188 results on '"Chantada G"'
Search Results
52. Results of treatment with an intensive induction regimen using idarubicin in combination with cytarabine and etoposide in children with acute myeloblastic leukemia
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Sackmann-Muriel, F., Zubizarreta, P., Felice, M. S., Chantada, G., Cygler, A. M., Gallego, M., and Rossi, J.
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- 1996
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53. HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE 1ST LATIN AMERICAN MEETING ON METRONOMIC CHEMOTHERAPY AND DRUG REPOSITIONING IN ONCOLOGY, 27-28 MAY, 2016; ROSARIO, ARGENTINA.
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ROSÉ, A., ANDRÉ, N., ROZADOS, V. R., MAINETTI, L. E., MÁRQUEZ, M. M., RICO, M, J., SCHAIQUEVICH, P., VILLARROEL, M., GREGIANIN, L., GRAUPERA, J. M., GÓMEZ GARCÍA, W., EPELMAN, S., ALASINO, C., ALONSO, DANIEL, CHANTADA, G., and SCHAROVSKY, O. G.
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- 2017
54. Infectious Risk in Cord Blood and Newborn from a Viremic HCV Mother. Experience from Public Related Cord Blood Bank in Argentina.
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Breier, D.V., Marcos, A., Remesar, M., Chantada, G., Gonzalez, J., Lazovaler, D., Frade, G. De Souza, and Del Pozo, A.E.
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CORD blood ,NEONATAL diseases ,HEPATITIS C ,MOTHERS ,DISEASES - Abstract
Background: The risk of mother to child transmission of hepatitis C from viremic pregnant women varies according to the population studied and the test used, ranging from 5 to 33%. Moreover intrafamiliar transmission also exists, and there is some evidence of transmission by breast feed, albeight low. Case report: We report a case from a viremic hepatitis C mother who delivered an apparently uninfected baby, cord blood sample being also negative for HCA RNA. A month ago a pregnant mother from a high risk ALL patient came to our Related Cord Blood Bank to ask for cord blood collection. She came just about to deliver, with no previous serologic studies. C-section was performed due to obstetric reasons. Baby boy was preterm but appropriate for gestational age; 66.5 ml of cord blood (CB) were collected (in utero + ex utero). Cellularity resulted optimal for recipient (3.4 × 10[sup 7]/kg). The unit was criopreserved under our standard procedures but had to be quarantined due to anti-HCV Ab positive in mother and cord's blood. Rest of TTI resulted negative. Breast-feeding was discontinued after 1[sup st] fed. RT-nested PCR (in house) for HCV RNA detection were consequently performed. Mother resulted positive in first round, however baby's blood and CB resulted non detectable' after nested. TTI and HCV RNA tests were requested in the possible recipient, with negative results. New tests will be performed in the baby's blood in 3 months' time. HLA studies (PCR-SSOP) resulted 4/6 identical (mm@classl). International search was initiated for unrelated HLA identical BM or CB. Conclusions: Ethical concern was raised about the use of this unit. There is consensus that the only absolute contraindication to CB collection for most centers is HIV infection. RT nested PCR sensitivity is not 100%, due to the failure to detect less than 100 copies of viral RNA in the used method. It is still not definitively assessed whether the use of identical unrelated CB vs. related mismatch CB or BM could result in better outcome for children. Careful decision must be taken in choosing between these two options. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2001
55. Global characteristics and outcomes of SARS-CoV-2 infection in children and adolescents with cancer (GRCCC): a cohort study
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Sheena Mukkada, Nickhill Bhakta, Guillermo L Chantada, Yichen Chen, Yuvanesh Vedaraju, Lane Faughnan, Maysam R Homsi, Hilmarie Muniz-Talavera, Radhikesh Ranadive, Monika Metzger, Paola Friedrich, Asya Agulnik, Sima Jeha, Catherine Lam, Rashmi Dalvi, Laila Hessissen, Daniel C Moreira, Victor M Santana, Michael Sullivan, Eric Bouffet, Miguela A Caniza, Meenakshi Devidas, Kathy Pritchard-Jones, Carlos Rodriguez-Galindo, A Juan Ribelles, Adriana Balduzzi, Alaa Elhaddad, Alejandra Casanovas, Alejandra Garcia Velazquez, Aliaksandra Laptsevich, Alicia Chang, Alessandra Lamenha F. Sampaio, Almudena González Prieto, Alvaro Lassaletta, Amaranto Suarez M, Ana Patricia Alcasabas, Anca Colita, Andres Morales La Madrid, Angélica Samudio, Annalisa Tondo, Antonella Colombini, Antonis Kattamis, N Araceli Lopez Facundo, Arpita Bhattacharyya, Aurélia Alimi, Aurélie Phulpin, Barbora Vakrmanova, Basak A Aksoy, Benoit Brethon, Jator Brian Kobuin, Carla Nolasco Monteiro, Catherine Paillard, Catherine Vezina, Bozkurt Ceyhun, Cristiana Hentea, Cristina Meazza, Daniel Ortiz-Morales, Roque Daniel Solorzano, Daniela Arce Cabrera, Daniele Zama, Debjani Ghosh, Diana Ramírez-Rivera, Doris A Calle Jara, Dragana Janic, Elianneth Rey Helo, Elodie Gouache, Enmanuel Guerrero Quiroz, Enrique Lopez, Eric Thebault, Essy Maradiegue, Eva de Berranger, Fatma S E Ebeid, Federica Galaverna, Federico Antillon-Klussmann, Felipe Espinoza Chacur, Fernando Daniel Negro, Francesca Carraro, Francesca Compagno, Francisco Barriga, Gabriela Tamayo Pedraza, Gissela Sanchez Fernandez, Gita Naidu, Gülnur Tokuc, Hamidah Alias, Hannah Grace B Segocio, Houda Boudiaf, Imelda Asetre Luna, Iris Maia, Itziar Astigarraga, Ivan Maza, Jacqueline E Montoya Vásquez, Janez Jazbec, Jelena Lazic, Jeniffer Beck Dean, Jeremie Rouger-Gaudichon, Johanny Carolina Contreras González, Jorge Huerta Aragonés, José L Fuster, Juan Quintana, Julia Palma, Karel Svojgr, Karina Quintero, Karolina Malic Tudor, Kleopatra Georgantzi, Kris Ann P Schultz, Laura Ureña Horno, Lidia Fraquelli, Linda Meneghello, Lobna Shalaby, Lola L Macias Mora, Lorna A Renner, Luciana Nunes Silva, Luisa Sisinni, Mahmoud Hammad, M Fernández Sanmartín, C Marcela Zubieta A, María Constanza Drozdowski, Maria Kourti, Marcela María Palladino, Maria R Miranda Madrazo, Marilyne Poiree, Marina Popova, Mario Melgar, Marta Baragaño, Martha J Avilés-Robles, Massimo Provenzi, Mecneide Mendes Lins, Mehmet Fatih Orhan, Milena Villarroel, Mónica Jerónimo, Mónica Varas Palma, Muhammad Rafie Raza, Mulindwa M Justin, Najma Shaheen, Nerea Domínguez-Pinilla, Nicholas S Whipple, Nicolas André, Ondrej Hrusak, Pablo Velasco Puyó, Pamela Zacasa Vargas, Paola Olate Mellado, Pascale Yola Gassant, Paulina Diaz Romero, Raffaella De Santis, Rejin Kebudi, Riza Boranbayeva, Roberto Vasquez, Romel A. Segura, Roy Enrique Rosado, Sandra Gómez, Sandra Raimbault, Sanjeeva Gunasekera, Sara M Makkeyah, Sema Buyukkapu Bay, Sergio M Gómez, Séverine Bouttefroy, Shahnoor Islam, Sherif Abouelnaga, Silvio Fabio Torres, Simone Cesaro, Sofia Nunes, Soraia Rouxinol, Sucharita Bhaumik, Symbat Saliyeva, Tamara Inostroza, Thelma Velasquez, Tint Myo Hnin, Ulrika Norén-Nyström, Valentina Baretta, Yajaira Valentine Jimenez-Antolinez, Vanesa Pérez Alonso, Vanessa Ayer Miller, Virginie Gandemer, Viviana Lotero, Volha Mishkova, Wendy Gómez-García, Yeva Margaryan, Yumna Syed, Mukkada S., Bhakta N., Chantada G.L., Chen Y., Vedaraju Y., Faughnan L., Homsi M.R., Muniz-Talavera H., Ranadive R., Metzger M., Friedrich P., Agulnik A., Jeha S., Lam C., Dalvi R., Hessissen L., Moreira D.C., Santana V.M., Sullivan M., Bouffet E., Caniza M.A., Devidas M., Pritchard-Jones K., Rodriguez-Galindo C., Ribelles A.J., Balduzzi A., Elhaddad A., Casanovas A., Garcia Velazquez A., Laptsevich A., Chang A., F. Sampaio A.L., Gonzalez Prieto A., Lassaletta A., Suarez M A., Alcasabas A.P., Colita A., Morales La Madrid A., Samudio A., Tondo A., Colombini A., Kattamis A., Lopez Facundo N.A., Bhattacharyya A., Alimi A., Phulpin A., Vakrmanova B., Aksoy B.A., Brethon B., Kobuin J.B., Nolasco Monteiro C., Paillard C., Vezina C., Ceyhun B., Hentea C., Meazza C., Ortiz-Morales D., Solorzano R.D., Arce Cabrera D., Zama D., Ghosh D., Ramirez-Rivera D., Calle Jara D.A., Janic D., Rey Helo E., Gouache E., Guerrero Quiroz E., Lopez E., Thebault E., Maradiegue E., de Berranger E., Ebeid F.S.E., Galaverna F., Antillon-Klussmann F., Espinoza Chacur F., Negro F.D., Carraro F., Compagno F., Barriga F., Tamayo Pedraza G., Sanchez Fernandez G., Naidu G., Tokuc G., Alias H., B Segocio H.G., Boudiaf H., Asetre Luna I., Maia I., Astigarraga I., Maza I., Montoya Vasquez J.E., Jazbec J., Lazic J., Beck Dean J., Rouger-Gaudichon J., Contreras Gonzalez J.C., Huerta Aragones J., Fuster J.L., Quintana J., Palma J., Svojgr K., Quintero K., Malic Tudor K., Georgantzi K., P Schultz K.A., Urena Horno L., Fraquelli L., Meneghello L., Shalaby L., Macias Mora L.L., A Renner L., Nunes Silva L., Sisinni L., Hammad M., Fernandez Sanmartin M., Zubieta A C.M., Drozdowski M.C., Kourti M., Palladino M.M., Miranda Madrazo M.R., Poiree M., Popova M., Melgar M., Baragano M., Aviles-Robles M.J., Provenzi M., Mendes Lins M., Fatih Orhan M., Villarroel M., Jeronimo M., Varas Palma M., Rafie Raza M., M Justin M., Shaheen N., Dominguez-Pinilla N., Whipple N.S., Andre N., Hrusak O., Velasco Puyo P., Zacasa Vargas P., Olate Mellado P., Yola Gassant P., Diaz Romero P., De Santis R., Kebudi R., Boranbayeva R., Vasquez R., Segura R.A., Rosado R.E., Gomez S., Raimbault S., Gunasekera S., Makkeyah S.M., Buyukkapu Bay S., M Gomez S., Bouttefroy S., Islam S., Abouelnaga S., Torres S.F., Cesaro S., Nunes S., Rouxinol S., Bhaumik S., Saliyeva S., Inostroza