endocrine abnormalities due to effects on the hypothalamus or pituitary and visual fielddisturbances as a result of optic pathway involvement. • 10. Cranial enlargement in infants (characteristic of increased ICP). • 11. Diencephalic syndrome can be seen in patients aged 6 months to 3 years with braintumors who present with sudden failure to thrive and emaciation. The syndrome iscaused by a hypothalamic tumor in the anterior portion of the hypothalamus or theanterior floor of the third ventricle.

  9. diagnostic evaluation • Computed Tomography: Scans performed both with and without iodinated contrast agents detect 95% of brain tumors. • Evaluating bony lesions • Detection of calcification in tumor • Investigating unstable patients because of the shorter imaging time • Magnetic Resonance Imaging: No ionizing radiation exposure (especially important in multiple follow-up examinations) • Greater sensitivity in detection of brain tumors especially in the temporal lobe andposterior fossa (these lesions are obscured by bony artifact on CT) • Ability to directly image in multiple planes (multiplanar), which is of value toneurosurgical planning • Ability to apply different pulse sequences which is useful in depicting anatomy (T1-weighted images) and pathology (T2-weighted images) • Ability to map motor areas with functional MRI.

  10. Treatment • Surgery: • 1. To provide a tissue biopsy for purposes of histopathology and cytogenetics. • 2. To attain maximum tumor removal with fewest neurologic sequelae. • 3. To relieve associated increased ICP due to CSF obstruction. • Radiotherapy: Most patients with high-grade brain tumors require radiotherapy to achieve local control of microscopic or macroscopic residual. The wider use of ionizing radiation in pediatric brain tumors has resulted in improved long-termsurvival. The total dose of radiotherapy depends on: • • Tumor type (which also influences volume of treatment) • • Age of the child • • Volume of the brain or spinal cord to be treated.

  11. Treatment • Chemotherapy: plays an expanding role in the management of recurrent disease and in many newly diagnosed patients. Tumors with a low mitotic index and small growth fraction are less sensitive tochemotherapy; tumors with a high mitotic index and larger growth fraction are more sensitive to chemotherapy.

  12. Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma (NHL) • NHL is cancer of immune sytem. • NHL is approximately 10% of all childhood cancers • Male:Female= 2:1 or 3:1 • NHL is less common in childhood than adults. • Histological types of NHL is even less in childhood than adults. • Peak incidence is 5-15y.

  13. Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma (NHL) • Predisposing Factors: • Genetic: Immunological defects (Bruton type of sex-linked agammaglobulinemia, common variable agammaglobulinemia, severe combined immunodeficiency ataxiatelangiectasia, Bloom syndrome Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome, autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome [ALPS]) • • Post-transplant immunosuppression, e.g. post bone-marrow transplantation (especially with use of T-cell depleted marrow); post-solid organ transplantation • • Lymphomatoid papulosis in children may evolve into or co-exist with anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) • Drugs: Diphenylhydantoin, Infliximab and other immunosuppressive agents • Radiation: Children treated with chemotherapy and radiotherapy for Hodgkin lymphoma • Viral: Epstein–Barr virus (EBV), human immune deficiency virus (HIV) and possible link to human T-lymphotropic virus (HTLV).

  14. NHL: Clinical Findings

  15. NHL: Diagnosis • Histopathologic analysis is very important in diagnosis. • Phenotypic and caryotypic analysis should also confirm the histologic diagnosis. • Differential diagnosis from other small round blue tms of childhood is very important (Ewing’s S, NB, RMS).

