We evaluated the long-term results obtained in 402 patients with non-metastatic Ewing's sarcoma (ES) of the bone treated in a single institution with adjuvant and neoadjuvant chemotherapies between 1972 and 1992. Multivariate analyses showed male gender, age older than 14 years, high serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) level, axial location of the tumour, use of radiotherapy alone as a local treatment, and poor histological response to chemotherapy, to be independent, adverse prognostic factors for event-free survival (EFS). At a mean follow-up of about 18 years (10-30 years), 177 patients (44.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAutoimmune hemolytic anemia (AIHA) in children is sometimes characterized by a severe course, requiring prolonged administration of immunosuppressive therapy. Rituximab is able to cause selective in vivo destruction of B lymphocytes, with abrogation of antibody production. In a prospective study, we have evaluated the use of rituximab for the treatment of AIHA resistant to conventional treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwenty-one children (16 males, 5 females) with malignant primary hepatic tumors were admitted to the Pediatric Clinic of the University of Bologna between June 1973 and July 2001. The diagnosis was hepatoblastoma (HBL) in 16 cases; hepatocellular carcinoma (HCA) in 3 cases; undifferentiated sarcoma in 1, malignant rhabdoid tumour of the liver in 1. Median age at diagnosis was 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground/aims: Paediatric primary follicular lymphoma of the testis (PPFLT) is exceptional: the few reported cases seem to lack BCL-2 gene rearrangement and/or protein expression. The aim of this study was to characterise a PPFLT arising in a 4 year old boy.
Methods: This case was characterised using conventional histological analysis, immunohistochemistry, and a polymerase chain reaction based method for the detection of immunoglobulin V(H) chain rearrangements.
Hereditary thrombocytopenias represent heterogeneous clinical and genetic syndromes. They include a consistent group of families which are considered as a separate clinical entity, characterized by autosomal dominant transmission, incomplete penetrance in females, chronic thrombocytopenia with early age of onset and frequently increased platelet volume, without any other hematologic abnormality. The molecular defect in these families is still unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: In 1991, the Italian Association for Pediatric Hematology-Oncology and the National Council of Research (CNR) initiated an Italian Cooperative Study (SE 91-CNR Protocol) with the main objective of improving the overall survival (SUR) and the event free survival (EFS) of children and young adults with localized Ewing sarcoma and primitive neuroectodermal tumors of bone compared with a previous study (IOR/Ew2 Protocol).
Methods: Between November 1991 and November 1997, 165 patients were enrolled in this study, 160 of whom were evaluable. The patients were treated with a multimodal approach characterized by intensified chemotherapy, hyperfractionated and accelerated radiation therapy, and the addition of ifosfamide and etoposide to standard chemotherapy with vincristine, actinomycin-D, doxorubicin, and cyclophosphamide.
Clinicopathologic variables associated with a good histological response to primary chemotherapy in Ewing's sarcoma are identified. The histological response to preoperative chemotherapy in 243 cases of Ewing's sarcoma treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy was analyzed in relation to different clinicopathological features (sex and age of the patients, tumor size, serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) levels, tumor site) and to the type and schedule of anticancer drugs delivered preoperatively according to three consecutive chemotherapy regimens. A higher rate of good responses was achieved with the use of ifosfamide and dactinomycin in addition to a conventional three-drug VAC regimen, suggesting that these drugs should be included from the beginning in neoadjuvant regimens for the treatment of Ewing's sarcoma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBone Marrow Transplant
December 1998
Since 1993 pediatric patients affected by high-risk Ewing sarcoma for the presence at onset of a large pelvic mass and/or metastatic disease, were enrolled in a national pilot study comprehensive, finally, of a high-dose chemotherapy (HDCT) procedure with hemopoietic stem cell support. The HDCT procedure considered as consolidation of the disease status obtained after the first-line therapy was followed by the reinfusion of granulokine colony-stimulating factor-primed (G-CSF) peripheral blood progenitor cell (PBPCT). Here we present the results in terms of treatment-related toxicity, hospitalization and rescue of the bone marrow function, in 17 pediatric patients enrolled in such a pilot protocol and submitted to HDCT and PBPCT at the end of first-line therapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe hematopoietic defect of Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA) results in selective failure of erythropoiesis. Thus far, it is not known whether this defect originates from an intrinsic impediment of hematopoietic progenitors to move forward along the erythroid pathway or to the impaired capacity of the bone marrow (BM) microenvironment to support proliferation and differentiation of hematopoietic cells. Reduced longevity of long-term bone marrow cultures, the most physiologic in vitro system to study the interactions of hematopoietic progenitors and hematopoietic microenvironment, is consistent with a defect of an early hematopoietic progenitor in DBA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe role of ifosfamide as first-line chemotherapy treatment of non metastatic Ewing's sarcoma of the extremity is still under discussion. The purpose of this paper is to report the results achieved in a neoadjuvant protocol (REN-3) in which ifosfamide, added to the conventional VACA regimen, was employed since the induction phase. Induction chemotherapy consisted of vincristine, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, actinomycin-D and ifosfamide.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Ifosfamide (IF) alone or combined with etoposide (ET) was reported to be effective in the treatment of patients with Ewing's sarcoma who relapsed after treatment with the VACA regimen, which consisted of vincristine (VC), actinomycin (AC), cyclophosphamide (CP), and doxorubicin (AD). The purpose of this article is to report the results achieved in a new neoadjuvant protocol in which IF and ET were added to the conventional VACA regimen and administered to patients with localized disease.
