Publications by authors named "Wollner N"

Background: Until the 1970s, diffuse lymphoblastic lymphoma (DLBL) was considered incurable. With intensive multidrug regimens, the majority of patients can now be cured. In the current study, the authors present what to their knowledge is the longest follow-up presented to date (median, 20 years for survivors) of the largest group of DLBL patients treated with a single protocol at a single institution.

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Background: Recent data indicate that the risk of developing a thyroid neoplasm clearly is increased after high-dose, therapeutic radiation therapy during childhood. To better understand the time course, natural history, and histopathology of thyroid lesions that develop after high-dose irradiation, the authors undertook a retrospective study of all survivors of childhood and adolescent malignancies who were treated at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center and who developed a clinically apparent thyroid neoplasm.

Methods: The authors searched the data base of the Department of Pediatrics, the hospital-based tumor registry, and the hospital medical records database for patients with thyroid neoplasms.

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Background: The recommended dosages of topotecan and cyclophosphamide in combination for prior-treated patients-3.75 mg/m(2) and 1,250 mg/m(2) in children, 5 mg/m(2) and 600 mg/m(2) in adults, respectively-are well below those of each agent when used singly. We tested the hypothesis that much higher dosing would meet critical goals of salvage therapy: antitumor effect and a lack of toxicity to key organs, so as not to preclude subsequent consolidative treatments needed for cure.

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Background: Chest wall tumors of primitive neuroectodermal origin (PNET, Ewing's sarcoma [ES]) are rare and have a poor prognosis. Multimodality therapy has improved survival results, and long-term survival is possible. Whether adjuvant radiation therapy is uniformly beneficial remains unclear.

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Purpose: Nasopharynx cancer is a rare malignancy in childhood. This study aims to determine the role of chemotherapy, the optimal dose of radiation, and the long-term outcome for children with locoregional disease.

Methods And Materials: Thirty-three patients [median age 14 (range: 12-20) years] were treated for Stage I-IVB nasopharynx cancer.

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Background: The authors report a study of pediatric patients with advanced diffuse large cell lymphoma (DLCL) who were treated with 2 consecutive regimens, LSA2-L2 and LSA4, over a 25-year-period at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. They also describe a comparative analysis of two subgroups retrospectively identified as having CD30 positive (+) anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) and CD30 negative (-) DLCL. To the authors' knowledge, this study represents the longest follow-up on the largest series of uniformly treated pediatric DLCL patients reported to date.

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Background: Primary epidural non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) is a rare but devastating event in pediatric oncology. Spinal cord compression due to an epidural mass from NHL, although it presents as a localized problem, in fact, is a systemic disease. Over the last 3 decades, aggressive systemic treatments with central nervous system prophylaxis have been designed with improving results.

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Purpose: To help fill the gap in knowledge about the risk of leukemia from repetitive high-dose use of alkylating agents and topoisomerase-II inhibitors in young patients with solid tumors.

Methods: Poor-risk solid tumors were treated with four courses of cyclophosphamide (4,200 mg/m2)/ doxorubicin (75 mg/m2), and three courses of ifosfamide (9,000 mg/m2)/etoposide (500 mg/m2). The cumulative incidence of treatment-related myelodysplasia/ leukemia (t-AML) was calculated using the method of competing risks.

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Pseudomalignant heterotopic ossification is a rare, self limited connective tissue disorder of unknown origin that may occur atypically during childhood and can simulate either soft tissue sarcoma or fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva. A complex constellation of diagnostic features usually enable the differentiation of pseudomalignant heterotopic ossification from extraosseous osteosarcoma and fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva during a time span of approximately 8 to 12 weeks. Orthopaedic surgeons who treat children with connective tissue tumors should be familiar with pseudomalignant heterotopic ossification and its differential diagnosis.

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Background: Few series of leiomyosarcoma in patients < 21 years of age have been reported. We reviewed our institutional experience with this neoplasm to learn disease characteristics, patterns of relapse, and outcome.

Methods: The records of 21 patients with leiomyosarcoma admitted to our institution were reviewed retrospectively; 18 of these were diagnosed after 1970.

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Objective: To determine the duration of stool shedding and incidence of clinical infection among pediatric oncology patients colonized with vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium (VRE) in our institution.

Methods: Stool cultures were obtained from all patients admitted from May 15 to August 2, 1994. Patients were followed for evidence of clinical VRE infection and surveillance stool results through August 15, 1995.

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Purpose: To test intensive alkylator-based therapy in desmoplastic small round-cell tumor (DSRCT).

Patients And Methods: Patients received the P6 protocol, which has seven courses of chemotherapy. Courses 1, 2, 3, and 6 included cyclophosphamide 4,200 mg/m2, doxorubicin 75 mg/m2, and vincristine (HD-CAV).

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This study compares the histologic and immunophenotypic features of 71 cases of primary CD30+ diffuse large-cell lymphomas (DLCL) and 128 cases of Hodgkin's disease (HD) and discusses the clinical features of 52 patients with CD30+ DLCL. It includes analysis of sites of involvement, staging, response to treatment, sites and treatment of recurrences, and disease-free and overall survival. Diagnostic immunophenotypic differences were found between CD30+ DLCL and HD.

