AI Article Synopsis

  • This research examines the link between congenital abnormalities and pediatric cancers by analyzing data from children with both conditions in a multicenter study.
  • The study recorded 679 instances of pediatric cancers associated with congenital abnormalities, identifying common cancers like central nervous system tumors and leukemia, and noting that many abnormalities were not linked to known genetic disorders.
  • The findings highlight three key themes: the role of germline mutations, the impact of postzygotic events leading to genomic mosaicism, and incidental connections that may require further investigation to better understand childhood cancer development.

Article Abstract

Objective: To assess the associations between congenital abnormalities and pediatric malignancies and evaluate the potential underlying molecular basis by collecting information on pediatric patients with cancer and congenital abnormalities.

Study Design: Tumeur Et Développement is a national, prospective, and retrospective multicenter study recording data of children with cancer and congenital abnormalities. When feasible, blood and tumoral samples are collected for virtual biobanking.

Results: From June 2013 to December 2019, 679 associations between pediatric cancers and congenital abnormalities were recorded. The most represented cancers were central nervous system tumors (n = 139; 20%), leukemia and myelodysplastic syndromes (n = 123; 18.1%), and renal tumors (n = 101; 15%). Congenital abnormalities were not related to any known genetic disorder in 66.5% of cases. In this group, the most common anomaly was intellectual disability (22.3%), followed by musculoskeletal (14.2%) and genitourinary anomalies (12.4%). Intellectual disability was mostly associated with hematologic malignancies. Embryonic tumors (neuroblastoma, Wilms tumor, and rhabdomyosarcoma) were associated with consistent abnormalities, sometimes with a close anatomical neighborhood between the abnormality and the neoplasm.

Conclusions: In the first Tumeur Et Développement analysis, 3 major themes have been identified: (1) germline mutations with or without known cancer predisposition, (2) postzygotic events responsible for genomic mosaicism, (3) coincidental associations. New pathways involved in cancer development need to be investigated to improve our understanding of childhood cancers.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpeds.2023.113451DOI Listing

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