  16. NHL: Prognostic Criteria • Large tm volume at diagnosis: p • Presence of bone marrow and CNS disease at diagnosis: p • Prolonged amount of time between treatments: p • Incomplete remission at the first 2 months of treatment: p • LDH and/or IL-2R and/or uric acid high: p

  17. NHL: Treatment • Chemotherapy and surgery. • XRT has very limited place in treatment plan.

  18. Hodgkin lymphoma • Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) is characterized by progressive enlargement of the lymph nodes.It is considered unicentric in origin and has a predictable pattern of spread by extension to contiguous nodes • 1. Etiology is unknown. • 2. Comprises 8.8% of all childhood cancers under the age of 20. • 3. Overall annual incidence rate in the United States is 12.1 per million for children under 20 years. • 4. Incidence increases to 32 per million for adolescents 15–19 years. • 5. Bimodal age – incidence curve with one peak at 15–35 years of age and the otherabove 50 years of age (incidence is highest among 15–19-year-olds). • 6. Association with Epstein–Barr virus (EBV). • 7. Incidence increased among consanguineous family members and among siblings of patients with HL. • 8. In United States, increased risk of HL in families with higher incomes and higher education levels.

  19. Hodgkin lymphoma • RISK FACTORS: • 1-family history of HL • 2-EBV infections (EBV incorporated into the tumor genome has been most commonly reported with the mixedcellularity histologic subtype. In turn, this subtype is most common in children fromunderdeveloped countries, in males under age 10 years and in those with other immunodeficiencies • 3-socioeconomic status (There is an association between HL and socioeconomic status. In children less than 10years of age and in underdeveloped nations, HL is associated with lowersocioeconomicstatus and in households with more children. However, in young adult patients and indeveloped nations, HL incidence increases with higher socioeconomic status and with smaller households with fewer children

  20. Hodgkin lymphoma • Histology • Hodgkin lymphomas (HL) consist of two disease groups, as was proposed in the RevisedEuropean-American Classification of Lymphoid Neoplasms (REAL classification) andincorporated into the 2008 4th edition of the WHO Classification of Tumors ofHaematopoietic and Lymphoid Tissues. These two groups are: • • “Classical” HL includes the nodular sclerosis classical Hodgkin lymphoma (NSCHL), mixed cellularity HL (MCHL), lymphocyte-depleted (LDHL) and lymphocyte-rich classical HL (LRCHL) subtypes • • Nodular lymphocyte-predominant HL (NLPHL).

  21. Hodgkin lymphoma • Clinical features 1-Lymphadenopathy (90% of All Cases) • Painless swelling of one or more groups of superficial lymph nodes; rarely painful.Cervical nodes involved in 60–80% of cases; associated with mediastinal involvement in 60% of cases. • Axillary, inguinal, mediastinal and retroperitoneal nodes also frequently involved.Involved nodes are discrete, elastic, painless and usually “rubbery”; tenderness is rare. • 2-Splenomegaly • 3-Systemic Symptoms (30% of All Cases)Intermittent fever (Pel–Ebstein), anorexia, fatigue, weakness, nausea, night sweats and weight loss. Mild itching may be seen in 15–25% of patients with HL • 4-Pulmonary disease (17% of All Cases)cough and dyspnea • 5-Neurologic Manifestations • 6-Bone Disease (2% of All Cases) • 7-Bone Marrow Involvement (5% of All Cases) • 8-Liver Disease (2% of All Cases) • 9-Renal Manifestations • 10-Hematologic Manifestations

  22. Hodgkin lymphoma • Diagnostic investigations • 1-Surgical • Excisional lymph node biopsy • Bilateral bone marrow biopsies • 2-Imaging studies • CT scan of neck, chest, abdomen and pelvis • FDG-PET • Technetium-99 bone scintography • 3-Laboratory studies • Complete blood count • Blood chemistries for renal and hepatic function • Erythrocyte sedimentation rate • Ferritin

  23. Hodgkin lymphoma PROGNOSTIC FACTORS • Advanced stage of disease (Stage IIB, IIIB, or IV disease) • • The presence of B symptoms • • The presence of bulk disease • • Extranodal extension • • Male sex • • Elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate • • White blood cell count 11,500/mm3 or higher • • Hemoglobin less than 11.0 g/dl • • The combination of B symptoms and bulky disease are inferior prognostic indicators

  24. Hodgkin lymphoma • Treatment 1-chemotherapy 2-raidotherapy

  25. Neuroblastoma (NB) • The neuroblastic tms (NB, ganglioneuroblastoma, and ganglioneuroma) are derived from primordial crest cells, that ultimately populate the symphathetic ganglia, adrenal medulla, and other sites. • NB is the most common extracranial solid tm in children and is the most common cancer diagnosed in infancy. • Median age at diagnosis is 17 months; 89% of patients at ages younger than 5y and 97.8% by 10y of age.

