Çocukluk Çağı Baş-Boyun Rabdomyosarkomlu Hastaların Klinik Özellikleri ve Tedavilerinin İncelenmesi

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Tarih
2021Yazar
Karahan, İbrahim Halil
Ambargo Süresi
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Objective: It was aimed to investigate the clinical features and treatment outcomes
in children with head and neck rhabdomyosarcomas.
Patients and methods: The clinical features, tumor location, histopathological
diagnosis, stages, treatment and outcomes of 65 children with head and neck
rhabdomyosarcoma diagnosed and treated between 2004-2018 in Hacettepe
University Faculty of Medicine, Department of Pediatric Oncology were
retrospectively analyzed.
Results: The median age of 65 patients was 5.8 years (2.8 months - 15.2 years; M/F:
37/28). The primary tumor localization was parameningeal in 49.2% (n=32), 35.4%
orbital (n=23), and 15.4% other non-parameningeal (n=10) locations. The patients
most frequently presented with the complaint of swelling/mass (81.5%). Surgery was
performed in 12.3% (n=8) of the patients with total resection or microscopic residue;
87.7% (n=57) had postoperative gross tumor mass (partial resection in 18 patients,
biopsy in 39 patients). Partial resection was performed in only six patients with the
parameningeal location, while gross or partial resection was performed in 16 patients
with the orbital location. Histopathologically, embryonal subtype was 73.8% (n=48),
alveolar subtype 13.7% (n=9), spindle cell/sclerosing subtype 4.6% (n=3). Subtypes
were unknown in five patients. According to the TNM staging, 44.6% (n=29) of the
patients had stage I; 7.7% (n=5) stage II; 32.3% (n=21) stage III; 15.4% (n=10) stage IV
diseae. According to the COG (The Children's Oncology Group) risk stratification,
38.5% (n=25) of the patients were in the low risk group; 44.6% (n=29) in the
intermediate risk, 16.9% (n=11) in the high risk group. All patients were treated with
systemic chemotherapy as determined according to risk groups. Five-year event-free
and overall survival rates were 41.5% and 58.5% in those receiving CDCV (cisplatin,
doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine) chemotherapy; VAC-VAdrC (VAC: vincristine, actinomycin-D, cyclophosphamide; VAdrC: vincristine, doxorubicin,
cyclophosphamide), 58.2% and 90.9% were found. Four of the five patients who
received the PIAV (ifosfamide, cisplatin, vincristine, doxorubicin) protocol died, and
fifth patient was alive; three of six patients who received VDC/IE (vincristine,
doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, ifosfamide, etoposide) died, three were alive. The
five-year event-free survival rate of 65 patients with head and neck
rhabdomyosarcoma was 41.2%, and the overall survival rate was 59.3%. Tumor
location, stage, and risk group were found to be important in survival analysis. Five-year overall survival rate in the orbital location was 85.2%, in the other non-parameningeal location 80%, and in the parameningeal location 34.2% (p=0.01). The
five-year overall survival rate was 80.3% in the early stages (stage I and II), 36.6% in
the advanced stages (stage III and IV) (p<0.001). The five-year overall survival rate of
low-risk patients was 82.4%, 57.3% of intermediate-risk patients, and 18.2% of high-risk patients (p<0.001). 10 of 11 patients in the high risk group died. Relapse was
observed in 13 (30.2%) of 43 patients whose treatment response was complete or
partial. 10 of the 13 patients with relapses died.
Conclusion: Early diagnosis and local control of the disease are critical in patients with
head and neck rhabdomyosarcoma. The prognosis is poor in parameningeal
localization, should be improved with appropriate surgery, radiotherapy and
intensive chemotherapy. New innovative treatment approaches should be
investigated to improve the outcomes in advanced stage, parameningeal,
refractory/relapsed diseases.