T., Velasquez T., Hnin T.M., Noren-Nystrom U., Baretta V., Jimenez-Antolinez Y.V., Perez Alonso V., Ayer Miller V., Gandemer V., Lotero V., Mishkova V., Gomez-Garcia W., Margaryan Y., Syed Y., Mukkada, S, Bhakta, N, Chantada, G, Chen, Y, Vedaraju, Y, Faughnan, L, Homsi, M, Muniz-Talavera, H, Ranadive, R, Metzger, M, Friedrich, P, Agulnik, A, Jeha, S, Lam, C, Dalvi, R, Hessissen, L, Moreira, D, Santana, V, Sullivan, M, Bouffet, E, Caniza, M, Devidas, M, Pritchard-Jones, K, Rodriguez-Galindo, C, Ribelles, A, Balduzzi, A, Elhaddad, A, Casanovas, A, Garcia Velazquez, A, Laptsevich, A, Chang, A, F. Sampaio A., L, Gonzalez Prieto, A, Lassaletta, A, Suarez M, A, Alcasabas, A, Colita, A, Morales La Madrid, A, Samudio, A, Tondo, A, Colombini, A, Kattamis, A, Lopez Facundo, N, Bhattacharyya, A, Alimi, A, Phulpin, A, Vakrmanova, B, Aksoy, B, Brethon, B, Kobuin, J, Nolasco Monteiro, C, Paillard, C, Vezina, C, Ceyhun, B, Hentea, C, Meazza, C, Ortiz-Morales, D, Solorzano, R, Arce Cabrera, D, Zama, D, Ghosh, D, Ramirez-Rivera, D, Calle Jara, D, Janic, D, Rey Helo, E, Gouache, E, Guerrero Quiroz, E, Lopez, E, Thebault, E, Maradiegue, E, de Berranger, E, Ebeid, F, Galaverna, F, Antillon-Klussmann, F, Espinoza Chacur, F, Negro, F, Carraro, F, Compagno, F, Barriga, F, Tamayo Pedraza, G, Sanchez Fernandez, G, Naidu, G, Tokuc, G, Alias, H, B Segocio, H, Boudiaf, H, Asetre Luna, I, Maia, I, Astigarraga, I, Maza, I, Montoya Vasquez, J, Jazbec, J, Lazic, J, Beck Dean, J, Rouger-Gaudichon, J, Contreras Gonzalez, J, Huerta Aragones, J, Fuster, J, Quintana, J, Palma, J, Svojgr, K, Quintero, K, Malic Tudor, K, Georgantzi, K, P Schultz, K, Urena Horno, L, Fraquelli, L, Meneghello, L, Shalaby, L, Macias Mora, L, A Renner, L, Nunes Silva, L, Sisinni, L, Hammad, M, Fernandez Sanmartin, M, Zubieta A, C, Drozdowski, M, Kourti, M, Palladino, M, Miranda Madrazo, M, Poiree, M, Popova, M, Melgar, M, Baragano, M, Aviles-Robles, M, Provenzi, M, Mendes Lins, M, Fatih Orhan, M, Villarroel, M, Jeronimo, M, Varas Palma, M, Rafie Raza, M, M Justin, M, Shaheen, N, Dominguez-Pinilla, N, Whipple, N, Andre, N, Hrusak, O, Velasco Puyo, P, Zacasa Vargas, P, Olate Mellado, P, Yola Gassant, P, Diaz Romero, P, De Santis, R, Kebudi, R, Boranbayeva, R, Vasquez, R, Segura, R, Rosado, R, Gomez, S, Raimbault, S, Gunasekera, S, Makkeyah, S, Buyukkapu Bay, S, M Gomez, S, Bouttefroy, S, Islam, S, Abouelnaga, S, Torres, S, Cesaro, S, Nunes, S, Rouxinol, S, Bhaumik, S, Saliyeva, S, Inostroza, T, Velasquez, T, Hnin, T, Noren-Nystrom, U, Baretta, V, Jimenez-Antolinez, Y, Perez Alonso, V, Ayer Miller, V, Gandemer, V, Lotero, V, Mishkova, V, Gomez-Garcia, W, Margaryan, Y, and Syed, Y
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Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,COVID-19, Children, adolescents, cancer ,Adolescent ,MEDLINE ,Severity of Illness Index ,Health systems ,Neoplasms ,purl.org/becyt/ford/3.2 [https] ,Severity of illness ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Children ,Pandemics ,Pandemic ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Risk Factor ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Cancer ,COVID-19 ,Odds ratio ,Articles ,medicine.disease ,Transplantation ,Oncology ,Child, Preschool ,Cohort ,Absolute neutrophil count ,Neoplasm ,purl.org/becyt/ford/3 [https] ,Female ,Cohort Studie ,business ,Delivery of Health Care ,Human ,Cohort study - Abstract
Background: Previous studies have shown that children and adolescents with COVID-19 generally have mild disease. Children and adolescents with cancer, however, can have severe disease when infected with respiratory viruses. In this study, we aimed to understand the clinical course and outcomes of SARS-CoV-2 infection in children and adolescents with cancer. Methods: We did a cohort study with data from 131 institutions in 45 countries. We created the Global Registry of COVID-19 in Childhood Cancer to capture de-identified data pertaining to laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infections in children and adolescents (
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- 2021
56. Risk Factors for Extraocular Relapse in Retinoblastoma.
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Aschero R, Simao M, Catala-Mora J, and L Chantada G
- Abstract
Background: Metastatic retinoblastoma remains a significant challenge in pediatric oncology, with stark disparities in survival outcomes between high-income countries (HICs) and low-income countries (LICs). Delayed diagnosis and treatment, driven by socioeconomic factors and limitations in healthcare systems, contribute to poorer outcomes in LICs. Histopathological characteristics, including high-risk pathology factors (HRPFs) and the extent of ocular tumor invasion, are critical for predicting metastatic risk and guiding treatment strategies., Methods: This review examines the role of clinical, histopathological, and molecular characteristics in assessing metastatic risk in retinoblastoma. Literature on HRPFs, tumor invasion, and molecular subtypes was analyzed to understand their impact on risk stratification and therapy optimization, particularly in resource-limited settings., Results: Retinoblastoma is increasingly recognized as a heterogeneous disease with at least two distinct molecular subtypes. High-risk cases frequently exhibit genetic alterations that underscore the need to incorporate molecular profiling into risk assessment. Current adjuvant therapy approaches, however, vary widely, and debates persist regarding their necessity based on tumor characteristics. Integrated strategies that combine clinical, histopathological, and molecular data show promise in improving management and survival outcomes., Conclusions: Addressing the disparities in metastatic retinoblastoma outcomes requires a multifaceted approach. By integrating clinical, histopathological, and molecular insights, management strategies can be optimized to improve survival, particularly in resource-limited settings where challenges are most pronounced.
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- 2025
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57. CANCaRe Africa: Working together to build a better future for children with cancer in Africa.
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Atwiine B, Chagaluka G, Chimalizeni Y, Khan MS, Chantada G, Israels T, and Kambugu J
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- 2025
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58. Mimicking Retinoblastoma Treatment With Repeated Topotecan or Melphalan Develops Cross-Resistance to Classic Agents But Not to Repurposed Drugs.
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Cancela MB, Winter U, Zugbi S, Dinardi M, Alves da Quinta D, Aschero R, Ganiewich D, Sampor C, Sgroi M, Lagomarsino E, Fandiño A, Llera AS, Chantada G, Carcaboso AM, and Schaiquevich P
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- Humans, Tumor Cells, Cultured, Topoisomerase I Inhibitors pharmacology, Antineoplastic Agents pharmacology, Carboplatin pharmacology, Drug Repositioning, Retinoblastoma drug therapy, Retinoblastoma pathology, Melphalan pharmacology, Topotecan pharmacology, Topotecan administration & dosage, Retinal Neoplasms drug therapy, Retinal Neoplasms pathology, Drug Resistance, Neoplasm
- Abstract
Purpose: Refractory or recurrent retinoblastoma results from acquired chemoresistance and the management of these eyes often requires surgical removal. Our objective was to develop retinoblastoma models resistant to chemotherapy by exposing cancer cells to repeated chemotherapy mimicking the clinical scenario. These newly resistant cells were used to evaluate potential novel therapies., Methods: Chemoresistant cells were obtained by exposing two primary retinoblastoma cell cultures to three weekly doses of melphalan or topotecan. The sensitivity of these resistant cells to each chemotherapy was evaluated, and cross-resistance to topotecan, melphalan, and carboplatin was assessed. Genomic alterations and differential expression of efflux/influx transporters between chemoresistant and parental cells were analyzed. Subsequently, sensitivity of both resistant and parental cells to the repurposed agents digoxin, methylene blue, and gemcitabine was assessed., Results: Four chemoresistant models were successfully established, showing significantly higher half-maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) values for melphalan and topotecan compared to their corresponding parental cells (P < 0.05). Cross-resistance between melphalan and topotecan was demonstrated, with a 3-fold increase in the IC50. Chemoresistant cells also showed reduced sensitivity to carboplatin (P < 0.05) compared to parental cells, whereas sensitivity to the evaluated repurposed agents remained unchanged. Genomic analysis revealed no selective alterations in the resistant cells, although differential expression of influx/efflux transporters was observed across all chemoresistant models., Conclusions: In vitro simulation of patient treatment was useful to establish chemoresistant retinoblastomas and to identify strategies to overcome resistance to topotecan or melphalan through drug repurposed. Our results warrant further investigation to support the clinical translation.
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- 2024
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59. The TeLeo Program: Tele-education in pediatric oncology as a tool to support training programs in Latin America.
