5 research outputs found

    Primary lung carcinoma in children and adolescents: An analysis of the European Cooperative Study Group on Paediatric Rare Tumours (EXPeRT)

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    Background Primary lung carcinoma is an exceptionally rare childhood tumour, as per definition of the European Cooperative Study Group on Paediatric Rare Tumours (EXPeRT), with an incidence of 0.1–0.2/1,000,000 per year. Little is known about the clinical characteristics of children with primary lung carcinoma, a gap which this joint analysis of the EXPeRT group aimed to fill. Patients and methods We performed a retrospective case series of children (aged 0–18 years) with primary lung carcinoma, as collected through the EXPeRT databases between 2000 and 2021. We recorded relevant clinical characteristics including treatment and outcome. Results Thirty-eight patients were identified with a median age of 12.8 years at diagnosis (range: 0–17). Mucoepidermoid carcinoma (MEC) was the most frequent entity (n = 20), followed by adenocarcinoma (n = 12), squamous cell carcinoma (n = 4), adenosquamous carcinoma (n = 1) and small-cell lung cancer (n = 1). Patients with MEC presented rarely with lymph node metastases (2/20 cases). Overall, 19/20 patients achieved long-lasting remission by surgical resection only. Patients with other histologies often presented in advanced stages (14/18 TNM stage IV). With multimodal treatment, 3-year overall survival was 52% ± 13%. While all patients with squamous cell carcinoma died, the 12 patients with adenocarcinoma had a 3-year overall survival of 64% ± 15%. Conclusions Primary lung carcinomas rarely occur in children. While the outcome of children with MEC is favourable with surgery alone, patients with other histotypes have a poor prognosis, despite aggressive treatment, highlighting the need to develop new strategies for these children, such as mutation-guided treatment

    Salivary Gland Carcinomas in Children and Adolescents: A Retrospective Analysis of the European Cooperative Study Group for Pediatric Rare Tumours (EXPeRT)

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    Background Salivary gland carcinomas (SGCs) are exceedingly rare in children, with a reported annual incidence of 0.8-1.4/1,000,000 under 20 years of age. Evidence regarding optimal treatment of pediatric SGCs is limited, and for a long time, no guidelines have been available. Here, we report on an international retrospective series of SGCs in children and adolescents collected by several national rare tumor study groups cooperating in the European Cooperative Study Group of Pediatric Rare Tumors (EXPeRT) Patients and Methods Patients diagnosed between 2000 and 2014 were included Data were reviewed the by the respective national rare tumor working groups and reported on a harmonized data sheet to EXPeRT for central analysis. Results Overall, 121 patients were identified, including 103 patients with parotid tumors, 12 with submandibular tumors and six tumors in minor glands. In 11 patients, SGCs were secondary cancers. Mucoepidermoid carcinoma was the most frequent diagnosis (n=65), followed by acinic cell carcinoma (n=39), adenocystic carcinoma (n=7), sialoblastoma (n=3) and other carcinomas (n=7). All patients underwent tumor resection (R0: 66%, R1: 34%). Neck dissection was performed in 47 patients, revealing nodal metastases in 13. Twenty-four patients underwent irradiation, and 11 patients received adjuvant chemotherapy. During a median follow-up of 25 (6-140 months), 14 relapses were observed (7 local, 5 with nodal and 2 with distant metastases). Five patients died of disease. Higher histological tumor grade was associated with advanced local tumor stage and risk of recurrence. Conclusions SGCs in children and adolescents mostly present as localized tumors with low malignant potential. In approximately 10% of patients, regional lymph node metastases present at diagnosis. After complete resection, prognosis is favorable. Surgery is the mainstay of treatment; adjuvant local or cervical irradiation should be reserved to those rare patients with nodal metastases or less favorable biology such as adenocystic carcinoma

    The French FRACTURE database: A way to improve knowledge on management of children with very rare tumors

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    International audienceIntroduction: Very rare pediatric tumors (VRTs), defined by an annual incidence ≤2 per million inhabitants, represent a heterogeneous group of cancers. Due to their extremely low incidence, knowledge on these tumors is scant. Since 2012, the French Very Rare Tumors Committee (FRACTURE) database has recorded clinical data about VRTs in France. This study aims: (a) to describe the tumors registered in the FRACTURE database; and (b) to compare these data with those registered in the French National Registry of Childhood Cancer (RNCE).Methods: Data recorded in the FRACTURE database between January 1, 2012 and December 31, 2018 were analyzed. In addition, these data were compared with those of the RNCE database between 2012 and 2015 to evaluate the completeness of the documentation and understand any discrepancies.Results: A total of 477 patients with VRTs were registered in the FRACTURE database, representing 97 histological types. Of the 14 most common tumors registered in the RNCE (772 patients), only 19% were also registered in the FRACTURE database. Total 39% of children and adolescent VRTs registered in the RNCE and/or FRACTURE database (323 of a total of 828 patients) were not treated in or linked to a specialized pediatric oncology unit.Conclusion: VRTs represent many different heterogenous entities, which nevertheless account for 10% of all pediatric cancers diagnosed each year. Sustainability in the collection of these rare tumor cases is therefore important, and a regular systematic collaboration between the FRACTURE database and the RNCE register helps to provide a more exhaustive picture of these VRTs and allow research completeness for some peculiar groups of patients

    Functional diversity of NLRP3 gain-of-function mutants associated with CAPS autoinflammation

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    International audienceNLRP3-associated autoinflammatory disease is a heterogenous group of monogenic conditions caused by NLRP3 gain-of-function mutations. The poor functional characterization of most NLRP3 variants hinders diagnosis despite efficient anti-IL-1 treatments. Additionally, while NLRP3 is controlled by priming and activation signals, gain-of-functions have only been investigated in response to priming. Here, we characterize 34 NLRP3 variants in vitro, evaluating their activity upon induction, priming, and/or activation signals, and their sensitivity to four inhibitors. We highlight the functional diversity of the gain-of-function mutants and describe four groups based on the signals governing their activation, correlating partly with the symptom severity. We identify a new group of NLRP3 mutants responding to the activation signal without priming, associated with frequent misdiagnoses. Our results identify key NLRP3 residues controlling inflammasome activity and sensitivity to inhibitors, and antagonistic mechanisms with broader efficacy for therapeutic strategies. They provide new insights into NLRP3 activation, an explanatory mechanism for NLRP3-AID heterogeneity, and original tools for NLRP3-AID diagnosis and drug development

    Human type I IFN deficiency does not impair B cell response to SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccination

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    International audienceInborn and acquired deficits of type I interferon (IFN) immunity predispose to life-threatening COVID-19 pneumonia. We longitudinally profiled the B cell response to mRNA vaccination in SARS-CoV-2 naive patients with inherited TLR7, IRF7, or IFNAR1 deficiency, as well as young patients with autoantibodies neutralizing type I IFNs due to autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome type-1 (APS-1) and older individuals with age-associated autoantibodies to type I IFNs. The receptor-binding domain spike protein (RBD)–specific memory B cell response in all patients was quantitatively and qualitatively similar to healthy donors. Sustained germinal center responses led to accumulation of somatic hypermutations in immunoglobulin heavy chain genes. The amplitude and duration of, and viral neutralization by, RBD-specific IgG serological response were also largely unaffected by TLR7, IRF7, or IFNAR1 deficiencies up to 7 mo after vaccination in all patients. These results suggest that induction of type I IFN is not required for efficient generation of a humoral response against SARS-CoV-2 by mRNA vaccines
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