Title: Programme
1Programme
- 1. Hematological malignancies acute leukemias,
lymphomas - 2. Solid tumors, part I Brain tumors,
neuroblastoma, - Wilms tumor, hepatoblastoma, germ cell tumors
- 3. Solid tumors, part II soft tissue sarcomas,
osteosarcoma, Ewing sarcoma, late effects after
anticancer treatment - 4. Anaemias
- 5. Coagulation disorders
2Pediatric oncology and hematology
- Hematological malignancies
- Acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- Acute non-lymphoblastic (myeloblastic) leukemia
- Non-Hodgkin lymphoma
- Hodgkin lymphoma
3Childhood leukemia
4- Uncontrolled proliferation of immature blood
cells with a different immunological subtypes
which is lethal within 1 6 months without
treatment - The disorder starts in the bone marrow, where
normal blood cells are replaced by leukemic cells - Morphological (FAB), immunological, cytogenetic,
biochemical, and molecular genetic factors
characterize the subtypes with various response
to treatment
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6Incidence
- Most frequent neoplasm in children (28 33)
- 45/ 1million children under the age of 16 years
- Incidence peak at 2 5 years
- 75-80- acute lymphoblastic leukemia -ALL
15-20 -
acute myelogenous (non-lymphoblastic) leukemia
AML/ ANLL
lt5 - undifferentiated acute leukemia
and chronic myelogenous leukemia -CML
7Ethiology
- Unknown
- Higher risk in congenital disorders
-trisomy 21 (14
times higher) and other trisomies
-Turner syndrome
-Klinefelter
syndrome
-monosomy 7
-neurofibromatosis type 1
-Fanconi anemia (high fragility
of chromosomes)
-Bloom syndrome, Kostmann S., Shwachman-Diamond
S., -ataxia- teleangiectasia
-congenital
agammaglobulinemia
-Wiskott-
Aldrich S.
8 - Ionizing radiation (atomic bomb developed high
incidence of leukemia) - Chemical and drugs
-benzene
-chloramphenicol
-alkylating agents - Infection (viral HTLV, EBV, HIV)
- Immunodeficiency agamma/hypogammaglobulinemia,
Wiskott-Aldrich S, HIV infection
9Acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- 80 of leukemias
- Girl to- boy ratio is 1 1.2
- Peak incidence 2 5 years
- Incidence in white children is twice as high as
in nonwhite children
10Clinical manifestation
- General aspects
-
history and symptoms reflect - the degree of bone marrow infiltration by
leukemic cells
and - the extramedullary involvement of the disease
- - the duration of symptoms is days to several
weeks, occasionally several months
-
often low grade fever, signs of infection,
fatigue, bleeding, pallor
11- The symptoms depend on the degree of cytopenia
- - anemia pallor, fatigue, tachycardia,
dyspnea, occasionally- cardiovascular
decompensation - - leukopeniainfections, temperature elevation
- - thrombocytopenia petechiae, mucosal
bleeding, epistaxes, prolonged menstrual bleeding
12Specific signs and symptoms
- Eye bleeding, infiltration of local vessels,
13CNS at time of diagnosis less than 5 have CNS
leukemia with meningeal signs (morning headache,
vomiting, papilla edema, focal neurological signs)
14Ear, nose, throat
-lymph
nodes infiltration (isolated or multiple)
-Mikulicz syndrome
(infiltration of salivary glands and/or tear
glands)
Laboratory Lk 3,91 Er 2,91 Hb 9,2 Ht
25,1 Blood smear neutr-9 ly- 45 bl-46 LDH 976
15Skin maculopapular skin infiltration, often of
deep red color (infants)
16- Cardiac involvement
-leukemic
infiltration or hemorrhage
-occasionally cardiac
tamponade due to pericardial infiltration
-tachycardia, low blood
pressure or other signs of cardiac insufficiency - Mediastinum
-enlargement due to leukemic infiltration by
lymph nodes and /or thymus (observed in T-cell
leukemia) - Pleura/and pericardium effusion
- Kidney enlargement
17Lymphadenopathy
Gastrointestinal involvement
-hepato- and/or splenomegaly
18- Testicular involvement enlargement of one or
both testes without pain , hard consistency - Penis priapism is occasionally associated with
elevated WBC - Bone and joint involvement
-bone pain initially present in 25 to 50 of
patients !
-bone or joint pain, sometimes with swelling
and tenderness due to leukemic infiltration of
the periosteum.
