Impact of age on clinicopathological outcomes and recurrence-free survival after the surgical management of nonseminomatous germ cell tumour

2012 ◽  
Vol 110 (7) ◽  
pp. 950-955 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timothy A. Masterson ◽  
Brett S. Carver ◽  
E. Jason Abel ◽  
Joseph A. Pettus ◽  
George J. Bosl ◽  
...  
2013 ◽  
Vol 31 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 10069-10069
Author(s):  
Argha Nandy ◽  
Soma Mukhopadhyay ◽  
Debdatta Maity ◽  
Gouri Shankar Bhattacharyya ◽  
Ashis Mukhopadhyay

10069 Background: Childhood cancers, a leading cause of childhood deaths, affect more than 200,000 children worldwide, of which >80% are from developing nations. This demands for proper measurement of the incidence of various childhood cancers which led to a novel study in assessing the burden of childhood cancers in eastern India through analysis of hospital-based cancer registry data from our institute in between January 2001- December 2011. Methods: 3,200pediatriccancer patients between 0-15 yearsdiagnosed by means of histological and cytological examinations were included in this study. Based on histopathological classification, cancer cases were distributed into 3 different age groups. Their respective family functioning, mental health, self-esteem and social competence were examined. Details of disease, tobacco usage along with socio demographic data were collected through standard questionnaires. Comparative measures of disease incidence were also calculated. For measuring the tolerance, different drugs were administered to patients. Results: The incidence of different malignancies was recorded which were Leukemia (34.9%), Lymphoma (24.1%), Hodgkin’s disease (18.1%), NHL (6.0%), Ewing’s sarcoma (4.9%), Rhabdomyosarcoma (3.6%), Neuroblastoma (2.0%), Brain tumour (9.9%), Wilm’s tumour (6.0%), Lymphoid Leukemia (26.9%), Myeloid Leukemia (7.9%), Germ cell tumour (4.2%), Osteosarcoma (4.0%), Retinoblastoma (2.0%) and Soft tissue sarcoma (2.3%). The disease free survival (DFS) for ALL was 76%, NHL (84%), Soft tissue sarcoma (78%), CML (98%), AML (48%) and germ cell tumour (95%). Finally, 53.33% patients were subjected to post-therapy assessment, of which 98% showed no after effect of therapy on growth chart, heart and endocrine function. The toxicity of grade III and IV chemotherapy ranges from 10-20%. Conclusions: Based on our study, the most happening cancer was Leukemia (34.9%) followed by Lymphoma (24.1%) and soft tissue sarcoma (18%). The overall disease free survival for pediatric patients was 72% with acceptable toxicity. Our results are comparable with the studies of other developed countries.


Author(s):  
Zuzana Sestakova ◽  
Katarina Kalavska ◽  
Bozena Smolkova ◽  
Vera Miskovska ◽  
Katarina Rejlekova ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suhaniya Samarasinghe ◽  
Rebecca Scott ◽  
Michael J Seckl ◽  
Mike Gonzalez ◽  
Richard Harvey ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (Supplement_3) ◽  
pp. iii282-iii282
Author(s):  
Rafael Moleron ◽  
Sara Stoneham ◽  
Thankamma Ajithkumar ◽  
Justin Cross ◽  
James Nicholson ◽  
...  

Abstract INTRODUCTION Patients with localised CNS-germinoma have excellent survival. More recently, intensive inpatient chemotherapy (carboPEI=carboplatin/etoposide/ifosfamide in Europe) has been effectively employed to reduce radiotherapy fields and/or dose. Current research priorities focus on reducing treatment burden and long-term sequelae. Of note, outpatient-based single-agent carboplatin chemotherapy is associated with excellent outcomes in metastatic testicular seminoma (an identical pathology) [Alifrangis,EJC,2020]. Recently, successful vinblastine monotherapy was reported in localised CNS-germinoma [Murray,Neurooncol-Adv,2020]. METHODS Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, adapted UK guidelines for germ-cell-tumour management were distributed, including potential non-standard treatment options that would reduce hospital visits/admissions. A 30-year-old patient presented with a 32mmx30mmx35mm diameter solid+multi-cystic localised pineal CNS lesion, consistent radiologically with a germ-cell-tumour with prominent teratoma component. Investigation revealed negative AFP/HCG markers and biopsy-proven pure germinoma. After appropriate consent, the patient commenced 12-week induction with weekly vinblastine monotherapy (low-grade-glioma dosing [Lassaletta,JCO,2016]), with wk6&12 MRI re-assessment prior to definitive radiotherapy. RESULTS Vinblastine was well-tolerated. After initial 4mg/m2 test-dosing (wk1), standard 6mg/m2 was delivered for wk2, but resulted in asymptomatic neutropenia (nadir 0.3x10^9/l) and missed dosing at wk3. Subsequent doses were 4mg/m2, with no further neutropenia. As expected, MRI showed moderate 40% tumour volume reduction by wk12. Surgical resection of the residual presumed teratoma component was undertaken prior to radiotherapy. CONCLUSION Patients with CNS-germinoma have excellent outcomes and reduction of treatment-effects remains a priority. The exquisite chemosensitivity of germinoma, excellent results from monotherapy for metastatic testicular disease, and early promise of vinblastine monotherapy lend itself to further exploration for CNS-germinoma.


1989 ◽  
Vol 59 (2) ◽  
pp. 156-159 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Horwich

2012 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 86-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sait Demirkol ◽  
Oben Baysan ◽  
Turgay Celik ◽  
Bulent Karaman ◽  
Seyfettin Gumus

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document