Cancer
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A 1-year-old male infant developed a classic Wilms' tumor of the left kidney. Treatment consisted of a left nephrectomy, chemotherapy, and irradiation to the left flank and associated abdomen. Two years later, a mass in the right kidney was discovered; open renal biopsy demonstrated a mature Wilms' tumor consisting entirely of rhabdomyomatous elements in the biopsy specimen. ⋯ Currently, he is disease-free with normal renal function more than 20 years after diagnosis of the metachronous bilateral Wilms' tumor. This is the first reported case of an anaplastic sarcoma arising within a Wilms' tumor; this individual also is the longest surviving patient with metachronous Wilms' tumor. The various possibilities regarding the development of the anaplastic sarcoma within the Wilms' tumor of the right kidney are discussed, including the possible role of chemotherapy and irradiation in the development of a second malignancy.