Complete resection before development of drug resistance is essential for survival from advanced hepatoblastoma--a report from the German Cooperative Pediatric Liver Tumor Study HB-89.

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Complete resection before development of drug resistance is essential for survival from advanced hepatoblastoma--a report from the German Cooperative Pediatric Liver Tumor Study HB-89. / von Schweinitz, D; Hecker, H; Harms, D; Bode, U; Weinel, P; Bürger, D; Erttmann, Rudolf; Mildenberger, H.

In: J PEDIATR SURG, Vol. 30, No. 6, 6, 1995, p. 845-852.

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@article{778182783bdf466aa4b52e1ab8218f69,
title = "Complete resection before development of drug resistance is essential for survival from advanced hepatoblastoma--a report from the German Cooperative Pediatric Liver Tumor Study HB-89.",
abstract = "Clinical data and tumor histology of 37 patients with advanced and/or metastatic hepatoblastoma (32 stage III and 5 stage IV) treated according to the protocol of the German Cooperative Pediatric Liver Tumor Study HB-89 from 1988 to 1992 were studied for prognostic factors. Twenty-three patients (73%) were free of tumor 9 months to 5 years (median, 36 months) after treatment, whereas 4 experienced progressive disease, 7 had local relapse, and 3 had recurrent metastases. None of 2 patients with primary lymph node involvement or 5 with primary metastases remained disease-free. Chemotherapy with ifosfamide, cisplatin, and adriamycin was effective in reduction of tumor to resectability in 33 (89%) patients. Drug resistance developed in 6 of 11 patients treated with four or more courses of chemotherapy as could be shown by monitoring of serum-alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) and serial investigations of tumor expansion with sonography and computed tomographic (CT) scan. Only 1 of these patients survived after a liver transplantation. Completeness of tumor resection at second- or third-look laparotomy was significantly related to disease-free survival (P <.0001). Patients with initial serum-AFP values <100 ng/mL or > 1,000,000 ng/mL had a worse outcome than those with immediate levels (P = .044). The rate of decrease of serum-AFP during chemotherapy was significantly related to prognosis (P = .003). Growth pattern of tumor within the liver (ie, defined nodes versus diffusely disseminated) (P = .011) and vascular tumor invasion (P = .026) were valuable prognostic factors, whereas tumor volume, local infiltration of surrounding tissue, histological subtypes, and epithelial differentiation were not significantly related to the outcome.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)",
author = "{von Schweinitz}, D and H Hecker and D Harms and U Bode and P Weinel and D B{\"u}rger and Rudolf Erttmann and H Mildenberger",
year = "1995",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "30",
pages = "845--852",
journal = "J PEDIATR SURG",
issn = "0022-3468",
publisher = "W.B. Saunders Ltd",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Complete resection before development of drug resistance is essential for survival from advanced hepatoblastoma--a report from the German Cooperative Pediatric Liver Tumor Study HB-89.

AU - von Schweinitz, D

AU - Hecker, H

AU - Harms, D

AU - Bode, U

AU - Weinel, P

AU - Bürger, D

AU - Erttmann, Rudolf

AU - Mildenberger, H

PY - 1995

Y1 - 1995

N2 - Clinical data and tumor histology of 37 patients with advanced and/or metastatic hepatoblastoma (32 stage III and 5 stage IV) treated according to the protocol of the German Cooperative Pediatric Liver Tumor Study HB-89 from 1988 to 1992 were studied for prognostic factors. Twenty-three patients (73%) were free of tumor 9 months to 5 years (median, 36 months) after treatment, whereas 4 experienced progressive disease, 7 had local relapse, and 3 had recurrent metastases. None of 2 patients with primary lymph node involvement or 5 with primary metastases remained disease-free. Chemotherapy with ifosfamide, cisplatin, and adriamycin was effective in reduction of tumor to resectability in 33 (89%) patients. Drug resistance developed in 6 of 11 patients treated with four or more courses of chemotherapy as could be shown by monitoring of serum-alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) and serial investigations of tumor expansion with sonography and computed tomographic (CT) scan. Only 1 of these patients survived after a liver transplantation. Completeness of tumor resection at second- or third-look laparotomy was significantly related to disease-free survival (P <.0001). Patients with initial serum-AFP values <100 ng/mL or > 1,000,000 ng/mL had a worse outcome than those with immediate levels (P = .044). The rate of decrease of serum-AFP during chemotherapy was significantly related to prognosis (P = .003). Growth pattern of tumor within the liver (ie, defined nodes versus diffusely disseminated) (P = .011) and vascular tumor invasion (P = .026) were valuable prognostic factors, whereas tumor volume, local infiltration of surrounding tissue, histological subtypes, and epithelial differentiation were not significantly related to the outcome.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

AB - Clinical data and tumor histology of 37 patients with advanced and/or metastatic hepatoblastoma (32 stage III and 5 stage IV) treated according to the protocol of the German Cooperative Pediatric Liver Tumor Study HB-89 from 1988 to 1992 were studied for prognostic factors. Twenty-three patients (73%) were free of tumor 9 months to 5 years (median, 36 months) after treatment, whereas 4 experienced progressive disease, 7 had local relapse, and 3 had recurrent metastases. None of 2 patients with primary lymph node involvement or 5 with primary metastases remained disease-free. Chemotherapy with ifosfamide, cisplatin, and adriamycin was effective in reduction of tumor to resectability in 33 (89%) patients. Drug resistance developed in 6 of 11 patients treated with four or more courses of chemotherapy as could be shown by monitoring of serum-alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) and serial investigations of tumor expansion with sonography and computed tomographic (CT) scan. Only 1 of these patients survived after a liver transplantation. Completeness of tumor resection at second- or third-look laparotomy was significantly related to disease-free survival (P <.0001). Patients with initial serum-AFP values <100 ng/mL or > 1,000,000 ng/mL had a worse outcome than those with immediate levels (P = .044). The rate of decrease of serum-AFP during chemotherapy was significantly related to prognosis (P = .003). Growth pattern of tumor within the liver (ie, defined nodes versus diffusely disseminated) (P = .011) and vascular tumor invasion (P = .026) were valuable prognostic factors, whereas tumor volume, local infiltration of surrounding tissue, histological subtypes, and epithelial differentiation were not significantly related to the outcome.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 30

SP - 845

EP - 852

JO - J PEDIATR SURG

JF - J PEDIATR SURG

SN - 0022-3468

IS - 6

M1 - 6

ER -