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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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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