- Differential diagnosis
rheumatic fever, rheumatoid arthritis
-radiological changes
diffuse demineralization, osteolysis,
19Laboratory findings
- Red cells
-hemoglobin normal/ moderate /markedly low
-low number of reticulocytes
- White blood cell
- normal/ low/ high
-in children with high WBC- leukemic blast
cells present - Platelets
-usually low
20- Coagulopathy
-in
children with hyperleukocytosis
-more common in AML
-low levels of prothrombin, fibrinogen,
factors V, IX, and X may be present - Chemistry
-the serum uric acid is often high initially
- the serum potassium level may be high (cell
lysis) -serum hypocalcemia
or hypercalcemia (in marked leukemic bone
infiltration)
abnormal liver function
gt increased level of transaminases
21 - Bone marrow analysis gt25 blasts
-characterize the blast cells
-determine
the degree of reduction of normal hematopoiesis
-morphological, immunological, biochemical, and
cytogenetic analyses
Differential diagnosis aplastic anemia,
myelodysplastic syndrome, neoplastic
infiltrations (neuroblastoma, NHL)
22Leukemic cell characterization and classification
- Morphology FAB classification
- ALL - L1,
-
- ALL-L2,
- ALL-L3
- AML M0 M7
- chemistry
ALL
periodic acid Schiff(PAS)
AML Sudan black, peroxidase
23Immunological characterization
-monoclonal
antibodies to leukemia-associated antigens
differentiate between types of leukemic cells
lympoid stem cells
CD19, HLA-DR, CD 24 (/-)
early pre-B
cells CD19, HLA-DR, CD24
pre-B
cells CD19, HLA-DR, CD24, CD10, CD20(/-)
B-precursors
cell CD19, HLA-DR, CD24, CD10, CD20 T-cell
lineage CD7, CD2, CD1, CD4, CD8,CD3
24- Cytogenetic characterization
- in 85 of
children abnormal karyotype in the malignant
clone
t(922) (BCR-ABL) unfavorable prognosis
t
(411) in infants , poor prognosis - -ploidy and structure of chromosomes
(rearrangements) -hypoploidy- poor prognosis
-DNA index (DI)
25Prognostic factors
- Favorable
- WBC lt10x10 9/l
- Age 2-7
- Female
- Response on steroid ()
- Pre-B-ALL
- Hyperploid
- FAB L1
- ?LDH moderate
- Unfavorable
- WBC gt50 x 10 9/L
- Age lt 2 and gt10
- Male
- Response on treatment (-)
- Hypoploid, t(922)/t(911)
- FAB L2/L3
- ??LDH high
- visceromegaly
26Differential diagnosis
- Leukemic reaction in bacterial infection, acute
hemolysis,tuberculosis, sarcoidosis,
histoplasmosis - Lymphocytosis pertussis
- Infectious mononucleosis
- Aplastic anemia
- Idiopathic thrombocytopenia
- Bone marrow infiltration by a solid tumor
(NBL,NHL, RMS) - Rheumatoid arthritis, rheumatoid fever
27Therapy
- In experienced center
- Subdivided into
-remission induction
-consolidation with CNS prophylaxis
-maintenance phase - Prognosis
- Rate of first remission in ALL more than 90
- 80 of children survive without relapse
28Response on treatment
- Reaction on steroids (7.day)
- Reaction on chemotherapy (15. and 33. day)
- Minimal residual disease - MRD (-)
29Acute myelogenous leukemia
- Heterogeneous group of malignant hematological
precursor cells of the myeloid, monocytic,
erythroid or megakaryocytic cell lineage - Epidemiology 15-20 of all leukemias in children
- Frequency remains stable throughout childhood
with slight increase during adolescence - No difference in incidence between boys and girls
30FAB classification
- M0 immature myeloblastic leukemia
- M1 myeloblastic leukemia
- M2 myeloblastic leukemia with signs of
maturation - M3 promyelocytic leukemia
- M4 myelomonocytic leukemia
- M5 monocytic leukemia
- M6 erythroleukemia
- M7 megakaryocytic leukemia
31Cytogenetics
FAB Chromosomal abnormalities Affected gene Comments
M1/M2 t(821) ETO-AML 1 Auer rods
M3 t(1517) t(1117) PML-RARA Promyelocytic leukemia
M4or M5 t(911) AF9-MLL Infants, high initial WBC
M5 t(11q23) MLL Infants, high initial WBC
M5 t(1b11) AF10-MLL Infants, high initial WBC
M5 t(1117) AF17-MLL Infants, high initial WBC
M7 t(122) Infants with Down syndrome
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33Prognostic factors
Favorable Unfavorable
WBC lt100,000 gt100,000
FAB class M1, M3, M4 with eosinophils Infants with 11q23, Secondary AML, CNS involvement
