Epithelial thymic tumours in paediatric age: a report from the TREP project

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Thymic epithelial tumours (thymoma and carcinoma) are exceptionally rare in children. We describe a national multicentre series with a view to illustrating their clinical behaviour and the results of treatment.</p> <p>Met...

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Main Authors: Migliorati Roberta, Di Cataldo Andrea, Conte Massimo, Ferrari Andrea, Inserra Alessandro, Carretto Elena, Cecchetto Giovanni, Bisogno Gianni
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2011-05-01
Series:Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases
Online Access:http://www.ojrd.com/content/6/1/28
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spelling doaj-da036ae0f53f4739ada8624b13b4692d2020-11-25T00:30:21ZengBMCOrphanet Journal of Rare Diseases1750-11722011-05-01612810.1186/1750-1172-6-28Epithelial thymic tumours in paediatric age: a report from the TREP projectMigliorati RobertaDi Cataldo AndreaConte MassimoFerrari AndreaInserra AlessandroCarretto ElenaCecchetto GiovanniBisogno Gianni<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Thymic epithelial tumours (thymoma and carcinoma) are exceptionally rare in children. We describe a national multicentre series with a view to illustrating their clinical behaviour and the results of treatment.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>From January 2000 all patients under 18 years of age diagnosed with "<it>rare paediatric tumours</it>" were centrally registered by the Italian centres participating in the TREP project (<b>T</b>umori <b>R</b>ari in <b>E</b>tà <b>P</b>ediatrica [Rare Tumours in Paediatric Age]). The clinical data of children with a thymic epithelial tumour registered as at December 2009 were analyzed for the purposes of the present study.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Our series comprised 4 patients with thymoma and 5 with carcinoma (4 males, 5 females; median age 12.4 years). The tumour masses were mainly large, exceeding 5 cm in largest diameter. Based on the Masaoka staging system, 3 patients were stage I, 1 was stage III, 1 was stage IVa and 4 were stage IVb.</p> <p>All 3 patients with stage I thymoma underwent complete tumour resection at diagnosis and were alive 22, 35 and 93 months after surgery. One patient with a thymoma metastasizing to the kidneys died rapidly due to respiratory failure.</p> <p>Thymic carcinomas were much more aggressive, infiltrating nearby organs (in 4 cases) and regional nodes (in 5), and spreading to the bone (in 3) and liver (in 1). All patients received multidrug chemotherapy (platinum derivatives + etoposide or other drugs) with evidence of tumour reduction in 3 cases. Two patients underwent partial tumour resection (after chemo-radiotherapy in one case) and 4 patients were given radiotherapy (45-54 Gy). All patients died of their disease.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Children with thymomas completely resected at diagnosis have an excellent prognosis while thymic carcinomas behave aggressively and carry a poor prognosis despite multimodal treatment.</p> http://www.ojrd.com/content/6/1/28
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Migliorati Roberta
Di Cataldo Andrea
Conte Massimo
Ferrari Andrea
Inserra Alessandro
Carretto Elena
Cecchetto Giovanni
Bisogno Gianni
spellingShingle Migliorati Roberta
Di Cataldo Andrea
Conte Massimo
Ferrari Andrea
Inserra Alessandro
Carretto Elena
Cecchetto Giovanni
Bisogno Gianni
Epithelial thymic tumours in paediatric age: a report from the TREP project
Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases
author_facet Migliorati Roberta
Di Cataldo Andrea
Conte Massimo
Ferrari Andrea
Inserra Alessandro
Carretto Elena
Cecchetto Giovanni
Bisogno Gianni
author_sort Migliorati Roberta
title Epithelial thymic tumours in paediatric age: a report from the TREP project
title_short Epithelial thymic tumours in paediatric age: a report from the TREP project
title_full Epithelial thymic tumours in paediatric age: a report from the TREP project
title_fullStr Epithelial thymic tumours in paediatric age: a report from the TREP project
title_full_unstemmed Epithelial thymic tumours in paediatric age: a report from the TREP project
title_sort epithelial thymic tumours in paediatric age: a report from the trep project
publisher BMC
series Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases
issn 1750-1172
publishDate 2011-05-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Thymic epithelial tumours (thymoma and carcinoma) are exceptionally rare in children. We describe a national multicentre series with a view to illustrating their clinical behaviour and the results of treatment.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>From January 2000 all patients under 18 years of age diagnosed with "<it>rare paediatric tumours</it>" were centrally registered by the Italian centres participating in the TREP project (<b>T</b>umori <b>R</b>ari in <b>E</b>tà <b>P</b>ediatrica [Rare Tumours in Paediatric Age]). The clinical data of children with a thymic epithelial tumour registered as at December 2009 were analyzed for the purposes of the present study.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Our series comprised 4 patients with thymoma and 5 with carcinoma (4 males, 5 females; median age 12.4 years). The tumour masses were mainly large, exceeding 5 cm in largest diameter. Based on the Masaoka staging system, 3 patients were stage I, 1 was stage III, 1 was stage IVa and 4 were stage IVb.</p> <p>All 3 patients with stage I thymoma underwent complete tumour resection at diagnosis and were alive 22, 35 and 93 months after surgery. One patient with a thymoma metastasizing to the kidneys died rapidly due to respiratory failure.</p> <p>Thymic carcinomas were much more aggressive, infiltrating nearby organs (in 4 cases) and regional nodes (in 5), and spreading to the bone (in 3) and liver (in 1). All patients received multidrug chemotherapy (platinum derivatives + etoposide or other drugs) with evidence of tumour reduction in 3 cases. Two patients underwent partial tumour resection (after chemo-radiotherapy in one case) and 4 patients were given radiotherapy (45-54 Gy). All patients died of their disease.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Children with thymomas completely resected at diagnosis have an excellent prognosis while thymic carcinomas behave aggressively and carry a poor prognosis despite multimodal treatment.</p>
url http://www.ojrd.com/content/6/1/28
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