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Case Conference. Maria Victoria Pertubal , MD PGY-2 St Barnabas Hospital - Pediatrics. TS 23 month old girl. --In Israel-- March 2012 Noted with decreased activity and seemed less happy, refused to walk ER: + anemia, US: + liver mass
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Case Conference • Maria Victoria Pertubal , MD • PGY-2 • St Barnabas Hospital - Pediatrics
TS 23 month old girl • --In Israel-- • March 2012 • Noted with decreased activity and seemed less happy, refused to walk • ER: + anemia, US: + liver mass • Transferred to Children’s Hospital: + high AFP (~ 600,000) • CT scan : + tumor 2 lobes of liver, + pulmonary nodules • April 2012 • Liver biopsy : + consistent with small cell hepatoblastoma • SIOPEL 4 Cycle 1: Cisplatin + Doxorubicin • ---flew to NYC---
July 2012 • Cycle 3 (SIOPEL4) Cisplatin + Doxorubicin • Case reviewed at Tumor Board : Resectable • AFP 189.4 • Pathology : 95% tumor necrosis • AFP 55.5 • August 2012 • Cycle 4 (SIOPEL 4) Cisplatin • Admitted for nadir sepsis
In NYC • May 2012 • Cycle 2 delayed due to nadir sepsis • MSKCC, confirmed the diagnosis of hepatoblastoma, epithelial type with predominant embryonal component. • AFP 39,709.9 Cycle 2 (SIOPEL4) Cisplatin + Doxorubicin • Admitted for nadir sepsis • June 2012 • CT scan : regression of large pulmonary nodule • MRI of liver : decreased size of liver tumors • Surgical eval: unresectable needs liver transplant • AFP 783.5 Cycle 3 (SIOPEL 4) Cisplatin + Doxorubicin
Epidemiology • Primary malignant tumors of the liver in pediatric population are _____ in the pediatric age group • Median age of diagnosis is_____ • Males to female preponderance is ______ • associated with Extremely LBW
Tumor biology • Hepatoblastoma has strong associations with which syndromes? (____ _____) • APC gene mutation is associated with _________ • ______syndrome associated with loss of heterozygosity IFG-2 gene at chromososme 11 p 15
Pathology • Hepatoblastoma represents _____ % of childhood liver cancers • the remaining ____% is __________ • Other Primary malignant tumors of the liver are : • Benign tumors of the liver are: • Commonly arises from _____lobe of liver
Primary liver cancers: • Hepatoblastoma • Hepatocellular carcinoma • extrahepatic biliary tree sarcoma • (angiosarcoma, ERMS)
Primary benign liver tumors: • vascular tumors: • hemangioma • hemangioepithelioma • hepatic ademona • focal nodular hyperplasia
Histopathology • Epithelial type • Fetal • Embryonal • Variants : macrotrabecular, • small cell ( anaplastic type ) • Mixed epithelial + mesenchymal type
Prognosis • Significance by histology is still unresolved • Complete resection of tumor ( purely fetal type ) + low mitotic activity = Excelent prognosis • Small cell- anaplastic type, poor prognosis • Often misdiagnosed due to low AFP levels
Clinical S/sx • Systemic symptoms • Physical exam: • Abdomen__________ • skin __________ • Signs of precocious puberty (3%)
Sites of metastasis • Most common site __________ • other less common_______&____
Imaging and Laboratory • First line modality for any child presenting with abdominal mass___ • assess the extent of involvement and resectability of tumor ________ • to define vascular involvement_____
Investigation of metastasis • Chest ct • Bone scans only if bone mets are suspected
Blood tests • CBC • LFT • AFP - often increased in 80- 90%, except for the _______ type • - used to monitor residual disease or recurrence • * AFP levels are eleveated in infancy, and will start to decline after 1 yr of age.
Management • 2 approaches • COG – Children’s Oncology Group • SIOPEL -Société Internationale d’Oncologie Pédiatrique – Epithelial Liver Tumor Study Group. • International Society Of Pediatric Oncology Group - (European based grp)
Staging • based on post-surgical findings
Chemotherapy • Cisplatin, 5- FU, vincristine • Doxorubicin – reserved for unresponsive and recurrent tumors • Cyclophosphamide • irinotecan
Treatment • Complete resection – 40 – 60% long term cure • Pre-op chemo – for large unresectable tumors resectable • Orthotopic liver transplant – for unresectable tumors
How to assess Liver size: • Liver span: • percussion (upper edge) • palpation (lower edge) • Newborns: 3.5 cm • children : 2cm • auscultation- scratch test
Normal liver span • 1 week new born: 4.5 - 5 cm • 12 year old: 7-8 cm (boys) • 6 to 6.5 cm (girls)
A palpable liver is NOT always hepatomegaly • Conditions that can displace the liver inferiorly: • fluid or air in the thorax • retroperitoneal mass (choledochal cyst, abscess) • narow chest walls - pectus excavatum • normal variant of R lobe of liver (Riedel lobe)
Normal liver span • 1 week new born: 4.5 - 5 cm • 12 year old: 7-8 cm (boys) • 6 to 6.5 cm (girls)
Mechanisms for Hepatomegaly: • inflammation • congestion • excessive storage • infiltration • obstruction
Clinical Evaluation • History: • Birth • perinatal infections • maternal infections, h/o IV drug abuse • Rh/ABO incompatibility • Newborn • hyperbilirubinema, NBS • umbilical catherterization (risk of hepatic abscesses
Clinical Evaluation • History: • Non-specific symptoms: • fatigue • anorexia • weight loss • bowel movement changes, color changes, blood in stools • fever • jaundice
Clinical Evaluation • History: • Family history • Inherited disease • travel • food intake • exposure to environmental toxins
Clinical Evaluation • Physical exam: • Liver size • nodularity, firmness • auscultation (bruits, increased flow)
Laboratory: • 2 true Liver Function tests: ____, ____ • PT - prolongation with loss of >80% synthetic capacity • Albumin
Question 176 A mother brings in her 5-week-old infant girl because of feeding difficulties. The baby weighed 3,300 g when born at term, and she has breastfed exclusively. Approximately 2 weeks ago, the parents noted that the baby became increasingly irritable, particularly during feedings, and she began spitting-up 4 to 6 times per day.
Physical examination demonstrates a well-developed, alert but irritable infant whose weight is 3.85 kg, heart rate is 180 beats/min, and respiratory rate is 70 breaths/min. Lung sounds are clear. On physical examination, you note a hyperdynamic precordium and a grade 2/6 holosystolic cardiac murmur. Chest auscultation yields normal results. You palpate a firm liver edge 5.0 cm below the right costal margin. The spleen is not palpable. You also note a 2x2-cm hemangioma on the abdominal wall.
Results of laboratory tests include: • Hemoglobin, 9.8 g/dL (9.8 g/L) • White blood cell count, 4.8x103/mcL (4.8x109/L) • Platelet count, 80x103/mcL (80x109/L) • Peripheral blood smear, Burr cells and schistocytes noted • Electrolytes, normal • Bilirubin, 1.6 mg/dL (27.4 mcmol/L) • Chest radiography demonstrates mild cardiomegaly.
Of the following, the study that is MOST likely to demonstrate the cause of this infant’s symptoms is A. abdominal ultrasonography B. acid alpha-glucosidase assay C. bone marrow aspiration D. Coombs test E. echocardiography
References: • Wolf , A, Lavine Hepatomegaly in Neonates and Children • Pediatrics in review Vol 21 No 9. Sept 2000, pp 303-310 • Abeloff: Abeloff's Clinical Oncology, 4th ed. Chapter 99:Pediatric solid tumors • PREP 2012