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An Audit of Malignant Solid Tumors in Infants and Neonates

Background: To audit the demographics, outcome and factors affecting long-term survival in infants and neonates with solid tumors. Material and Methods: Retrospective case series was performed for 13 years. Demographics, surgical notes, treatment protocols and outcome details were reviewed. Results:...

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Autor principal: Bhatnagar, Sushmita N
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: EL-MED-Pub 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4420305/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26023364
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author Bhatnagar, Sushmita N
author_facet Bhatnagar, Sushmita N
author_sort Bhatnagar, Sushmita N
collection PubMed
description Background: To audit the demographics, outcome and factors affecting long-term survival in infants and neonates with solid tumors. Material and Methods: Retrospective case series was performed for 13 years. Demographics, surgical notes, treatment protocols and outcome details were reviewed. Results: Of total 372 tumors over 13 years, there were 59 infants (15.86%) of which 8 were neonates, with M:F 1.2:1, and mean age of presentation was 5.18months. Fifty three of the infants had tumors which were > 5 cm in size. Thirty two (54%) had a rapid progression of the lesion during investigations. Tumors markers and pre-operative biopsy were diagnostic in 61.5% and 30% respectively. Neuroblastoma was the commonest tumor (22%), followed by hepatoblastoma (20.3%), malignant germ cell tumor (20.3%), soft tissue sarcomas (11.9%), and others (8.5%). Staging distribution for 39 (66%) infants showed Stage 1-n=9, Stage 2-n=15, Stage 3-n=7, Stage 4-n= 5 and Stage IVs-n=3. Nineteen (32.2%) babies received chemotherapy. Almost half (50.8%) of the children underwent surgical removal of the tumor; with gross total resection in 76.6%. The overall mortality was 35.6%. About 30.5% are alive, well and tumor free on 2-12 years follow-up. Conclusion: A much higher incidence (15.8%) of infantile tumors in our region as compared to literature (2%) is alarming. Treatment failures from deaths or non-compliance amounted to be 69.5%. These are the two major issues which need to be addressed in the future management of infantile tumors. Reduction in deaths due to chemotherapy toxicity, rapid surgical intervention and R0 resection and risk stratification needs to be incorporated, to improve long-term tumor free survival in infants.
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spelling pubmed-44203052015-05-28 An Audit of Malignant Solid Tumors in Infants and Neonates Bhatnagar, Sushmita N J Neonatal Surg Original Article Background: To audit the demographics, outcome and factors affecting long-term survival in infants and neonates with solid tumors. Material and Methods: Retrospective case series was performed for 13 years. Demographics, surgical notes, treatment protocols and outcome details were reviewed. Results: Of total 372 tumors over 13 years, there were 59 infants (15.86%) of which 8 were neonates, with M:F 1.2:1, and mean age of presentation was 5.18months. Fifty three of the infants had tumors which were > 5 cm in size. Thirty two (54%) had a rapid progression of the lesion during investigations. Tumors markers and pre-operative biopsy were diagnostic in 61.5% and 30% respectively. Neuroblastoma was the commonest tumor (22%), followed by hepatoblastoma (20.3%), malignant germ cell tumor (20.3%), soft tissue sarcomas (11.9%), and others (8.5%). Staging distribution for 39 (66%) infants showed Stage 1-n=9, Stage 2-n=15, Stage 3-n=7, Stage 4-n= 5 and Stage IVs-n=3. Nineteen (32.2%) babies received chemotherapy. Almost half (50.8%) of the children underwent surgical removal of the tumor; with gross total resection in 76.6%. The overall mortality was 35.6%. About 30.5% are alive, well and tumor free on 2-12 years follow-up. Conclusion: A much higher incidence (15.8%) of infantile tumors in our region as compared to literature (2%) is alarming. Treatment failures from deaths or non-compliance amounted to be 69.5%. These are the two major issues which need to be addressed in the future management of infantile tumors. Reduction in deaths due to chemotherapy toxicity, rapid surgical intervention and R0 resection and risk stratification needs to be incorporated, to improve long-term tumor free survival in infants. EL-MED-Pub 2012-01-01 /pmc/articles/PMC4420305/ /pubmed/26023364 Text en Copyright © 2012 Bhatnagar http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Bhatnagar, Sushmita N
An Audit of Malignant Solid Tumors in Infants and Neonates
title An Audit of Malignant Solid Tumors in Infants and Neonates
title_full An Audit of Malignant Solid Tumors in Infants and Neonates
title_fullStr An Audit of Malignant Solid Tumors in Infants and Neonates
title_full_unstemmed An Audit of Malignant Solid Tumors in Infants and Neonates
title_short An Audit of Malignant Solid Tumors in Infants and Neonates
title_sort audit of malignant solid tumors in infants and neonates
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4420305/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26023364
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