Desmoplastic small round cell tumour in children and adolescents
β Scribed by Bisogno, Gianni; Roganovich, Jelena; Sotti, Guido; Ninfo, Vito; di Montezemolo, Luca Cordero; Donfrancesco, Alberto; Mascarin, Maurizio; Carli, Modesto
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 104 KB
- Volume
- 34
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0098-1532
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β¦ Synopsis
Background:
Desmoplastic small round cell tumour (dsrct) is a rare highly aggressive neoplasm, and clinical studies are scarce.
Procedure:
We report six cases of children and adolescents (median age 14 years, range 6.9-17.5) with dsrct (5 abdominal, 1 paratesticular) registered by the italian cooperative group (icg) for soft tissue sarcoma over a 9-year period. patients received a multidisciplinary treatment, including aggressive initial or delayed surgery and radiotherapy. chemotherapy regimen was based on the use of ifosfamide, vincristine, dactinomycin, and a few doses of antharacyclines (doxorubicin or epirubicin).
Results:
Complete surgical resection was possible only for the paratesticular tumour. among the patients with abdominal lesions, macroscopically radical excision was possible in only one case. all patients received multidrug chemotherapy, and tumour reduction was obtained in the 4 evaluable patients. no relapses were evident in the irradiated fields in the 4 patients who received radiotherapy. two patients remained progression-free 22 and 63 months after diagnosis, one is in third complete remission, whereas three died 10-25 months after diagnosis.
Conclusions:
Dsrct is a chemosensitive tumour, but survival rates remain disappointing despite aggressive multimodality therapy. our results support surgical tumour removal and radiotherapy to achieve local control. our experience and a review of the literature suggest that patients with localised abdominal tumours or a paratesticular primary may have a better prognosis.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Desmoplastic small round cell tumor (DSRCT) is a rare neoplasm mainly affecting young males and typically located in the abdomen. Prognosis is generally very poor. We report a rare case of paratesticular DSRCT in a 17-year-old boy, presenting with an isolated left scrotal mass. The patient had an ex
We have read with some interest the recent review of the molecular pathology of small round cell tumours by McManus et al.' In the section on desmoplastic small round cell tumour (DSRCT), the authors report that the EWS/WTI gene fusion has been described in a case of undifferentiated carcinoma of un
## Background: The identification of recently described nonrandom chromosomal defects specific for various small round-cell and spindle-cell sarcomas can eliminate diagnostic uncertainty arising from the clinical and histopathologic overlap of soft tissue neoplasms. ## Methods: A 26-year-old man
## BACKGROUND. Desmoplastic small round-cell tumor has been identified as a neoplasm with multidirectional immunohistochemical differentiation. The combination of topographic, morphologic, immunohistochemical, and molecular features of this tumor sets it apart as a pathologic entity. The optimal t