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Sampor C, Alonso R, Durañona M, Gorostegui M, Antillón-Klussmann F, Lopes LF, Cappellano AM, Gonzalez-Ramella O, Lobos P, Palma J, Grynszpancholc E, Vasquez L, Morales La Madrid A, Moreira DC, Cruz O, and Chantada G
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- Humans, Latin America, Telemedicine, Fellowships and Scholarships, Child, Medical Oncology education, Pediatrics education, Education, Distance methods
- Abstract
The TeLeo Program offers a free-access 2-year online learning program to support fellowship programs in pediatric oncology, enhance networking opportunities, and facilitate the exchange of context-specific, educational content within the pediatric oncology community in training in Latin America. In its first edition beginning in 2021, 185 fellows from 40 centers in 12 Latin American countries were enrolled. Additional courses for other healthcare professionals related to oncology in the region were produced to further support the program. A digital platform was created to allow users to easily access learning activities after registration, with 7075 professionals currently registered., (© 2024 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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60. The St. Jude Global Academy: A Multifaceted Education Program to Expand Pediatric Oncology Workforce Capacity.
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Moreira DC, Hashmi SK, Andujar A, Berg F, Conger K, Fox Irwin L, Mikkelsen M, Antillón-Klussmann F, Bazzeh F, Cypriano M, Gao YJ, González-Ramella O, Rivas S, Lopes LF, Mack R, Morosini F, Noun D, Garcia X, Homsi MR, Puerto-Torres M, Agulnik A, Baker JN, Caniza MA, McNeil MJ, Qaddoumi I, Chantada G, and Rodríguez-Galindo C
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- Humans, Pediatrics education, Neoplasms therapy, Child, Workforce, Health Workforce, Medical Oncology education
- Abstract
There is currently a global shortage of healthcare professionals equipped to handle the rising burden of childhood cancer. St. Jude Global is an initiative to improve survival rates of children with cancer worldwide while improving access to quality care. One of the overriding goals of St. Jude Global is focused on education: the training of the clinical workforce needed to expand quality care for all children with cancer. Herein, we describe the St. Jude Global Academy (SJGA) and its programs. The three main workstreams of the SJGA are: clinical training programs, courses, and distance learning. St. Jude collaborates with eight institutions in seven low- and middle-income countries to train pediatric subspecialists. Each year, approximately 20 new fellows start at these clinical training programs. To date, 92 specialists have been trained. The SJGA's courses create educational opportunities that provide a structured learning experience in key areas that are relevant to pediatric cancer care. To date, 1081 participants from 372 institutions in 84 countries have successfully completed these educational opportunities. Cure4Kids is the SJGA's distance learning platform. Over 9000 healthcare professionals in 177 countries use Cure4Kids. The platform receives 1400 visits and over 13,000 page views per day. The SJGA's multifaceted approach encompasses various disciplines and skills, providing healthcare professionals from around the world the skills to address the needs of children diagnosed with cancer in their respected institutions. These efforts are essential for building workforce capacity to improve outcomes., (© 2025 The Author(s). Pediatric Blood & Cancer published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2025
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61. The transformation of Cure4Kids: Expanding knowledge transfer capacity.
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Berg F, Conger K, Avula M, Hansen C, Chatman G, Provasnik J, Alguire K, Wellman A, Chantada G, Rodriguez-Galindo C, and Moreira DC
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- Humans, Medical Oncology education, Child, Internet, Health Personnel education, Hematology education, Pediatrics, Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Global survival disparities among children with cancer and other catastrophic diseases are the driving force behind Cure4Kids' sustained outreach to healthcare professionals. Congruent with this need, Cure4Kids was redesigned to meet the emergent demands of diverse healthcare professionals seeking free, web-based pediatric hematology/oncology education. Herein, we present an overview of each phase of the design and development process for the transformation and describe key features of the new Cure4Kids and future opportunities for expansion., (© 2024 The Authors. Pediatric Blood & Cancer published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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62. The importance of basic and translational research in caring for children with malignant solid tumors in Latin America.
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Cancela MB, Dinardi M, Aschero R, Zugbi S, Chantada G, Baroni L, and Schaiquevich P
- Abstract
Objective: Basic and translational research in pediatric cancer are essential to improve patient care. To critically assess the developments achieved in these areas in Latin America, we systematically reviewed information published between 2013 and 2023., Methods: Studies of basic and translational research performed by investigators in Latin America evaluating pediatric malignant solid and central nervous system tumors were retrieved from PubMed. Original articles published in English between 2013 and 2023 were included. Collaborations among Latin American authors or among Latin American authors working with researchers from other continents were also included. Studies were excluded if they focused only on adults or on basic research in tumor biology not specifically related to the tumor types analyzed in this review., Results: A total of 550 articles were retrieved, but after removal of duplicates, 514 articles were included in the analysis, the majority of which were authored by researchers affiliated with institutions in Argentina, Brazil and Mexico. These countries also had the highest number of collaborations on original articles published with authors from Europe and North America. Argentina had the highest number of collaborations on original publications, with coauthors from Brazil and Uruguay. The median impact factor of the 244 journals in which articles were published was 3.5. The most commonly studied tumors were osteosarcomas, neuroblastomas and medulloblastomas; the most commonly studied areas were molecular analysis, tumor cell biology and biomarkers., Conclusions: In Latin America, research in pediatric oncology is on the agenda, despite a notable disparity in publication rates and frequency of collaboration between countries. There is a need to strengthen scientific collaboration within Latin America and with countries from other continents to promote research and to develop novel treatment strategies that reflect the local needs of children in Latin America who have solid tumors and brain cancer., Competing Interests: Conflicts of interest. None declared.
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- 2024
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63. The role of International Society of Paediatric Oncology (SIOP) in advancing global childhood cancer care.
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Challinor J, Davidson A, Chantada G, Kebudi R, and Pritchard-Jones K
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The Société Internationale d'Oncologie Pédiatrique [International Society of Paediatric Oncology] (SIOP), founded in 1969, aims to improve the lives of children and adolescents with cancer through global collaboration, education, training, research and advocacy. The annual congress provides the opportunity to share late-breaking research, clinical experiences and debate, with experts worldwide. SIOP's six Continental Branches represent their constituent members in North America, Oceania, Latin America, Africa, Europe and Asia and bring best practices and recent research findings of value to their specific patient populations. In 1990, the SIOP Board of Directors addressed the formerly predominantly European/North American society transforming into a global association by establishing a scholarship program to bring low- and middle-income country (LMIC) paediatric oncologists and nurses to SIOP meetings. A major achievement was SIOP's acceptance as a World Health Organisation (WHO) non-state actor in official relations in 2018, joining 220 non-governmental organisations, international business associations and philanthropic foundations with this privilege. SIOP supports advocacy with WHO member states and civil society to highlight the specific needs of cancer in this age-group through key programs especially supporting the WHO Global Initiative for Childhood Cancer. Sustained improvement in childhood cancer outcomes has paralleled the integration of research with care; thus, SIOP launched a Programme for Advancing Research Capacity for funding selected clinical trial groups in LMICs. SIOP supports south-south partnerships, and the principles elegantly expressed in SIOP Africa's checklist for co-branding projects, that include the prioritisation of local needs, cultivation of local expertise and commitment to equitable partnerships. SIOP now counts approximately 3,000 members from over 128 countries; 39% are from more than 60 LMICs. SIOP members have multidisciplinary expertise on all aspects of childhood cancer care working in collaboration with key stakeholders including governments, civil society organisations and funders to improve the lives of children/adolescents with cancer everywhere in all ways., Competing Interests: The authors declare no financial conflicts of interest., (© the authors; licensee ecancermedicalscience.)
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- 2024
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64. SIOP pediatric oncology services Global Mapping Program: Latin American data collection.
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Chantada L, Gorostegui M, Lowe J, Ranasinghe N, Villegas L, Geel J, Howard S, Bouffet E, Chantada G, Challinor J, and Cappellano A
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- Child, Humans, Latin America, Medical Oncology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Africa, Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
The International Society of Paediatric Oncology (SIOP) launched a program to map all pediatric cancer facilities around the world. After the results in Africa were completed, the strategy for data collection for Latin America was revised to improve the accuracy and avoid duplications. In partnership with SIOP, the Sociedad Latino Americana de Oncología Pediátrica (SLAOP) approached their delegates who provided the contacts for a 10-question survey about their institutional capacities. Data were collected by email, online meetings, or telephone calls, and stored in a secure platform. All but one country participated and a high number of centers were recorded., (© 2023 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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65. Establishment and Comprehensive Characterization of a Novel Preclinical Platform of Metastatic Retinoblastoma for Therapeutic Developments.
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Zugbi S, Aschero R, Ganiewich D, Cancela MB, Winter U, Ottaviani D, Sampor C, Dinardi M, Torbidoni AV, Mena M, Balaguer-Lluna L, Lamas G, Sgroi M, Lagomarsino E, Lubieniecki F, Fandiño A, Radvanyi F, Abramson DH, Podhajcer O, Llera AS, Cafferata EG, Chantada G, Carcaboso AM, and Schaiquevich P
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local, Cell Line, Disease Models, Animal, Retinoblastoma drug therapy, Retinoblastoma genetics, Retinal Neoplasms drug therapy, Retinal Neoplasms genetics
- Abstract
Purpose: Although there have been improvements in the management of metastatic retinoblastoma, most patients do not survive, and all patients suffer from multiple short- and long-term treatment toxicities. Reliable and informative models to assist clinicians are needed. Thus we developed and comprehensively characterized a novel preclinical platform of primary cell cultures and xenograft models of metastatic retinoblastoma to provide insights into the molecular biology underlying metastases and to perform drug screening for the identification of hit candidates with the highest potential for clinical translation., Methods: Orbital tumor, bone marrow, cerebrospinal fluid, and lymph node tumor infiltration specimens were obtained from seven patients with metastatic retinoblastoma at diagnosis, disease progression, or relapse. Tumor specimens were engrafted in immunodeficient animals, and primary cell lines were established. Genomic, immunohistochemical/immunocytochemical, and pharmacological analysis were performed., Results: We successfully established five primary cell lines: two derived from leptomeningeal, two from orbital, and one from lymph node tumor dissemination. After the intravitreal or intraventricular inoculation of these cells, we established cell-derived xenograft models. Both primary cell lines and xenografts accurately retained the histological and genomic features of the tumors from which they were derived and faithfully recapitulated the dissemination patterns and pharmacological sensitivity observed in the matched patients., Conclusions: Ours is an innovative and thoroughly characterized preclinical platform of metastatic retinoblastoma developed for the understanding of tumor biology of this highly aggressive tumor and has the potential to identify drug candidates to treat patients who currently lack effective treatment options.
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- 2023
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66. Development of EPAT: An assessment tool for pediatric hematology/oncology training programs.