  26. Neuroblastoma (NB) • The etiology of NB is unknown in most cases. There are few reports but not consistently confirmed: • alcohol, seizure medications, diuretics, neurally active drugs, fertility drugs or hormones, maternal hair coloring products (???) • paternal occupation of electrical, farming, gardening, painting jobs (???) • Congenital abnormalities with NB is rare: • Turner’s Synd, neurodevelopmental abnormalities, NF-1, Hirschprug dis, central hypoventilation (increased NB incidence) • Down’s Synd (decreased NB incidence)

  27. Neuroblastoma (NB) • Most primary NBs occur within the abdomen (65%) • The signs and symptoms of NB reflect the location of primary, regional, and metastatic disease. • Paraneoplasticsyndromes: • Sweat, flushing, palpitation, hypertension (catecholamine secretion) • Intractable secretory diarrhea, abd distention, hypokalemia (VIP secretion; usu mature NB) • Opsomyoclonus (myoclonic jerking and random eye movement) or cerebellar ataxia (usu g outcome associated with MYCN but long-term nrl deficits; antineural antibodies??).

  28. Diagnosis of NB is established if: • An unequivocal pathological diagnosis made from tm tissue by light microscopy, with or without immunohistology, EM, or increased urine (or serum) catecholamines or metabolites. • BMA or Bx contains unequivocal tm cells AND increased urine (or serum) catecholamines or metabolites.

  29. NB: Prognostic Criteria • The most important clinical variables predictive of disease outcome are the age of the patient and the stage of disease at diagnosis. • Differentiated histology is associated with localized tms (g). • Normal ferritin, NSE, LDH (g, but not against MYCN) • Hyperploidy (DI>1) (g in infants) • 1 N-myc copy (g) • Del 1p (p) • TRKA expression (g)

  30. NB: Treatment • Surgery plays a pivotal role in management for both diagnosis and treatment. Gross total resection improves survival. • Chemotherapy is planned before surgery, if total resection surgery would be mutiliating. • Radiotherapy is considered if margins are positive after the surgery.

  31. Wilms’ Tm (WT) • WT is the most common primary malignant renal tm of childhood. • Male:Female=0.92:1 • Most patients (78%) diagnosed between 1-5y. • Peak age: 3-4y. • Usually sporadic. Less than 1% could be familial.

  32. WT and Congenital Abnormalities • WAGR Synd (WT, Aniridia, GU abn, mental Retardation) • Denys-Drash Synd (pseudohermaphroditism, degenerative renal disease like AGN or NS and WT) • Beckwith-Wiedemann Synd (Hemihypertrophy, sporadic aniridia, omphlocele, visceromegaly)abdominal USG and alpha-FP levels q3mo till 5y/o and q1y till growth stops. • Sporadic hemihypertorphy • Cryptorchidism (male only) • Hypospadias (male only)

  33. WT: Clinical Findings • Abdominal swelling or presence of and abdominal mass are the most common presenting symptoms. Abdominal pain, gross hematuria and fever and hypertension are the other frequent findings. • Increased EPO expression could lead to polyctemia.