Chromosomal abnormalities t(821) and t(1517),inv(16), t(911) Wild-type FLT3 Mutation of FLT3 receptor, t(922), del(7)and del(11)
Ethnicity White ethnicity MRD (-) Rapid response to therapy Black ethnicity MRD()
34Clinical presentation
- Bleeding thrombocytopenia coagulopathy (DIC)
- Leukostasis in the lungs or CNS
- Tumor lysis syndrome
- Granulocytic sarcoma (chloroma)
- Infection (fungal, opportunistic)
35Therapy
- Induction/ consolidation/ intensification/
maintenance - in AML3 ATRA - Allogeneic/ autologous stem cell transplantation
- Prognosis
- 5year survival rate 50-60
36Non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL)
37- Neoplasia of the lymphatic system and its
precursor cells with genetically disturbed
regulation, differentiation and apoptosis - If marked bone marrow involvement is present the
clinical condition is equal of leukemia - Incidence 5 7 of all neoplasias in childhood
- Peak incidence between 5 and 15 years
- Ratio of boys to girls 21
- Burkitt lymphoma (BL) endemic form in Africa
10100,000 children and sporadic form in Europe
and USA
38Etiology, pathogenesis and molecular genetics
- Often chromosomal alterations are detecable in
B-cell NHL translocation of chromosome 14 -
t(1814) - Predisposing factors for NHL
- Acquired immunodeficiency autoimmune disorders,
HIV infection - EBV infection
- Congenital B-cell defect, congenital T-cell
defect with thymus hyperplasia - Bloom syndrome, Chedak-Higashi syndrome, SCID,
ataxia teleangiectasia, Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome - Exposure to irradiation
- Drug induced, after immunosuppressive treatment
39WHO classification
Histology Rate Immuno - phenotype Main occurence
Burkitt lymphoma Burkitt-like lymphoma 50 B-cell Abdomen
Large B-cell lymphoma 7-8 B-cell
Lymphoblastic lymphoma 30 Pre-T-cell or pre-B-cell Thorax, lymph nodes, bone
Anaplastic, large cell lymphoma 7-8 T-cell Lymph nodes, skin, soft tissue, bone
40Burkitt lymphomaBurkit-like lymphoma
- About 50 of NHL
- Localization abdomen, lymphatic tissue of
adenoids and tonsils - 80 with translocation t(814) or t(82) and
t(228) with c-MYC on chromosome 8q24 which
stimulates proliferation - 40 with a p53 mutation
41Large B-cell lymphoma
- 7-8 of NHL
- Localization abdomen, peripheral lymph nodes,
skin, bone - Lymphoblastic lymphoma
- 30 of NHL
- Usually mediastinal localization
-
- Anaplastic Large Cell Lymphoma
- 7-8 of NHL
42Clinical manifestations
- Duration of symptoms usually a few days to weeks
- Non-specific symptoms fatigue, nausea, anorexia,
loss of weigth and/or fever - In relation to localisation of NHL
- Abdomen
- especially the ileocecal region, mesentery,
retroperitoneum, ovaries gt painfull, spasms,
vomiting - Obstipation, intussusception
- Apendicitis-like
- Ileus, ascites
43- Mediastinum
- Mostly anterior or middle part of mediastinum gt
cough, stridor, dyspnea, wheezing - Edema of the neck and face with marked dyspnea
may indicate SVCS - Pain of the back or abdomen
- Pleural effusion
44Involvement of adenoid and tonsils,
nasopharyngeal lymph nodes, parotid gland swelling
45- Peripheral lymph nodes
- Mostly cervical, supraclavicular and inguinal
- Lymph nodes are firm, not usually tender, but
involving multiple lymph nodes that usually occur
unilaterally - Other locations
- CNS, cranial and peripheral nerves, skin,
muscles, bone, thorax,
gonads, parotid gland, epidural region? spinal
cord compression
46Differential diagnosis
- Lymph node enlargement in infectious diseases
- Autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome
- Hodgkin Lymphoma
- metastatic disease of sarcomas or neuroblastomas
- ALL if more than 25 blasts ALL, if less NHL
IV stage
47Diagnosis-histology-stage
- Histological (lymph nodes, peripheral blood, bone
marrow or fluid resulting from pleural effusion
or ascites) - In abdominal stage laparotomy
- In SVCS- emergency situation, noninvasive biopsy
or pretreatment with chemotherapy or/and
radiotherapy - Morphological, immunophenotypical and molecular
/cytogenetic analyses - Serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH)