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Moreira DC, Metzger ML, Antillón-Klussmann F, González-Ramella O, Gao Y, Bazzeh F, Middlekauff J, Fox Irwin L, Gonzalez ML, Chantada G, Barr RD, Garrington T, Hastings C, Kutluk T, Saab R, Khan MS, Saha V, Rodríguez-Galindo C, and Friedrich P
- Abstract
Purpose: In the absence of a standardized tool to assess the quality of pediatric hematology/oncology training programs, the Education Program Assessment Tool (EPAT) was conceptualized as a user-friendly and adaptable tool to evaluate and identify areas of opportunity, pinpoint needed modifications, and monitor progress for training programs around the world., Methods: The development of EPAT consisted of three main phases: operationalization, consensus, and piloting. After each phase, the tool was iteratively modified based on feedback to improve its relevance, usability, and clarity., Results: The operationalization process led to the development of 10 domains with associated assessment questions. The two-step consensus phase included an internal consensus phase to validate the domains and a subsequent external consensus phase to refine the domains and overall function of the tool. EPAT domains for programmatic evaluation are hospital infrastructure, patient care, education infrastructure, program basics, clinical exposure, theory, research, evaluation, educational culture, and graduate impact. EPAT was piloted in five training programs in five countries, representing diverse medical training and patient care contexts for proper validation of the tool. Face validity was confirmed by a correlation between the perceived and calculated scores for each domain (r = 0.78, p < .0001)., Conclusions: EPAT was developed following a systematic approach, ultimately leading to a relevant tool to evaluate the different core elements of pediatric hematology/oncology training programs across the world. With EPAT, programs will have a tool to quantitatively evaluate their training, allowing for benchmarking with centers at the local, regional, and international level., (© 2023 American Cancer Society.)
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- 2023
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67. Pharmacokinetics of Orbital Topotecan After Ophthalmic Artery Chemosurgery and Intravenous Infusion in the Swine Model.
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Requejo F, Opezzo J, Vater A, Asprea M, Lagomarsino E, Sampor C, Fandiño A, Chantada G, Francis JH, Abramson DH, and Schaiquevich P
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- Animals, Swine, Infusions, Intravenous, Ophthalmic Artery, Topotecan, Retinoblastoma drug therapy, Retinal Neoplasms
- Abstract
Purpose: Surgery, multiagent systemic chemotherapy, and radiation are used for patients with orbital retinoblastoma but are associated with unacceptable short- and long-term toxicity (including death). We studied orbital and systemic exposure of topotecan in the swine model after ophthalmic artery chemosurgery (OAC) and intravenous (IV) delivery., Methods: Landrace pigs (n = 3) underwent 30-minute OAC of topotecan (4 mg), and samples were serially obtained from the femoral artery and from a microdialysis probe inserted into the lateral rectus muscle sheath of the infused eye as a surrogate of the orbital irrigation. Animals were recovered, and, after a wash-out period, plasma and microdialysate samples from the contralateral eye were collected after a 30-minute IV infusion of topotecan (4 mg). Samples were quantified by high-performance liquid chromatography, and population pharmacokinetic analysis was conducted using MonolixSuite., Results: After OAC, median topotecan exposure in the orbit was 5624 ng × h/mL (range 3922-12531) compared to 23 ng × h/mL (range 18-75) after IV infusion. Thus, topotecan exposure in the orbit was 218-fold (range 75-540) higher after OAC than after IV infusion despite comparable systemic exposure (AUCpl) between routes (AUCpl, OAC: 141 ng × h/mL [127-191] versus AUCpl, IV: 139 ng × h/mL [126-186]). OAC was more selective to target the orbit because the median (range) orbital-to-plasma exposure ratio was 44 (28-65) after OAC compared to 0.18 (0.13-0.40) after IV infusion., Conclusions: OAC of topotecan resulted in higher orbital exposure than after IV infusion and was a more selective route for local drug delivery. Patients with orbital retinoblastoma may benefit from a multimodal treatment strategy including OAC therapy.
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- 2023
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68. Evaluating the baseline survival outcomes of the "six Global Initiative for Childhood Cancer index cancers" in Africa.
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van Heerden J, Balagadde-Kambugu J, Angom R, Lusobya RC, Chantada G, Desjardins L, Fabian ID, Israels T, Paintsil V, Hessissen L, Diouf MN, Elayadi M, Turner SD, Kouya F, and Geel JA
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- Child, Humans, Africa epidemiology, Neoplasms epidemiology, Neoplasms therapy, Wilms Tumor, Retinoblastoma, Kidney Neoplasms, Retinal Neoplasms
- Abstract
Limited survival data for the six Global Initiative for Childhood Cancer (GICC) priority cancers are available in Africa. Management of pediatric malignancies in Africa is challenging due to lack of resources, setting-specific comorbidities, high rates of late presentation and treatment abandonment. Reporting of outcome data is problematic due to the lack of registries. With the aim of evaluating the feasibility of baseline outcomes for the six index cancers, we present a descriptive analysis of respective survival rates in Africa. The survival rates were between 18% (lower middle-income countries) to 82.3% (upper middle-income countries) for acute lymphoblastic leukemia, between 26.9% (low-income countries) to 77.9% (upper middle-income countries) for nephroblastoma, between 23% (low-income countries) to 100% (upper middle-income countries), for retinoblastoma, 45% (low-income countries) to 95% (upper middle-income countries) for Hodgkin lymphoma and 28% (low-income countries) to 76% (upper middle-income countries) for Burkitt lymphoma. Solutions to improve survival rates and reported outcomes include establishing and funding sustainable registries, training and to actively include all countries in consortia from different African regions.HighlightsContinental differences in childhood cancer management such lack of resources, setting-specific comorbidities, high rates of late presentation and treatment abandonment, present challenges to the achievement of Global Initiative for Childhood Cancer goals.The available data registries do not adequately inform on the true incidences and outcomes of childhood cancers in Africa.The pathophysiology of some childhood cancers in Africa are associated with high-risk prognostic factors.Outcomes can be improved by greater regional collaboration to manage childhood cancer based on local resources and tumor characteristics.Some individual countries have reached the Global Initiative for Childhood Cancer goals for single cancers and it should be possible for more African countries to follow suit.
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- 2023
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69. Cure4Kids: Two decades of knowledge transfer.
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Moreira DC, Jones HM, Schaeffer E, Wellman A, Shuler A, Ribeiro R, Chantada G, and Rodriguez-Galindo C
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- Child, Humans, Internet, Learning, Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Cure4Kids is a free web-based knowledge platform for professionals providing care for children with cancer and hematologic diseases, offering its users a comprehensive suite of learning opportunities. It has been a resource for the pediatric oncology community across the world for the past two decades, with 60,107 users having logged in 1,412,514 times with 22,045,553 content hits. A transformation of Cure4Kids is being planned and will include an improved user interface, increased interactivity, and more content., (© 2022 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2022
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70. Controversies in the Management of Choroidal Invasion in Retinoblastoma.
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Pendri PR and Chantada G
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- Choroid, Eye Enucleation, Humans, Infant, Neoplasm Invasiveness, Retrospective Studies, Retinal Neoplasms surgery, Retinoblastoma surgery
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Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest to disclose.
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- 2022
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71. Impact of COVID-19 in pediatric oncology care in Latin America during the first year of the pandemic.
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Villanueva G, Sampor C, Palma J, Villarroel M, Valencia D, Lombardi MG, Garcia WG, Caceres EL, Sobrero V, Garcia L, Cabrera V, Maza I, Velasquez T, Ugaz C, Vasquez JM, Coronado RD, Gonzalez N, Aguiar S, Dabezies A, Moreno F, Sardinas S, Gamboa Y, Maradiegue E, Fu L, Gassant P, Moreno K, Gonzales O, Schelotto M, Luna-Fineman S, Antoneli CG, Fuentes-Alabi S, Luciani S, Cappellano A, Chantada G, and Vasquez L
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- Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Latin America epidemiology, Pandemics, Suspensions, COVID-19 epidemiology, Neoplasms epidemiology, Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Background: The ongoing coronavirus 2019 disease (COVID-19) pandemic strained medical systems worldwide. We report on the impact on pediatric oncology care in Latin American (LATAM) during its first year., Method: Four cross-sectional surveys were electronically distributed among pediatric onco-hematologists in April/June/October 2020, and April/2021 through the Latin American Society of Pediatric Oncology (SLAOP) email list and St Jude Global regional partners., Results: Four hundred fifty-three pediatric onco-hematologists from 20 countries responded to the first survey, with subsequent surveys response rates above 85%. More than 95% of participants reported that treatment continued without interruption for new and active ongoing patients, though with disruptions in treatment availability. During the first three surveys, respondents reported suspensions of outpatient procedures (54.2%), a decrease in oncologic surgeries (43.6%), radiotherapy (28.4%), stem cell transplants (SCT) (69.3%), and surveillance consultations (81.2%). Logistic regression analysis showed that at the beginning of the first wave, participants from countries with healthcare expenditure below 7% were more likely to report a decrease in outpatient procedures (odds ratio [OR]: 1.84, 95% CI: 1.19-2.8), surgeries (OR: 3, 95% CI: 1.9-4.6) and radiotherapy (OR: 6, 95% CI: 3.5-10.4). Suspension of surveillance consultations was higher in countries with COVID-19 case fatality rates above 2% (OR: 3, 95% CI: 1.4-6.2) and SCT suspensions in countries with COVID-19 incidence rate above 100 cases per 100,000 (OR: 3.48, 95% CI: 1.6-7.45). Paradoxically, at the beginning of the second wave with COVID-19 cases rising exponentially, most participants reported improvements in cancer services availability., Conclusion: Our data show the medium-term collateral effects of the pandemic on pediatric oncology care in LATAM, which might help delineate oncology care delivery amid current and future challenges posed by the pandemic., (© 2022 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2022
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72. Subsequent malignant neoplasms in the pediatric age in retinoblastoma survivors in Argentina.