Methods: In this study, eighty-two patients were treated between May 1988 and October 1991.
The long-term results obtained in 252 patients with non-metastatic Ewing's sarcoma of bone treated between March 1972 and June 1988 according to three sequential protocols of treatment were evaluated. Primary tumor was treated with radiotherapy in 125 cases, with surgery in 52 and with surgical resection followed by radiotherapy in 75. In the first protocol (REA 1; 1972-78) chemotherapy was performed with a 3-drug regimen (VCR, CPM, ADM), whereas in the REA 2 protocol (1979-82) and in the REN 1 protocol (1983-88) a 4-drug regimen was used (VCR, CPM, ADM, ACTD).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe results obtained in 172 cases of non metastatic Ewing's sarcoma of the extremities are reported. The patients were advised to undergo surgical treatment, followed by radiotherapy (40-45 Gy) in case of inadequate surgical margins. 48 patients who refused surgical treatment, were locally treated with radiotherapy alone (50-65 Gy).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: This study was performed to assess the prognostic value of the proposed histopathologic method to evaluate the response of the primary tumor to preoperative chemotherapy in Ewing's sarcoma.
Patients And Methods: The response to chemotherapy was evaluated from the specimens of 118 Ewing's sarcoma patients, who were preoperatively treated by chemotherapy alone. Responses were graded I to III (macroscopic viable tumor, microscopic viable tumor, and no viable tumor cells, respectively).
Bone Marrow Transplant
March 1996
We report the case of a 4-year-old female with high-risk ALL in first CR who received a BMT from an 11-month-old matched sibling treated with G-CSF in order to obtain an adequate number of mononuclear cells in a limited volume of bone marrow. The absence of toxicity, efficacy of the procedure and quality of the post-transplant clinical outcome suggest such treatments are feasible and useful to overcome problems caused by donor age and/or body weight. In view of this experience we demonstrate how such an approach leads to a notable reduction in risks and in bone marrow donation costs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFrom January 1988 to October 1991, one hundred and twelve patients with non metastatic Ewing's sarcoma of bone were treated with a 6 drugs neoadjuvant chemotherapy protocol (IOR/Ew2) in which, to the four drugs usually used in the treatment of this tumor (vincristine, adriamycin, cyclophosphamide and dactinomycin), Ifosfamide and VP-16 were added. The local treatment consisted of radiation therapy in 52 cases, a surgical treatment was performed in 27 cases and in the remaining 33 cases both the previous treatments were used. At a mean follow-up of 4.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSurvival of children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) has increased considerably in recent years and data on the spontaneous growth and final height of these children are conflicting. Therefore, we analysed the longitudinal growth and final height in 52 survivors (33 females, 19 males) of childhood ALL. These children were diagnosed and treated in a single institution, all remained in first remission and were submitted to cranial irradiation with either 2400 or 1800 cGy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Pediatr Oncol
December 1993
Neoplastic invasion of the inferior vena cava due to renal tumors (especially Wilms' tumor) is uncommon in children. The tumor thrombus, according to the aggressiveness of the original neoplasm, can extend in diverse ways, obliterate the vascular lumen completely, and even reach the right atrium. The luminal thrombus might be accompanied by the involvement of the caval wall, which requires wide vascular resection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Nucl Biol Med (1991)
September 1993
In a group of 22 patients with a stage 4 neuroblastoma, MIBG and 99mTc-MDP scintigraphy and radiological skeletal survey were performed at diagnosis to assess the presence of metastatic skeletal disease. In 20 out of 22 patients the MIBG scan was repeated during follow-up at a time when maximum tumoral regression was expected, i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBetween January 1988 and December 1990, 74 patients with localized Ewing's sarcoma of bone were treated with a new protocol that consisted of an initial 6-week period of chemotherapy with vincristine (VCR), adriamycin (ADM) and cyclophosphamide (EDX) followed by local therapy and additional chemotherapy with the same drugs previously indicated plus ifosfamide and VP-16. The rationale for the addition of ifosfamide and VP-16 to the four drugs of the standard chemotherapy of this tumor was that this drug combination was previously very effective in the treatment of metastases from Ewing's sarcoma even in patients who did not respond to cyclophosphamide. As local treatment all patients were offered surgery, when feasible (70 cases).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTen healthy donors and four patients with Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA) have been investigated for granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) and stem cell factor (SCF) production by bone marrow-enriched fibroblasts (BMEF) in a highly sensitive biological assay on growth factor-dependent M-07e cells. M-07e cells detected active soluble kit-ligand from normal bone marrow fibroblasts as well as from DBA BMEF which produce constitutively significant amounts of SCF. Interleukin 1 beta (IL-1 beta) induced a significant increase of soluble SCF from both normal and DBA BMEF.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn 1985, Stein et al. (Blood 66:848-858) described a large cell lymphoma consisting of activated lymphoid elements, expressing the Reed-Sternberg cell-associated antigen Ki-1 (CD30); this tumor has recently been included in the updated Kiel classification and has been termed anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL). This report concerns 13 patients with previously untreated ALCL who were admitted to the Pediatric Hematology and Oncology Department of Bologna University between January 1983 and December 1989.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To determine the effects of 18-Gy cranial irradiation on growth, growth hormone (GH) secretion, and pituitary magnetic resonance imaging in children who underwent previous irradiation for treatment of acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
Design: Clinical survey.
Setting: Department of Pediatrics of the University of Bologna (Italy).