Journal of the Egyptian National Cancer Institute (Mar 2018)

Survival outcome of intermediate risk neuroblastoma at Children Cancer Hospital Egypt

  • Hossam Elzomor,
  • Gehad Ahmed,
  • Salma Elmenawi,
  • Naglaa Elkinaai,
  • Amal Refaat,
  • Sonya Soliman,
  • Mai Amr Abdelwahab,
  • Mohamed Saad Zaghloul,
  • Mohamed Fawzy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jnci.2018.01.001
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 1
pp. 21 – 26

Abstract

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Aim: The study aims to evaluate survival outcome in newly diagnosed pediatric intermediate risk neuroblastoma patients treated at the Children Cancer Hospital – Egypt and their relation to various clinical and pathological factors. Methods: The study included stage 3 patients <1.5 years, children 1.5 years or older with stage 3 disease and favorable histopathological features, infants (<1 year) with International Neuroblastoma Staging System (INSS) stage 4 disease, stage 4 children 1–1.5 years with favorable biology, and infants stage 4 s (with unfavorable biologic features). Patients received systemic chemotherapy, in the form of etoposide and carboplatin alternating with cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin and vincristine, administered at 3-week intervals, with a total of 6 or 8 cycles guided by reaching objective overall response (complete/very good partial/partial response). Results: The study included 136 patients, 67 males and 69 females. 101 patients had abdominal primary tumors, 28 had mediastinal masss and 7 with masses in the neck; 68% were stage 3 and the remaining (n = 44) had metastatic disease. The three-year overall survival (OS) and event-free survival (EFS) estimates were 94% ± 2% and 90.9% ± 2.5%, respectively. OS and EFS by gender, age, pathology and INPC were all statistically not significantly different. Moreover, OS for patients having surgery versus no surgery (inoperable residual only) was statistically significant (98.4% ± 1.6% & 88.7% ± 5.3%, respectively, p = .034). Conclusion: A very high rate of survival is currently achievable in patients with intermediate risk neuroblastoma by chemotherapy or chemotherapy and surgery. In addition to response, our plan is to adopt biologically-based treatment to reduce treatment-induced complications among survivors.

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