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Villanueva G, Sampor C, Moreno F, Alderete D, Moresco A, Pinto N, Szijan I, Schaiquevich P, Felice MS, Rose A, Zubizarreta P, Sgroi M, Fandiño A, and Chantada G
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- Adolescent, Argentina epidemiology, Child, Female, Humans, Incidence, Risk Assessment, Survivors, Bone Neoplasms complications, Breast Neoplasms epidemiology, Central Nervous System Neoplasms complications, Leukemia complications, Neoplasms complications, Neoplasms, Second Primary diagnosis, Neoplasms, Second Primary epidemiology, Neoplasms, Second Primary etiology, Retinal Neoplasms complications, Retinal Neoplasms epidemiology, Retinal Neoplasms therapy, Retinoblastoma complications, Retinoblastoma epidemiology, Retinoblastoma therapy, Sarcoma epidemiology, Sarcoma etiology, Sarcoma therapy, Sarcoma, Ewing complications, Skin Neoplasms complications, Soft Tissue Neoplasms complications
- Abstract
Background: Retinoblastoma survivors in low- and middle-income countries are exposed to high-intensity treatments that potentially place them at higher risk of early subsequent malignant neoplasms (SMNs)., Methods: We followed 714 (403 [56.4%] nonhereditary and 311 [43.5%] hereditary) retinoblastoma survivors diagnosed from August 1987 to December 2016, up to the age of 16 years. We quantified risk of SMNs with cumulative incidence (CI) and standardized incidence ratios (SIR) analysis. Multivariate regression Cox model was used to determine the association of treatments and risk of SMNs., Results: Median follow-up was of 9 years (range: 0.18-16.9) and 24 survivors (3.36%) developed 25 SMNs (n = 22 hereditary, n = 2 nonhereditary). SMNs included sarcomas (osteosarcomas, Ewing sarcomas, rhabdomyosarcomas; n = 12), leukemias (n = 5), and central nervous system tumors (CNS; n = 3). All cases of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and most of Ewing sarcomas occurred within 5 years of retinoblastoma diagnosis. The type of SMN was the main indicator of mortality (five of five patients with leukemias, six of 12 with sarcomas, and zero of three with CNS tumors died). Compared to the general population, radiation increased the risk of Ewing sarcoma in hereditary survivors by 700-fold (95% CI = 252-2422.6) and chemotherapy increased the risk of AML by 140-fold (95% CI = 45.3-436). The CI of SMNs for hereditary survivors was 13.7% (95% CI = 8.4-22.1) at 15 years., Conclusion: Retinoblastoma survivors from Argentina are at higher risk of developing SMNs early in life compared to the general Argentinean population, especially those treated with radiation plus chemotherapy. AML and Ewing sarcoma presented within 5 years of retinoblastoma diagnosis are associated with chemotherapy and radiation exposure., (© 2022 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2022
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73. Metastatic Death Based on Presenting Features and Treatment for Advanced Intraocular Retinoblastoma: A Multicenter Registry-Based Study.
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Tomar AS, Finger PT, Gallie B, Kivelä TT, Mallipatna A, Zhang C, Zhao J, Wilson MW, Brennan RC, Burges M, Kim J, Berry JL, Jubran R, Khetan V, Ganesan S, Yarovoy A, Yarovaya V, Kotova E, Volodin D, Yousef YA, Nummi K, Ushakova TL, Yugay OV, Polyakov VG, Ramirez-Ortiz MA, Esparza-Aguiar E, Chantada G, Schaiquevich P, Fandino A, Yam JC, Lau WW, Lam CP, Sharwood P, Moorthy S, Long QB, Essuman VA, Renner LA, Semenova E, Català-Mora J, Correa-Llano G, and Carreras E
- Subjects
- Eye Enucleation, Humans, Infant, Registries, Retrospective Studies, Retinal Neoplasms drug therapy, Retinal Neoplasms pathology, Retinoblastoma drug therapy, Retinoblastoma pathology
- Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate presenting features, tumor size, and treatment methods for risk of metastatic death due to advanced intraocular retinoblastoma (RB)., Design: International, multicenter, registry-based retrospective case series., Participants: A total of 1841 patients with advanced RB., Methods: Advanced RB was defined by 8th edition American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) categories cT2 and cT3 and new AJCC-Ophthalmic Oncology Task Force (OOTF) Size Groups (1: < 50% of globe volume, 2: > 50% but < 2/3, 3: > 2/3, and 4: diffuse infiltrating RB). Treatments were primary enucleation, systemic chemotherapy with secondary enucleation, and systemic chemotherapy with eye salvage., Main Outcome Measures: Metastatic death., Results: The 5-year Kaplan-Meier cumulative survival estimates by patient-level AJCC clinical subcategories were 98% for cT2a, 96% for cT2b, 88% for cT3a, 95% for cT3b, 92% for cT3c, 84% for cT3d, and 75% for cT3e RB. Survival estimates by treatment modality were 96% for primary enucleation, 89% for systemic chemotherapy and secondary enucleation, and 90% for systemic chemotherapy with eye salvage. Risk of metastatic mortality increased with increasing cT subcategory (P < 0.001). Cox proportional hazards regression analysis confirmed a higher risk of metastatic mortality in categories cT3c (glaucoma, hazard ratio [HR], 4.9; P = 0.011), cT3d (intraocular hemorrhage, HR, 14.0; P < 0.001), and cT3e (orbital cellulitis, HR, 19.6; P < 0.001) than in category cT2a and with systemic chemotherapy with secondary enucleation (HR, 3.3; P < 0.001) and eye salvage (HR, 4.9; P < 0.001) than with primary enucleation. The 5-year Kaplan-Meier cumulative survival estimates by AJCC-OOTF Size Groups 1 to 4 were 99%, 96%, 94%, and 83%, respectively. Mortality from metastatic RB increased with increasing Size Group (P < 0.001). Cox proportional hazards regression analysis revealed that patients with Size Group 3 (HR, 10.0; P = 0.002) and 4 (HR, 41.1; P < 0.001) had a greater risk of metastatic mortality than Size Group 1., Conclusions: The AJCC-RB cT2 and cT3 subcategories and size-based AJCC-OOTF Groups 3 (> 2/3 globe volume) and 4 (diffuse infiltrating RB) provided a robust stratification of clinical risk for metastatic death in advanced intraocular RB. Primary enucleation offered the highest survival rates for patients with advanced intraocular RB., (Copyright © 2022 American Academy of Ophthalmology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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74. Defining High-risk Retinoblastoma: A Multicenter Global Survey.
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Kaliki S, Shields CL, Cassoux N, Munier FL, Chantada G, Grossniklaus HE, Yoshikawa H, Fabian ID, Berry JL, McKenzie JD, Kimani K, Reddy MA, Parulekar M, Tanabe M, Furuta M, Grigorovski N, Chevez-Barrios P, Scanlan P, Eagle RC Jr, Rashid R, Coronado RD, Sultana S, Staffieri S, Frenkel S, Suzuki S, Ushakova TL, and Ji X
- Subjects
- Eye Enucleation, Humans, Infant, Neoplasm Invasiveness, Prospective Studies, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Optic Nerve Injuries, Retinal Neoplasms diagnosis, Retinal Neoplasms pathology, Retinal Neoplasms therapy, Retinoblastoma diagnosis, Retinoblastoma pathology, Retinoblastoma therapy
- Abstract
Importance: High-risk histopathologic features of retinoblastoma are useful to assess the risk of systemic metastasis. In this era of globe salvage treatments for retinoblastoma, the definition of high-risk retinoblastoma is evolving., Objective: To evaluate variations in the definition of high-risk histopathologic features for metastasis of retinoblastoma in different ocular oncology practices around the world., Design, Setting, and Participants: An electronic web-based, nonvalidated 10-question survey was sent in December 2020 to 52 oncologists and pathologists treating retinoblastoma at referral retinoblastoma centers., Intervention: Anonymized survey about the definition of high-risk histopathologic features for metastasis of retinoblastoma., Main Outcomes and Measures: High-risk histopathologic features that determine further treatment with adjuvant systemic chemotherapy to prevent metastasis., Results: Among the 52 survey recipients, the results are based on the responses from 27 individuals (52%) from 24 different retinoblastoma practices across 16 countries in 6 continents. The following were considered to be high-risk features: postlaminar optic nerve infiltration (27 [100%]), involvement of optic nerve transection (27 [100%]), extrascleral tissue infiltration (27 [100%]), massive (≥3 mm) choroidal invasion (25 [93%]), microscopic scleral infiltration (23 [85%]), ciliary body infiltration (20 [74%]), trabecular meshwork invasion (18 [67%]), iris infiltration (17 [63%]), anterior chamber seeds (14 [52%]), laminar optic nerve infiltration (13 [48%]), combination of prelaminar and laminar optic nerve infiltration and minor choroidal invasion (11 [41%]), minor (<3 mm) choroidal invasion (5 [19%]), and prelaminar optic nerve infiltration (2 [7%]). The other histopathologic features considered high risk included Schlemm canal invasion (4 [15%]) and severe anaplasia (1 [4%]). Four respondents (15%) said that the presence of more than 1 high-risk feature, especially a combination of massive peripapillary choroidal invasion and postlaminar optic nerve infiltration, should be considered very high risk for metastasis., Conclusions and Relevance: Responses to this nonvalidated survey conducted in 2020-2021 showed little uniformity in the definition of high-risk retinoblastoma. Postlaminar optic nerve infiltration, involvement of optic nerve transection, and extrascleral tumor extension were the only features uniformly considered as high risk for metastasis across all oncology practices. These findings suggest that the relevance about their value in the current scenario with advanced disease being treated conservatively needs further evaluation; there is also a need to arrive at consensus definitions and conduct prospective multicenter studies to understand their relevance.
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- 2022
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75. A high-risk retinoblastoma subtype with stemness features, dedifferentiated cone states and neuronal/ganglion cell gene expression.
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Liu J, Ottaviani D, Sefta M, Desbrousses C, Chapeaublanc E, Aschero R, Sirab N, Lubieniecki F, Lamas G, Tonon L, Dehainault C, Hua C, Fréneaux P, Reichman S, Karboul N, Biton A, Mirabal-Ortega L, Larcher M, Brulard C, Arrufat S, Nicolas A, Elarouci N, Popova T, Némati F, Decaudin D, Gentien D, Baulande S, Mariani O, Dufour F, Guibert S, Vallot C, Rouic LL, Matet A, Desjardins L, Pascual-Pasto G, Suñol M, Catala-Mora J, Llano GC, Couturier J, Barillot E, Schaiquevich P, Gauthier-Villars M, Stoppa-Lyonnet D, Golmard L, Houdayer C, Brisse H, Bernard-Pierrot I, Letouzé E, Viari A, Saule S, Sastre-Garau X, Doz F, Carcaboso AM, Cassoux N, Pouponnot C, Goureau O, Chantada G, de Reyniès A, Aerts I, and Radvanyi F
- Subjects
- Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Biomarkers, Tumor metabolism, Cell Dedifferentiation genetics, Child, Preschool, DNA Methylation, Female, Gene Expression, Genetic Heterogeneity, Humans, Infant, Male, Mutation, N-Myc Proto-Oncogene Protein genetics, Neoplasm Metastasis, Retinal Cone Photoreceptor Cells metabolism, Retinal Ganglion Cells pathology, Retinal Neoplasms genetics, Retinal Neoplasms metabolism, Retinal Neoplasms pathology, Retinoblastoma genetics, Retinoblastoma metabolism, Retinoblastoma pathology, Retinal Cone Photoreceptor Cells pathology, Retinal Ganglion Cells metabolism, Retinal Neoplasms classification, Retinoblastoma classification
- Abstract
Retinoblastoma is the most frequent intraocular malignancy in children, originating from a maturing cone precursor in the developing retina. Little is known on the molecular basis underlying the biological and clinical behavior of this cancer. Here, using multi-omics data, we demonstrate the existence of two retinoblastoma subtypes. Subtype 1, of earlier onset, includes most of the heritable forms. It harbors few genetic alterations other than the initiating RB1 inactivation and corresponds to differentiated tumors expressing mature cone markers. By contrast, subtype 2 tumors harbor frequent recurrent genetic alterations including MYCN-amplification. They express markers of less differentiated cone together with neuronal/ganglion cell markers with marked inter- and intra-tumor heterogeneity. The cone dedifferentiation in subtype 2 is associated with stemness features including low immune and interferon response, E2F and MYC/MYCN activation and a higher propensity for metastasis. The recognition of these two subtypes, one maintaining a cone-differentiated state, and the other, more aggressive, associated with cone dedifferentiation and expression of neuronal markers, opens up important biological and clinical perspectives for retinoblastomas., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2021
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76. Children admitted to a pediatric intensive care unit after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation: Analysis of survival and predictors of mortality.
