Intensified chemotherapy is one of the strategies currently used in the treatment of children with metastatic Ewing sarcoma. However, the increasing dose intensity has not significantly improved the event-free survival. We report a patient who initially presented with localized Ewing sarcoma and later developed metastatic disease that required dose-intensified chemotherapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPseudoangiomatous stromal hyperplasia (PASH) is a benign lesion consisting of mammary stromal proliferation with anastomosing slits mimicking vascular spaces. Grossly, it most often resembles fibroadenoma, but may commonly be confused with angiosarcoma and other types of benign vascular proliferations. While PASH has been described in female and male adults since the mid-1980s, there have been only a few accounts in the pediatric population.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMost (up to 71%) of renal cell neoplasms occurring in patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD), particularly with acquired cystic disease of the kidney (ACDK), have been reported to be papillary renal cell carcinoma (RCC). Our initial experience with tumors in such a setting indicated that many tumors were histologically difficult to classify into the known subtypes of RCC or had features that were different from those in sporadically occurring RCCs. In this study on 66 ESRD kidneys (52 of which showed features of ACDK) removed because tumors were detected in them, we found two major groups of RCC.
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