  34. WT: Prognostic Factors • Anaplastic histology (p) • Presence of para-aortic lymph nodes (p) • Since the treatment is more effective the prognostic significance of age and tm size does not exist anymore. • LOH 16q (p) • Aneuploidy (p?, g?) • Relapsing after more than 15 months after the diagnosis (g)

  35. WT: Treatment • Surgery. • Chemotherapy. • Radiotherapy in selected patients.

  36. RMS and other STS • Soft-tissue sarcomas (STS) constitute a eterogeneous group of malignant tumors that arederived from primitive mesenchymal cells. These tumors arise from muscle, connectivetissue, supportive tissue and vascular tissue. They are locally highly invasiveand have a high propensity for local recurrence. When they metastasize, it is usually via thebloodstream and, less commonly, via the lymphatics. The STS can be divided into two groups: 1-rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) 2- non-rhabdomyosarcoma soft-tissue sarcomas (NRSTS)

  37. RMS • RMS is the third most common solid extracranial tumor, following neuroblastoma and Wilms’ tumor • It accounts for 3% of all malignant neoplasms • There is a slight male predominance with a male:female ratio of 1.4:1 • There are two age peaks: 2–6 years and 15–19 years. The adolescent peak has primarily been noted in males • Incidence in African-American females is half that of Caucasian females. Incidence islower in Asian populations residing in Asia or the West.

  38. RMS • Risk factors • Germline mutations of the p53 suppressor gene, as in Li-Fraumeni familial cancer syndrome. There is an association between early onset breast cancer, sarcomas, braintumors and adrenocortical tumors in family members • Ionizing radiation • Neurofibromatosis with NF1 • Associated with anomalies of the central nervous system (CNS), genitourinary system, gastrointestinal system and cardiovascular system (i.e. Beckwidth–Weidemann syndrome) • • Associated with maternal and paternal use of marijuana and cocaine and first-trimesterpre-natal X-ray exposure, possibly as an environmental interaction with a genetic trigger

  39. RMS • Pathologic classification 1-embryonal (Head and neck, orbit, genitourinary) -botryoid variant (bladder, vagina,nasopharynx, bile duct) -spindle cell variant (paratesticular) 2-alveolar (extremity, trunk) 3-RMS-NOS (extremity, trunk)

  40. RMS • Clinical manifestations Neck: soft-tissue mass, hoarseness, dysphagia Nasopharynx: sinusitis, local pain and swelling, epistaxis Paranasal Sinus: sinus obstruction/sinusitis, unilateral nasal discharge, local pain and swelling, epistaxis Middle ear/mastoid:chronic otitis media – purulent blood stained discharge, Polypoid mass in external canal, Peripheral facial nerve palsy Orbit: proptosis, ocular palsies, conjunctival mass Vagina and uterus: vaginal bleeding, grapelike clustered mass protruding through vaginal or cervical opening Prostate: hematuria, constipation, urinary obstruction Bladder: urinary obstruction, hematuria Paratesticular: painless scrotal or inguinal mass Retroperitoneum : abdominal pain, abdominal mass, intestinal obstruction Pelvic: constipation, genitourinary obstruction Extremity/trunk:asymptomatic or painful mass

  41. RMS Diagnostic evaluation • Magnetic resonance imaging for extremities, body wall and head/neck • Computed tomography for intrathoracic, retroperitoneal, paraspinal, skull base • Ultrasound for paratesticular, bladder/prostate or biliary tree • Metastatic workup • CT scan: chest , abdomen • Bone scan • Bilateral bone marrow aspiration and biopsy • PET scan for determining initial extent of disease and to monitor response to therapy

  42. RMS • Risk factors Extent of disease Residual disease after surgery Patients with smaller tumors (<5 cm) have improved survival compared to children with tumors >5 cm Those with metastatic disease at diagnosis have the worst prognosis Nonparameningeal head and neck sites, Nonbladder/nonprostate male and femalegenitourinary tract sites and biliary tract are considered “favorable sites”; all other sites are considered “unfavorable.” Children between 1 and 9 years of age have a better prognosis than those older than 9 years of age Risk factors for NRSTS Extent of resection Metastasis Tumor size Location (intraabdominal) Grade

  43. RMS and NR-STS • Treatment 1-surgery 2-chemotherapy 3-radiotherapy

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