6 research outputs found

    Hospitalization of children with sickle cell disease in a region with increasing immigration rates.

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    Sickle cell disease (SCD) has become a paradigm of immigration hematology in Europe. Accurate up-to date information is needed to determine SCD prevalence, define real burden of disease and develop appropriate clinical networks of care, especially in regions lacking screening programs. We used two independent sources of data (Regional Register of Rare Disorders and Regional Register of Hospital Discharge Records) to determine extent of SCD and pattern of hospitalization of pediatric patients in the Veneto Region of NorthEast Italy. A steady increase of case notifications and hospitalizations has been observed in the past five years. Ninety-five percent of patients are immigrants with HbS/HbS SCD. Specialized regional registers can be used to define disease extent and guide targeted interventions in regions still lacking comprehensive care screening programs

    Cytogenetics of pediatric central nervous system tumors.

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    Abstract A cytogenetic analysis was performed on short-term cultures of 43 previously untreated childhood central nervous system neoplasms of various histology. The cells were obtained from pediatric patients, none of whom had received therapy before karyotypic evaluation. Successful chromosome studies were performed on 24 tumors. The most commonly detected structural abnormalities involved chromosomes 1 and 17. Other structural chromosome abnormalities involved chromosomes 3, 6, 8, 9, 11, 12, and 20

    Analyses of prognostic factors in a retrospective review of 92 children with ependymoma: Italian Pediatric Neuro-oncology Group.

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    Abstract The principal aim of this report is to present the results of multivariate analyses conducted to identify clinical prognostic factors in 92 children aged 5 years), sex, site (infratentorial vs. supratentorial), histology (anaplastic/malignant vs. non-anaplastic/non-malignant), type of resection (complete vs. incomplete); use and fields of RT, and of CT employed were entered in a multivariate regression model to test their impact on OS and PFS. On univariate analysis, radical surgery, the use of RT and age more than 5 years at the time of diagnosis achieved statistically significant values for predicting long-term OS and PFS. Histology reached marginal statistical significance but only for PFS. When those variables were entered in a multivariate analysis only radical resection (P = 0.00142 and 0.0001) resulted a significant factor for predicting long-term OS and PFS, while the use of RT reached a marginal statistical significance, but only for PFS (P = 0.05). Children who had the tumour completely resected did significantly better than all the others who had less than a complete resection, with a 10-year OS and PFS for the two groups of patients of 69.8% (CI 53-86.5%) and 57.2% (CI 40.3-75%) and of 32.5% (CI 8.5-57.6%) and 11.1% (0-24.4%), respectively. These findings suggest that, for childhood EPD, radical resection should be pursued as much as reasonably possible. Thus, it seems justified proposing for future trials, patient stratification by entity of surgical resection

    Complex karyotype newly defined: the strongest prognostic factor in advanced childhood myelodysplastic syndrome

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    To identify cytogenetic risk factors predicting outcome in children with advanced myelodysplastic syndrome, overall survival of 192 children prospectively enrolled in European Working Group of Myelodysplastic Syndrome in Childhood studies was evaluated with regard to karyotypic complexity. Structurally complex constitutes a new definition of complex karyotype characterized by more than or equal to 3 chromosomal aberrations, including at least one structural aberration. Five-year overall survival in patients with more than or equal to 3 clonal aberrations, which were not structurally complex, did not differ from that observed in patients with normal karyotype. Cox regression analysis revealed the presence of a monosomal and structurally complex karyotype to be strongly associated with poor prognosis (hazard ratio = 4.6, P < .01). Notably, a structurally complex karyotype without a monosomy was associated with a very short 2-year overall survival probability of only 14% (hazard ratio = 14.5; P < .01). The presence of a structurally complex karyotype was the strongest independent prognostic marker predicting poor outcome in children with advanced myelodysplastic syndrome
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