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Torres SF, Iolster T, Reyes Haczek PJ, Berro M, Longo PG, Siaba Serrate AJ, Schnitzler EJ, Chantada G, and Kusminsky GD
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- Adolescent, Child, Humans, Respiration, Artificial, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation adverse effects, Intensive Care Units, Pediatric
- Abstract
Introduction: Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) in children is a procedure that is not exempt of severe complications. Admission to the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) is associated with a high mortality rate. Objectives: To analyze survival and predictors of mortality among children who received a HSCT and were admitted to the PICU, and to develop a mortality prediction model in this population., Materials and Methods: Retrospective review of children and adolescents who received a HSCT between January 1st, 2005 and December 31st, 2019 and were admitted to the PICU of a tertiary care teaching hospital., Results: Out of 264 children receiving the transplant, 114 were admitted to the PICU. The overall mortality rate was 29% (n = 34). The type of transplant, underlying disease, febrile neutropenia event, cytomegalovirus infection, respiratory failure, graft versus host disease (GVHD), myeloablative chemotherapy, and previous malnutrition were associated with higher mortality rates. In the multivariate analysis, GVHD (odds ratio [OR]: 2.23; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.92-2.98), need for mechanical ventilation (OR: 2.47; 95% CI: 1.39- 5.73), alternative donor transplant (OR: 1.58; 95% CI: 1.14-2.17), and previous malnutrition (OR: 1.78; 95% CI: 1.22-3.89) were associated with a higher mortality rate., Conclusion: In the studied population, 2 out of 3 children who received a HSCT and were admitted to the PICU survived. GVHD, mechanical ventilation, alternative donor transplant, and previous malnutrition were predictors of mortality., Competing Interests: None, (Sociedad Argentina de Pediatría.)
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- 2021
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77. Current Indications of Secondary Enucleation in Retinoblastoma Management: A Position Paper on Behalf of the European Retinoblastoma Group (EURbG).
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Stathopoulos C, Lumbroso-Le Rouic L, Moll AC, Parulekar M, Maeder P, Doz F, Jenkinson H, Beck Popovic M, Chantada G, and Munier FL
- Abstract
Secondary enucleation (SE) puts an irreversible end to eye-preserving therapies, whenever their prolongation is expected to violate the presumed state of metastatic grace. At present, it must be acknowledged that clear criteria for SE are missing, leading to empiric and subjective indications commonly related to disease progression or relapse, disease persistence masking the optic nerve head or treatment-related complications obscuring the fundus view. This absence of evidence-based consensus regarding SE is explained by the continuously moving frontiers of the conservative management as a result of diagnostic and therapeutic advances, as well as by the lack of studies sufficiently powered to accurately stratify the risk of metastasis in conservatively treated patients. In this position paper of the European Retinoblastoma Group (EURbG), we give an overview of the progressive shift in the indications for SE over the past decades and propose guidelines to assist decision-making with respect to when SE becomes imperative or recommended, with corresponding absolute and relative SE indications. Further studies and validation of biologic markers correlated with the risk of metastasis are expected to set more precisely the frontiers of conservative management and thus consensual criteria for SE in the future.
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- 2021
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78. COVID-19: Consequences for Children With Cancer in Turkey and Globally.
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Kebudi R, Chantada G, Kurucu N, Tuğcu D, Mukkada S, and C Moreira D
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Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest: The authors have no conflict of interest to declare.
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- 2021
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79. High prevalence of BRAF V600E in patients with cholestasis, sclerosing cholangitis or liver fibrosis secondary to Langerhans cell histiocytosis.
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Carrere X, Pinto N, Gene Olaciregui N, Galluzzo L, Rossetti E, Celis Passini V, Salvador Marcos N, Chantada G, Braier J, Lavarino C, and Felizzia G
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- Humans, Liver Cirrhosis, Mutation, Prevalence, Cholangitis, Sclerosing complications, Cholangitis, Sclerosing epidemiology, Cholangitis, Sclerosing genetics, Cholestasis complications, Cholestasis genetics, Histiocytosis, Langerhans-Cell epidemiology, Histiocytosis, Langerhans-Cell etiology, Histiocytosis, Langerhans-Cell genetics, Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf genetics
- Abstract
Targeted therapies with MAPK inhibitors have proven to modulate the clinical manifestations of patients with Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH). We explored the presence of BRAF
V600E mutation in our cohort of patients with LCH and cholestasis, sclerosing cholangitis, or liver fibrosis that presented resistance to chemotherapy. The BRAFV600E mutation was detected either in the diagnosis (skin and bone) or liver biopsy in our cohort of 13 patients. Thus, we observed a high incidence of BRAFV600E mutation in 100% either in diagnostic biopsy (skin and bone) or liver biopsy in patients with progressive liver disease, sequela, or liver transplant requirement., (© 2021 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)- Published
- 2021
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80. Adjuvant therapy of histopathological risk factors of retinoblastoma in Europe: A survey by the European Retinoblastoma Group (EURbG).
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Dittner-Moormann S, Reschke M, Abbink FCH, Aerts I, Atalay HT, Fedorovna Bobrova N, Biewald E, Brecht IB, Caspi S, Cassoux N, Castela G, Diarra Y, Duncan C, Ebinger M, Garcia Aldana D, Hadjistilianou D, Kepák T, Klett A, Kiratli H, Maka E, Opocher E, Pawinska-Wasikowska K, Rascon J, Russo I, Rutynowska-Pronicka O, Sábado Álvarez C, Pacheco SSR, Svojgr K, Timmermann B, Vishnevskia-Dai V, Eggert A, Ritter-Sovinz P, Bechrakis NE, Jenkinson H, Moll A, Munier FL, Popovic MB, Chantada G, Doz F, and Ketteler P
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- Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Chemotherapy, Adjuvant methods, Child, Child, Preschool, Combined Modality Therapy methods, Europe, Eye Enucleation, Humans, Prognosis, Radiotherapy, Adjuvant methods, Retinal Neoplasms pathology, Retinoblastoma pathology, Risk Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Retinal Neoplasms therapy, Retinoblastoma therapy
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Introduction: Advanced intraocular retinoblastoma can be cured by enucleation, but spread of retinoblastoma cells beyond the natural limits of the eye is related to a high mortality. Adjuvant therapy after enucleation has been shown to prevent metastasis in children with risk factors for extraocular retinoblastoma. However, histological criteria and adjuvant treatment regimens vary and there is no unifying consensus on the optimal choice of treatment., Method: Data on guidelines for adjuvant treatment in European retinoblastoma referral centres were collected in an online survey among all members of the European Retinoblastoma Group (EURbG) network. Extended information was gathered via personal email communication., Results: Data were collected from 26 centres in 17 countries. Guidelines for adjuvant treatment were in place at 92.3% of retinoblastoma centres. There was a consensus on indication for and intensity of adjuvant treatment among more than 80% of all centres. The majority of centres use no adjuvant treatment for isolated focal choroidal invasion or prelaminar optic nerve invasion. Patients with massive choroidal invasion or postlaminar optic nerve invasion receive adjuvant chemotherapy, while microscopic invasion of the resection margin of the optic nerve or extension through the sclera are treated with combined chemo- and radiotherapy., Conclusion: Indications and adjuvant treatment regimens in European retinoblastoma referral centres are similar but not uniform. Further biomarkers in addition to histopathological risk factors could improve treatment stratification. The high consensus in European centres is an excellent foundation for a common European study with prospective validation of new biomarkers., (© 2021 The Authors. Pediatric Blood & Cancer published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2021
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81. The Global COVID-19 Observatory and Resource Center for Childhood Cancer: A response for the pediatric oncology community by SIOP and St. Jude Global.
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Moreira DC, Sniderman E, Mukkada S, Chantada G, Bhakta N, Foster W, Avula M, Homsi MR, Faughnan L, Happ B, Andujar A, Sonnenfelt J, Dalvi R, Frazier AL, Hessissen L, Kearns PR, Luna-Fineman S, Moreno A, Saghir Khan M, Sullivan M, Devidas M, Santana V, Caniza M, Pritchard-Jones K, and Rodriguez-Galindo C
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- Child, Comorbidity, Health Resources, Humans, Registries, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19 pathology, Information Dissemination methods, Libraries, Medical, Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic quickly led to an abundance of publications and recommendations, despite a paucity of information on how COVID-19 affects children with cancer. This created a dire need for a trusted resource with curated information and a space for the pediatric oncology community to share experiences. The Global COVID-19 Observatory and Resource Center for Childhood Cancer was developed, launched, and maintained by the International Society of Pediatric Oncology and St. Jude Children's Research Hospital. The three components (Resource Library, Global Registry, and Collaboration Space) complement each other, establishing a mechanism to generate and transfer knowledge rapidly throughout the community., (© 2021 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2021
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82. A decision process for drug discovery in retinoblastoma.
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Cancela MB, Zugbi S, Winter U, Martinez AL, Sampor C, Sgroi M, Francis JH, Garippa R, Abramson DH, Chantada G, and Schaiquevich P
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- Cell Line, Tumor, Drug Discovery methods, High-Throughput Screening Assays methods, Humans, Infusions, Intraventricular, Injections, Spinal, Intravitreal Injections, Neoplasm Metastasis, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local, Retinal Neoplasms pathology, Retinoblastoma pathology, Drug Discovery organization & administration, Retinal Neoplasms drug therapy, Retinoblastoma drug therapy
- Abstract
Intraocular retinoblastoma treatment has changed radically over the last decade, leading to a notable improvement in ocular survival. However, eyes that relapse remain difficult to treat, as few alternative active drugs are available. More challenging is the scenario of central nervous system (CNS) metastasis, in which almost no advancements have been made. Both clinical scenarios represent an urgent need for new drugs. Using an integrated multidisciplinary approach, we developed a decision process for prioritizing drug selection for local (intravitreal [IVi], intrathecal/intraventricular [IT/IVt]), systemic, or intra-arterial chemotherapy (IAC) treatment by means of high-throughput pharmacological screening of primary cells from two patients with intraocular tumor and CNS metastasis and a thorough database search to identify clinical and biopharmaceutical data. This process identified 169 compounds to be cytotoxic; only 8 are FDA-approved, lack serious toxicities and available for IVi administration. Four of these agents could also be delivered by IT/IVt. Twelve FDA-approved drugs were identified for systemic delivery as they are able to cross the blood-brain barrier and lack serious adverse events; four drugs are of oral usage and six compounds that lack vesicant or neurotoxicity could be delivered by IAC. We also identified promising compounds in preliminary phases of drug development including inhibitors of survivin, antiapoptotic Bcl-2 family proteins, methyltransferase, and kinesin proteins. This systematic approach may be applied more broadly to prioritize drugs to be repurposed or to identify novel hits for use in retinoblastoma treatment.