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Ki-1-positive anaplastic large-cell lymphoma (ALCL) is an uncommon neoplasm which may present with extranodal as well as nodal disease. By definition, the tumor cells are immunoreactive for Ki-1 or Ber-H2 antigen (CD30). There have been few published cytologic descriptions of this lymphoma, or of its detection in extranodal sites.

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Purpose: This study was conducted to evaluate clinical prognostic factors predictive of the probability of recurrence of desmoid tumor (DT).

Patients And Methods: Sixty-three patients with histologically confirmed diagnosis of DT were retrospectively studied. Median age at diagnosis was 13 years.

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Purpose: To improve the prognosis of patients with poor-risk peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumors (pPNETs; including peripheral neuroepithelioma and Ewing's sarcoma), while testing the feasibility of intensive use in adolescents and young adults of high-dose cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, and vincristine (HD-CAV).

Patients And Methods: This report concerns previously untreated patients with newly diagnosed pPNET deemed poor-risk because of a tumor volume more than 100 cm3 or metastases to bone or bone marrow. The P6 protocol consists of seven courses of chemotherapy.

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Examined predictors of depressive symptoms among 59 parents providing primary care to children newly diagnosed with cancer. Parents were studied for a 3-month period. The parent providing primary care to the child during medical treatment completed measures of depressive symptoms, endorsement of family routines, family functioning, amount of assistance from the spouse in providing care to the child, child behavior problems, as well as measures of the severity of the child's treatment regimen.

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Purpose: Based on in vitro studies that have shown synergistic effects of sequential administration of methotrexate (MTX) and thioguanine (6-TG), we conducted a pharmacologically guided trial of sequential MTX and 6-TG to determine the following: (1) the maximum-tolerated dose (MTD) of 6-TG; (2) the nature of the dose-limiting toxicity; and (3) the modulation effect of MTX on 6-TG given by this sequence and schedule.

Patients And Methods: Thirty-one children with advanced malignancies (acute leukemia, n = 10; lymphoma n = 10; and solid tumors, n = 11) were treated weekly for 3 weeks with a 2-week rest; treatment consisted of a fixed dose of MTX (30 mg/m2 over 24 hours) followed by a 2-hour infusion of 6-TG in escalating doses.

Results: Measurement of plasma MTX, 6-TG, and mononuclear 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate (PRPP) levels indicates that the desired biochemical modulation and serum levels were achieved.

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Background: In this series of 208 pediatric patients with non-Hodgkin (NHL) studied from 1971 to 1986, 84 patients (40.4%) had nodal lymphomas; 40 (19.2%) of these patients had peripheral nodal lymphoma and 44 (21.

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This study aims to identify significant predictors of survival in pediatric and adolescent colorectal carcinoma. We retrospectively analyzed our experience with 29 histologically verified cases, of which 20 were resected for cure. Variables analyzed as predictors of survival included: (1) resectability, (2) regional nodal involvement, (3) depth of invasion, (4) grade, and (5) interval from symptom onset to diagnosis.

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Twenty patients with known primary untreated and recurrent bone and soft tissue tumors underwent thallium imaging and three-phase bone imaging in the same session. The ratio of thallium uptake in the tumor tissue to the contralateral normal tissue areas was compared with the same ratio for phase 1 (blood flow or arterial phase), phase 2 (blood pool), and phase 3 (delayed medroxy-diphosphonate, MDP, uptake). There was poor correlation between Tl uptake and phases 1 and 3 of the bone scan ratios; r = 0.

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We report here cytogenetic studies of a series of 23 childhood non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHL), a group that has previously not been subjected to detailed cytogenetic analysis. Combining our results with data from 25 tumours in the published literature, we have performed the first cytogenetic analysis of a large series of childhood NHL. Our results show that the cytogenetic changes encountered in NHL of children are distinct and may be different from those seen in NHL of adults reflecting the previously recognized differences in histological presentation and clinical behaviour of the two entities.

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The authors discuss rare primary skeletal non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in 16 patients treated from 1973 to 1989. The symptoms of these patients related to bone lesions in 95% of the cases. These bone lesions were monostotic or polyostotic, with or without regional and distant metastases.

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Sixty-three pediatric patients with germ cell tumors are presented with details of symptoms, histological findings, staging, serological markers, treatment, and response to therapy. The primary sites were: ovarian 32, testicular 17, presacral 7, mediastinal 3, intraabdominal 2, vaginal 1, and right inguinal canal 1. These patients were treated with T2 (sequential use of dactinomycin, doxorubicin, vincristine, and cyclophosphamide, with or without radiation), T6 (combination chemotherapy with cyclophosphamide, bleomycin, dactinomycin, doxorubicin, methotrexate, vincristine), or VAB treatment protocols (velban, dactinomycin, bleomycin, cisplatin).

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