29 research outputs found
Outcomes of truncal vascular injuries in children.
BACKGROUND: Pediatric truncal vascular injuries occur infrequently and have a reported mortality rate of 30% to 50%. This report examines the demographics, mechanisms of injury, associated trauma, and outcome of patients presenting for the past 10 years at a single institution with truncal vascular injuries.
METHODS: A retrospective review (1997-2006) of a pediatric trauma registry at a single institution was undertaken.
RESULTS: Seventy-five truncal vascular injuries occurred in 57 patients (age, 12 +/- 3 years); the injury mechanisms were penetrating in 37%. Concomitant injuries occurred with 76%, 62%, and 43% of abdominal, thoracic, and neck vascular injuries, respectively. Nonvascular complications occurred more frequently in patients with abdominal vascular injuries who were hemodynamically unstable on presentation. All patients with thoracic vascular injuries presenting with hemodynamic instability died. In patients with neck vascular injuries, 1 of 2 patients who were hemodynamically unstable died, compared to 1 of 12 patients who died in those who presented hemodynamically stable. Overall survival was 75%.
CONCLUSIONS: Survival and complications of pediatric truncal vascular injury are related to hemodynamic status at the time of presentation. Associated injuries are higher with trauma involving the abdomen
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Lymphatic mapping with sentinel node biopsy in pediatric patients
Background/Purpose: Lymphatic mapping with sentinel node biopsy is used widely in adult melanoma and breast cancer to determine nodal status without the morbidity associated with elective lymph node dissection. This technique can be used in children to determine lymph node status with limited dissection and accurate interpretation. The authors report their initial experience. Methods: The charts of patients who underwent lymphatic mapping with sentinel node biopsy were reviewed retrospectively. Lymphoscintigraphy was performed in patients with truncal lesions 24 hours before surgery to determine the draining nodal basin (for surgical mapping). The tumors were injected 1 hour preoperatively with technetium sulfur colloid and in the operating room with Lymphazurin blue. The draining basin was examined using a radioisotope detector. The blue nodes with high counts were localized and removed. If nodal metastases were identified, lymph node dissection was recommended. Four patients were injected only with Lymphazurin blue. Results: Thirteen children (7 girls, 6 boys; mean age, 7 years) underwent lymphatic mapping with sentinel node biopsy. The tumor types were as follows: 8 malignant melanoma (6 extremity, 2 truncal), 1 malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor, 1 alveolar soft part sarcoma, and 3 rhabdomyosarcoma. A mean of 2.4 nodes (range, 1 to 6) were removed from each patient. Six patients had a positive sentinel node. Formal lymph node dissection was performed on 4 of the 6 patients, 1 of whom had further nodal disease with 2 of 13 nodes containing micrometastases. One of the 6 patients refused lymph node dissection and adjuvant therapy; the final patient had rhabdomyosarcoma, a malignancy for which lymph node dissection is not indicated. Pulmonary metastasis developed 26 months after diagnoses in the patient with alveolar soft part sarcoma and a negative sentinel node. This patient was injected only with Lymphazurin blue at the time of sentinel node biopsy and refused adjuvant therapy. There have been no other recurrences. There were no complications related to lymphatic mapping or sentinel node biopsy. Conclusions: Lymphatic mapping with sentinel node biopsy, using both technetium-labeled sulfur colloid and Lymphazurin blue, can be performed safely in pediatric skin and soft tissue malignancies. Further study with long-term follow-up will determine the utility and accuracy of this technique in pediatric malignancies. J Pediatr Surg 35:961-964. Copyright © 2000 by W.B. Saunders Company
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Preoperative staging, prognostic factors, and outcome for extremity rhabdomyosarcoma: A preliminary report from the intergroup rhabdomyosarcoma study IV (1991–1997)
Background: During the fourth Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) Study IRS IV 1991–1997, a preoperative staging system was evaluated prospectively for the first time. The authors evaluated this staging system and the role of surgery in extremity RMS in contemporary multimodal therapy.