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- 2021
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83. Recommendations for Long-Term Follow-up of Adults with Heritable Retinoblastoma.
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Tonorezos ES, Friedman DN, Barnea D, Bosscha MI, Chantada G, Dommering CJ, de Graaf P, Dunkel IJ, Fabius AWM, Francis JH, Greer MC, Kleinerman RA, Kors WA, Laughlin S, Moll AC, Morton LM, Temming P, Tucker MA, van Leeuwen FE, Walsh MF, Oeffinger KC, and Abramson DH
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- Follow-Up Studies, Global Health, Humans, Incidence, Retinal Neoplasms epidemiology, Retinal Neoplasms genetics, Retinoblastoma epidemiology, Retinoblastoma genetics, Risk Factors, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Guidelines as Topic, Retinal Neoplasms diagnosis, Retinoblastoma diagnosis, Risk Assessment
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Purpose: To generate recommendations for long-term follow-up of adult survivors of heritable retinoblastoma., Design: We convened a meeting of providers from retinoblastoma centers around the world to review the state of the science and to evaluate the published evidence., Participants: Retinoblastoma is a rare childhood cancer of the retina. Approximately 40% of retinoblastoma cases are heritable, resulting from a germline mutation in RB1. Dramatic improvements in treatment and supportive care have resulted in a growing adult survivor population. However, survivors of heritable retinoblastoma have a significantly increased risk of subsequent malignant neoplasms, particularly bone and soft tissue sarcomas, uterine leiomyosarcoma, melanomas, and radiotherapy-related central nervous system tumors, which are associated with excess morbidity and mortality. Despite these risks, no surveillance recommendations for this population currently are in place, and surveillance practices vary widely by center., Methods: Following the Institute of Medicine procedure for clinical practice guideline development, a PubMed, EMBASE, and Web of Science search was performed, resulting in 139 articles; after abstract and full-text review, 37 articles underwent detailed data abstraction to quantify risk and evidence regarding surveillance, if available. During an in-person meeting, evidence was presented and discussed, resulting in consensus recommendations., Main Outcome Measures: Diagnosis and mortality from subsequent neoplasm., Results: Although evidence for risk of subsequent neoplasm, especially sarcoma and melanoma, was significant, evidence supporting routine testing of asymptomatic survivors was not identified. Skin examination for melanoma and prompt evaluation of signs and symptoms of head and neck disease were determined to be prudent., Conclusions: This review of the literature confirmed some of the common second cancers in retinoblastoma survivors but found little evidence for a benefit from currently available surveillance for these malignancies. Future research should incorporate international partners, patients, and family members., (Copyright © 2020 American Academy of Ophthalmology. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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84. Clinical, Genomic, and Pharmacological Study of MYCN -Amplified RB1 Wild-Type Metastatic Retinoblastoma.
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Zugbi S, Ganiewich D, Bhattacharyya A, Aschero R, Ottaviani D, Sampor C, Cafferata EG, Mena M, Sgroi M, Winter U, Lamas G, Suñol M, Daroqui M, Baialardo E, Salas B, Das A, Fandiño A, Francis JH, Lubieniecki F, Lavarino C, Garippa R, Podhajcer OL, Abramson DH, Radvanyi F, Chantada G, Llera AS, and Schaiquevich P
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An uncommon subgroup of unilateral retinoblastomas with highly aggressive histological features, lacking aberrations in RB1 gene with high-level amplification of MYCN ( MCYN ampl RB1 +/+) has only been described as intra-ocular cases treated with initial enucleation. Here, we present a comprehensive clinical, genomic, and pharmacological analysis of two cases of MCYN ampl RB1 +/+ with orbital and cervical lymph node involvement, but no central nervous system spread, rapidly progressing to fatal disease due to chemoresistance. Both patients showed in common MYCN high amplification and chromosome 16q and 17p loss. A somatic mutation in TP53 , in homozygosis by LOH, and high chromosomal instability leading to aneuploidy was identified in the primary ocular tumor and sites of dissemination of one patient. High-throughput pharmacological screening was performed in a primary cell line derived from the lymph node dissemination of one case. This cell line showed resistance to broad spectrum chemotherapy consistent with the patient's poor response but sensitivity to the synergistic effects of panobinostat-bortezomib and carboplatin-panobinostat associations. From these cells we established a cell line derived xenograft model that closely recapitulated the tumor dissemination pattern of the patient and served to evaluate whether triple chemotherapy significantly prolonged survival of the animals. We report novel genomic alterations in two cases of metastatic MCYN ampl RB1 +/+ that may be associated with chemotherapy resistance and in vitro/in vivo models that serve as basis for tailoring therapy in these cases.
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- 2020
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85. Optimizing the storage of chemotherapeutics for ophthalmic oncology: stability of topotecan solution for intravitreal injection.
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Bossacoma F, Cuadrado-Vilanova M, Vinent J, Correa MG, Gavrus D, Castillo-Ecija H, Catala-Mora J, Mora J, Schaiquevich P, Chantada GL, and Carcaboso AM
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- Humans, Intravitreal Injections, Topoisomerase I Inhibitors analysis, Topotecan analysis, Drug Stability, Drug Storage standards, Topoisomerase I Inhibitors chemistry, Topoisomerase I Inhibitors metabolism, Topotecan chemistry, Topotecan metabolism
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Background: . Intravitreal administration of topotecan shows activity against tumor vitreous seeding in the conservative treatment of retinoblastoma, a malignant tumor originated in the retina of small children. Adequate storage of the intravitreal topotecan solution would allow immediate availability for patients at health care institutions. The goal of the work was to address the stability of the intravitreal topotecan formulation upon reconstitution., Materials and Methods: . Intravitreal topotecan solutions were reconstituted (at a concentration of 0.2 mg topotecan in 1 mL saline solution vehicle, aliquoted in 1 mL plastic syringes) and stored either frozen or at room temperature for different times. Topotecan content was analyzed at time zero and at different conditions using a high performance liquid chromatography method to quantify topotecan lactone (active) and to detect its pH-dependent hydrolysis product, the open carboxylate., Results: . We found that intravitreal topotecan syringes remained stable at room temperature at least for 24 h, at least for 167 days upon stored frozen at -20°C, and up to 8 h after thawing at day 6. The degradation carboxylate product did not appear in the analyzed thawed samples during the whole study., Conclusions: . This study confirms the stability of frozen intravitreal topotecan syringes and will help optimize the use of this chemotherapy modality at institutions with low resources. Storage of aliquots will also help reduce personnel exposure to chemotherapy at hospital pharmacies.
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- 2020
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86. XAF1 as a modifier of p53 function and cancer susceptibility.
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Pinto EM, Figueiredo BC, Chen W, Galvao HCR, Formiga MN, Fragoso MCBV, Ashton-Prolla P, Ribeiro EMSF, Felix G, Costa TEB, Savage SA, Yeager M, Palmero EI, Volc S, Salvador H, Fuster-Soler JL, Lavarino C, Chantada G, Vaur D, Odone-Filho V, Brugières L, Else T, Stoffel EM, Maxwell KN, Achatz MI, Kowalski L, de Andrade KC, Pappo A, Letouze E, Latronico AC, Mendonca BB, Almeida MQ, Brondani VB, Bittar CM, Soares EWS, Mathias C, Ramos CRN, Machado M, Zhou W, Jones K, Vogt A, Klincha PP, Santiago KM, Komechen H, Paraizo MM, Parise IZS, Hamilton KV, Wang J, Rampersaud E, Clay MR, Murphy AJ, Lalli E, Nichols KE, Ribeiro RC, Rodriguez-Galindo C, Korbonits M, Zhang J, Thomas MG, Connelly JP, Pruett-Miller S, Diekmann Y, Neale G, Wu G, and Zambetti GP
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Cancer risk is highly variable in carriers of the common TP53- R337H founder allele, possibly due to the influence of modifier genes. Whole-genome sequencing identified a variant in the tumor suppressor XAF1 (E134*/Glu134Ter/rs146752602) in a subset of R337H carriers. Haplotype-defining variants were verified in 203 patients with cancer, 582 relatives, and 42,438 newborns. The compound mutant haplotype was enriched in patients with cancer, conferring risk for sarcoma ( P = 0.003) and subsequent malignancies ( P = 0.006). Functional analyses demonstrated that wild-type XAF1 enhances transactivation of wild-type and hypomorphic TP53 variants, whereas XAF1 -E134* is markedly attenuated in this activity. We propose that cosegregation of XAF1- E134* and TP53- R337H mutations leads to a more aggressive cancer phenotype than TP53- R337H alone, with implications for genetic counseling and clinical management of hypomorphic TP53 mutant carriers., (Copyright © 2020 The Authors, some rights reserved; exclusive licensee American Association for the Advancement of Science. No claim to original U.S. Government Works. Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial License 4.0 (CC BY-NC).)
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- 2020
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87. Early impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on paediatric cancer care in Latin America.
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Vasquez L, Sampor C, Villanueva G, Maradiegue E, Garcia-Lombardi M, Gomez-García W, Moreno F, Diaz R, Cappellano AM, Portilla CA, Salas B, Nava E, Brizuela S, Jimenez S, Espinoza X, Gassant PY, Quintero K, Fuentes-Alabi S, Velasquez T, Fu L, Gamboa Y, Quintana J, Castiglioni M, Nuñez C, Moreno A, Luna-Fineman S, Luciani S, and Chantada G
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- Betacoronavirus, COVID-19, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Health Care Surveys, Humans, Latin America epidemiology, Neoplasms diagnosis, Pandemics, Risk Factors, SARS-CoV-2, Coronavirus Infections epidemiology, Medical Oncology statistics & numerical data, Neoplasms therapy, Pneumonia, Viral epidemiology
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- 2020
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88. Delayed Enucleation With Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy in Advanced Intraocular Unilateral Retinoblastoma: AHOPCA II, a Prospective, Multi-Institutional Protocol in Central America.
