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Surgical treatment of malignant mediastinal neurogenic tumors in children. | LitMetric

Surgical treatment of malignant mediastinal neurogenic tumors in children.

Eur J Cardiothorac Surg

Department of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Cancer Research Institute, Xenotransplantation Research Center, Clinical Research Institute, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea.

Published: April 2007

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to assess the effectiveness of surgical resection for treating malignant mediastinal neurogenic tumors in children, focusing on outcomes post-surgery.
  • A total of 38 children who had surgery between 1986 and 2004 were analyzed; the majority had neuroblastomas and underwent either curative or salvage resections, with most being under 4 years old and a significant portion presenting with symptoms.
  • The results indicated high 5-year survival rates for localized tumors (95.2%) but lower for stage IV tumors (52.5%), with complications like Horner's syndrome occurring in some patients, highlighting the importance of tumor invasion status for prognosis.

Article Abstract

Introduction: The aim of this study was to identify the role of surgical resection in the treatment of malignant mediastinal neurogenic tumors in children.

Materials And Methods: Thirty-eight consecutive children, who underwent surgical resection of a malignant mediastinal neurogenic tumor between 1986 and 2004, were included in this study. The tumor cell types were neuroblastoma in 23 patients (60.5%), ganglioneuroblastoma in 14 (36.8%), and malignant neuroepithelioma in 1 (2.6%). Surgery was performed for curative resection in localized tumors and salvage resection of residual mediastinal masses after chemotherapy in stage IV tumors. Of the 16 patients (42.1%) who underwent salvage resection, 14 had neuroblastoma and 2 ganglioneuroblastoma.

Results: Mean patient age was 3.4+/-3.0 years (1 month-13 years) and 26 patients (68.4%) were symptomatic at presentation. Adjacent structure invasion was found in eight patients (21.1%), invasion of chest wall in four, heart and vena cava in two, lung in one, and chest wall and lung in one. Complete gross resection was possible in 30 patients (78.9%) and there was no surgical mortality. Surgical morbidity occurred in 10 patients (26.3%) and Horner's syndrome was the most frequent complication (n=7). The 5-year survival was 95.2% for a localized tumor and 52.5% for a stage IV tumor (p=0.004). The significant risk factors of long-term survival were adjacent structure invasion (p=0.002) and a stage IV tumor (p=0.002) by multivariate Cox regression analysis.

Conclusions: Surgical resection of localized malignant mediastinal neurogenic tumor in children showed good long-term survival, and salvage operations after chemotherapy showed acceptable long-term survival.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejcts.2007.01.026DOI Listing

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