Methods: A total of 139 patients (71 girls; median age, 6 years) were entered in IRS IV with extremity-site RMS. Stage was assigned by the IRSG Preoperative Staging System. Postsurgical group was determined by tumor status after initial surgical intervention. Multivariate analysis was performed using all pretreatment factors that were significant by univariate analysis, including clinical Group lie, I through IV), tumor invasiveness (T1,T2), nodal status (N0,N1), and tumor size (< or ≥5 cm). Failure-free survival rates (FFS) and survival rates were estimated using the Kaplan and Meier method.
Results: Preoperative staging and clinical group distribution were as follows: Stage 2, n = 34; Stage 3, n = 73; Stage 4, n = 32; Group I, n = 31; Group II, n = 21; Group III, n = 54; Group IV, n = 33. Three-year FFS was 55%, and the overall survival rate was 70%. Eighty-seven patients had either unresectable, gross residual disease (Group III) or metastases (Group IV). FFS was significantly worse for these patients with advanced disease, compared with that for patients with complete resection or with only microscopic residual tumor lie, Group I or II; Group I, 3-year FFS, 91%; Group II, 72%; Group III, 50%; Group IV, 23%; P < .001). Lymph nodes were evaluated surgically in 76 patients with positive results in 38. Clinically, 13 additional patients had nodal disease. Both stage and group were highly predictive of outcome and were highly correlated. By multivariate analysis, none of the other variables were predictors of FFS.
Conclusions: This review confirms the utility of pretreatment staging for stratification of patients with extremity RMS with widely different risks of relapse, thereby paving the way for development of risk-based therapy. Group (operative staging) remains the most important predictor of FFS, emphasizing the importance of complete gross resection at initial surgical intervention, when feasible without loss of limb function. The high incidence of nodal disease in the patients who had lymph node biopsy confirms the need for surgical evaluation of lymph nodes to ensure accurate staging in children with extremity rhabdomyosarcoma
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The role of surgery in children with neurofibromatosis
Neurofibromatosis frequently is complicated by the development of symptomatic lesions such as optic gliomas and plexiform neurofibromas that require operative resection. Although characteristically benign, these neoplasms have often devastating functional and cosmetic effects and must be monitored for malignant transformation. The purpose of this study is to identify and describe the surgical considerations in the care of children with neurofibromatosis.
The authors reviewed the charts of all children (<21) at our institution with neurofibromatosis who underwent an operative procedure from 1979 to 1999. Patient demographics, symptomatic lesions, malignant transformation, form of surgical intervention, type of anesthesia, and outcome were collected.
A total of 249 patients with either neurofibromatosis 1 or 2 were identified. Of these, 50 (20%) underwent a total of 93 operations. The average age at operation was 9.4 years (1.2 to 21 years). There were 40 soft tissue procedures, 21 intracranial, and 32 miscellaneous. The soft tissue masses typically were treated with wide local excision, and in 8 of these procedures multiple resections were performed. Four teen of the 50 patients had malignancies. Five of the tumors were soft tissue sarcomas, and 9 were intracranial malignancies. Three patients died, 2 from malignancy and 1 from acute, obstructive hydrocephalus after operation. There were 3 patients alive with malignancy and 8 others living with varying levels of disability.
Neurofibromatosis in the pediatric patient frequently requires surgical intervention, often because of symptoms such as pain or cosmetic deformity, or for malignancy. Children should be watched carefully for signs of malignant transformation and undergo biopsy for neurofibromas that exhibit rapid growth. Management of sarcomas should be aggressive with consideration given to re-excision, placement of brachytherapy catheters, metastectomy, and limb salvage with adjuvant therapy when possible. Preoperatively, children should receive clinical and radiographic (computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging) evaluation for hydrocephalus
Melanoma growth and tumorigenicity in models of microgravity
Spaceflight involves numerous biological stressors that could affect long-term cancer incidence and tumor behavior. Ground-based models of microgravity can be used to investigate in vitro and in vivo tumor growth as a preparation for later work in space. The incidence of tumor growth and carcinogenesis in microgravity is as yet unknown. Hence, we investigated the effects of modeled microgravity on tumor growth and tumorigenicity using ground-based in vitro and in vivo models