Pediatric hematology and oncology
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Pediatr Hematol Oncol · Sep 1994
Review Case ReportsWilms' tumor with intracardiac extension: chemotherapy before surgery.
The article describes two Chinese boys ages 2 and 3 years with unilateral Wilms' tumors complicated by intracaval and intracardiac extension. In contrast to the previously recommended treatment with surgery followed by chemotherapy and radiation therapy, the children were managed primarily with combination chemotherapy before definitive operation. Reduction of tumor size on serial imaging was documented, and no viable tumor cells were found when the involved kidney and right atrium were explored. ⋯ Wilms' tumor presenting with extension into the inferior vena cava and right atrium is thus rare and renders the affected child with additional cardiovascular complications and operative risks. As a result of the uncommon occurrence, a consensus on management based on prospective study would be difficult. The present report and the literature are supportive of the use of preoperative chemotherapy in the initial management of advanced Wilms' tumor extending into the right atrium.
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Pediatr Hematol Oncol · Sep 1994
Seventeen years of experience with chronic idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura in childhood. Is therapy always better?
Between 1975 and 1992 450 children with idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) were diagnosed, and of those 100 (22%) developed the chronic form of the disease. Approximately half the patients with chronic ITP presented with mild to moderate hemorrhagic manifestations at the onset of purpura (30 cases) and/or later during the course of the disease (25 cases). The incidence of intracranial hemorrhage was 1%, and the mortality rate due to overwhelming septicemia after splenectomy was also 1%. ⋯ Thirteen children were lost in follow-up, and 7 remain thrombocytopenic but asymptomatic. These data indicate that chronic ITP in childhood runs a benign course in most cases and may remit with or without therapy even several years from onset. Therefore, therapeutic intervention has to be individualized, and splenectomy, which is not always safe, should be reserved for problematic cases that fail to respond to conventional therapeutic modalities.