- Serum uric acid
- Bone marrow aspiration
- CSF analysis
48 - Radiological diagnosis
- Ultrasound
- Conventional X-ray
- CT of the thoracic, abdomen and skeletal disease
- MRI for CNS
- PET (positron emmision tomography)
- Bone scan
49Staging ( Murphy/St.Jude)
- I- a single tumor (extranodal) or single
anatomical area (nodal), excluding mediastinum or
abdomen - II- a single tumor (extranodal) with regional
involvement On same side of
diaphragm
a/ two or more nodal areas
b/ two single (extranodal) tumors with or
without regional node involvement
A primary gastrointestinal
tract tumor (usually ileocecal) with or without
associated mesenteric node involvement gross
complete resection
50- III- On both sides of the diaphragm
a/two single
tumors (extranodal)
b/two or more nodal areas
ALL primary intrathoracic tumors
(mediastinal, pleural, thymic)
All extensive primary intra-abdominal disease,
unresectable All primary
paraspinal or epidural tumors regardless of other
sites
- IV- Any of the above with initial CNS or bone
marrow involvement (less than 25)
51- Stages I II 10 20 of all NHL
- Stages III IV 80 90 of all NHL
52Treatment
- Induction therapy should be begun as soon as
possible! - Tumor lysis syndrome prophylaxis or treatment
- Chemotherapy (in Poland -according to BFM
protocols) - Surgical procedure total resection in I or II
stage with localized masses only - BMT ( auto)
- Overall long-term survival gt80
53Hodgkin Disease
54- Progressive, painless enlargement of lymph nodes
with continuous extension between lymph node
region - Pathogmonic histologically Reed-Sternberg cells
- Incidence 5-7 of all neoplasia in childhood
- Boys more than girls
- Rare before 5 years increasing until the age of
11 years - Peak incidence between 15 and 35 years of age
55Etiology and pathogenesis
- Correlation with EBV infection, genetic
predisposition, disturbed humoral and cellular
immune response - High incidence in patients with LE, rheumatoid
disorders, ataxia
teleangiectasia, agammaglobulinemia -
56Clinical presentation
- Painless enlargement of lymph nodes, mostly in
the cervical and supraclavicular regions - Swollen lymph nodes are firm, not inflammatory
and painfull to palpation - Most common involved lymph nodes cervical (75),
supraclavicular(25), axillary,
infradiaphragmatic - Extranodal involvement lung, bone, liver
- In mediastinal involvement a cough, sometimes
with dyspnea, dysphagia and enlargement of the
vessels of the neck (SVCS)
57- B symptoms (in 20 -30)
- Fever higher than 38 C
- Night sweats
- Loss of more than 10 body weight
- Sometimes pruritus and/or nausea
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59Open biopsy Not fine-nedle biopsy!!!
- Histological classification
- Lymphocyte predominance
- Nodular sclerosing
- Lymphocyte-depleted
- Mixed cellular
60Laboratory analyses
- Blood
- Bone marrow
- Ferritin, LDH
- Immunological analyses
- Stage- Radiological evaluation
- Chest (x-ray, CT)
- Abdomen (usg, CT)
- Bone scintigraphy
- PET-CT
61 HL
62Staging classification
- I involvement of a single lymph node region(I)
or a single extralymphatic organ (IE) - IItwo or more lymph node regions on the same
side of the diaphragm (II) or localized
involvement of an extralymphatic organ or site
one or more lymph node regions on the same side
of the diaphragm - III involvement of lymph node regions on both
sides of the diaphragm (III) which may be
accompanied by involvement of an extralymphatic
organ (IIIe) or site, or both (IIIES) - IV diffuse or disseminated process
- A absence of B symptoms
- B presence ofloss of 10 or more body weight in
6 months preceding diagnosis, unexplained fever,
drenching night-sweat, pruritus
63Differential diagnosis
- Toxoplasmosis, tuberculosis, atypical infections
- NHL
- Mononucleosis
- Metastatic disease
- Thymus hyperplasia
- Rheumatoid arthritis, LE
- Sarcoidosis
64Treatment
- Procedure depends on stage and histopathology
- Chemo- and radiotherapy (EuroNet protocol)
-
- Prognosis
- Stage I/II EFS gt90
- Stage III/IV EFS 70-80