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Luna-Fineman S, Chantada G, Alejos A, Amador G, Barnoya M, Castellanos ME, Fu L, Fuentes-Alabi S, Girón V, Goenz MA, Maldonado C, Méndez G, Morales RA, Ortiz R, Sanchez G, Wilson M, and Rodríguez-Galindo C
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- Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols adverse effects, Carboplatin administration & dosage, Central America, Chemotherapy, Adjuvant, Child, Child, Preschool, Disease Progression, Etoposide administration & dosage, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Neoplasm Staging, Progression-Free Survival, Prospective Studies, Retinal Neoplasms mortality, Retinal Neoplasms pathology, Retinoblastoma mortality, Retinoblastoma pathology, Risk Factors, Time Factors, Treatment Refusal, Vincristine administration & dosage, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols administration & dosage, Eye Enucleation adverse effects, Eye Enucleation mortality, Neoadjuvant Therapy adverse effects, Neoadjuvant Therapy mortality, Retinal Neoplasms therapy, Retinoblastoma therapy, Time-to-Treatment
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Purpose: Treatment abandonment because of enucleation refusal is a limitation of improving outcomes for children with retinoblastoma in countries with limited resources. Furthermore, many children present with buphthalmos and a high risk of globe rupture during enucleation. To address these unique circumstances, the AHOPCA II protocol introduced neoadjuvant chemotherapy with delayed enucleation., Patients and Methods: Patients with advanced unilateral intraocular disease (International Retinoblastoma Staging System [IRSS] stage I) were considered for upfront enucleation. Those with diffuse invasion of the choroid, postlaminar optic nerve, and/or anterior chamber invasion received six cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy (vincristine, carboplatin, and etoposide). Patients with buphthalmos and those with a perceived risk for enucleation refusal and/or abandonment were given two to three cycles of chemotherapy before scheduled enucleation followed by adjuvant chemotherapy to complete six cycles, regardless of pathology., Results: A total of 161 patients had unilateral IRSS stage I disease; 102 underwent upfront enucleation, and 59 had delayed enucleation. The estimated 5-year abandonment-sensitive event-free and overall survival rates for the group were 0.81 ± 0.03 and 0.86 ± 0.03, respectively. The 5-year estimated abandonment-sensitive event-free survival rates for patients undergoing upfront and delayed enucleation were 0.89 ± 0.03 and 0.68 ± 0.06, respectively ( P = .001). Compared with AHOPCA I, abandonment for patients with IRSS stage I retinoblastoma decreased from 16% to 4%., Conclusion: AHOPCA describes the results of advanced intraocular retinoblastoma treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy. In eyes with buphthalmos and patients with risk of abandonment, neoadjuvant chemotherapy can be effective when followed by enucleation and adjuvant chemotherapy. Our study suggests that this approach can save patients with buphthalmos from ocular rupture and might reduce refusal of enucleation and abandonment.
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- 2019
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89. Metronomic Chemotherapy for Children in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: Survey of Current Practices and Opinions of Pediatric Oncologists.
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Revon-Rivière G, Banavali S, Heississen L, Gomez Garcia W, Abdolkarimi B, Vaithilingum M, Li CK, Leung PC, Malik P, Pasquier E, Epelman S, Chantada G, and André N
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- Administration, Metronomic, Antineoplastic Agents therapeutic use, Child, Developing Countries, Drug Repositioning, Female, Humans, Male, Physician's Role, Poverty, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Socioeconomic Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Antineoplastic Agents administration & dosage, Neoplasms drug therapy, Practice Patterns, Physicians'
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Purpose: Low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) experience the burden of 80% of new childhood cancer cases worldwide, with cure rates as low as 10% in some countries. Metronomics combines frequent administrations of low-dose chemotherapy with drug repurposing, which consists of using already-approved drugs for new medical applications. With wide availability, limited costs, and little infrastructure needs, metronomics can be part of constraint-adapted regimens in these resource-limited settings-with the understanding that metronomics shall not be a substitute for standard treatments when available and doable. Our study aims to describe the experience, practices, opinions, and needs in metronomics of physicians working in LMICs., Methods: An online questionnaire was sent to more than 1,200 physicians in pediatric oncology networks in LMICs. Items included the type of center, physician's demographics, experience in pediatric oncology, and experience with current knowledge of metronomics. Opinions and perspectives were explored using multiple-answer and open questions., Results: Of physicians, 17% responded. Of respondents, 54.9% declared that they had already used a metronomic regimen. The most frequently cited repositioned drugs were celecoxib (44%) followed by propranolol and valproic acid (17%). Respondents highlighted the advantages of outpatient use (20%) and expected low toxicity (24%). In considering the drawbacks of metronomics, 47% of responses highlighted the lack of scientific evidence or guidelines, 33% the availability or affordability of drugs, and 18% the problem of acceptance or compliance. Of physicians, 79% believed that use of metronomics will spread in LMICs in the near future and 98% of them were willing to participate in international metronomic protocols or registries., Conclusion: Metronomics is already used in LMICs and is a potential answer to unmet needs in pediatric oncology. There is room for improvement in the availability of drugs and a necessity to develop collaborative protocols and research to generate level A evidence.
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- 2019
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90. Optimizing outcomes for children with non-Hodgkin lymphoma in low- and middle-income countries by early correct diagnosis, reducing toxic death and preventing abandonment.
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Chantada G, Lam CG, and Howard SC
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- Child, Child, Preschool, Combined Modality Therapy, Developing Countries, Disease Management, Early Detection of Cancer, Global Health, Humans, Income, Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin diagnosis, Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin therapy, Patient Outcome Assessment, Population Surveillance, Poverty, Refusal to Treat, Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin epidemiology
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In high-income countries, more than 90% of children with mature B-cell lymphomas are cured with frontline therapy. However, cure requires prompt and correct diagnosis, careful risk stratification, very intense chemotherapy and meticulous supportive care, together with logistical support for patients who live far from the cancer centre or face financial barriers to receiving care. In low- and middle-income countries (LMIC), cure rates range from 20% to 70% because of lack of diagnosis, misdiagnosis, abandonment of treatment, toxic death and excess relapse with reduced-intensity regimens. Fortunately, a wide range of successful interventions in LMIC have reduced these causes of avoidable treatment failure. Public awareness campaigns have led to societal awareness of childhood cancer; telepathology has improved diagnosis, even in remote areas; subsidized chemotherapy, transportation, housing and food have reduced abandonment; and hand hygiene, nurse training programmes and health system improvements have reduced toxic death. These interventions can be deployed everywhere and at low cost, so are highly scalable. Children and adolescents with Burkitt lymphoma can be cured in all countries by making a timely correct diagnosis, applying protocols adapted to the local context, preventing abandonment of therapy and avoiding toxic death. Reducing these causes of treatment failure is feasible and highly cost-effective everywhere., (© 2019 British Society for Haematology and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2019
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91. Neuroblastoma in patients under 18 months. Single institution experience in Argentina.
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Rossa A, Cacciavillano W, Rose A, Flores P, Chantada G, and Zubizarreta P
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- Antineoplastic Protocols, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Male, Neoplasm Staging, Neuroblastoma mortality, Prognosis, Retrospective Studies, Antineoplastic Agents administration & dosage, Neuroblastoma diagnosis, Neuroblastoma drug therapy
- Abstract
The purpose of the study was to evaluate the outcome of patients under 18 months diagnosed with neuroblastoma. Between April 2006 and December 2013, 45 consecutive patients followed in Hospital de Pediatría Garrahan, were retrospectively reviewed. With a median age of 9.3 months (1-18 months) N-myc amplification was detected in 5 out of 38 patients, 1p deletion (del1p) in 4 patients, and 11q aberration in one patient. With a median follow-up of 53 (range: 6-109 months), at 24 months the event free survival (EFS) of all patients was 83% (SE 6%) and overall survival (OS) of 88% (SE 5%). Significant difference was found in OS and EFS between patients with stages L1, L2 and Ms vs. stage M (p = 0.01 and p = 0.01 respectively). EFS for each stage: L1 85% (SE 7%), L2 100%, MS 100%, vs. M 55% (SE 16%). OS: L1 90% (SE 6%), L2 100%, MS 100%, vs. M 66% (SE 15%). OS and EFS results are similar to those reported in international studies. However, better identification of biological prognostic factors will warr ant accurate staging and consequently an appropriate treatment.
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- 2019
92. Comparison of the pharmacological activity of idarubicin and doxorubicin for retinoblastoma.
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Zugbi S, Winter U, Castañon A, Sampor C, Chantada G, and Schaiquevich P
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- Cell Proliferation drug effects, Humans, Retinal Neoplasms drug therapy, Retinoblastoma drug therapy, Tumor Cells, Cultured, Antibiotics, Antineoplastic pharmacology, Apoptosis drug effects, Doxorubicin pharmacology, Idarubicin pharmacology, Retinal Neoplasms pathology, Retinoblastoma pathology
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- 2019
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93. Combined high-dose intra-arterial and intrathecal chemotherapy for the treatment of a case of extraocular retinoblastoma.
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Rodriguez A, Zugbi S, Requejo F, Deu A, Sampor C, Sgroi M, Bosaleh A, Fandiño A, Schaiquevich P, and Chantada G
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- Carboplatin administration & dosage, Central Nervous System Neoplasms drug therapy, Central Nervous System Neoplasms secondary, Child, Preschool, Humans, Infusions, Intra-Arterial, Injections, Spinal, Male, Melphalan administration & dosage, Retinal Neoplasms pathology, Retinoblastoma secondary, Topotecan administration & dosage, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols administration & dosage, Retinal Neoplasms drug therapy, Retinoblastoma drug therapy
- Abstract
Patients with retinoblastoma and central nervous system (CNS) involvement are rarely curable with available treatments. We designed a high-dose intra-arterial regimen targeting the ophthalmic artery and chiasm combined with intrathecal chemotherapy to treat a 4-year-old patient with retinoblastoma metastasized to the CNS. After three cycles of this regimen, including carboplatin, melphalan, and intrathecal topotecan, a partial response of the orbital tumor mass and chiasmatic lesion, and complete response in the cerebrospinal fluid and bone marrow were achieved. This new treatment strategy may be explored as a treatment component for patients with overt extraocular retinoblastoma and CNS dissemination., (© 2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
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- 2018
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94. Survivin is high in retinoblastoma, but what lies beneath?
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Alfaar AS, Chantada G, and Qaddoumi I
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- Aqueous Humor, Humans, Inhibitor of Apoptosis Proteins, Survivin, Retinal Neoplasms, Retinoblastoma blood
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- 2018
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95. The technique of superselective ophthalmic artery chemotherapy for retinoblastoma: The Garrahan Hospital experience.
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Requejo F, Marelli J, Ruiz Johnson A, Sampor C, and Chantada G
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- Angiography, Digital Subtraction, Catheterization, Cerebral Angiography, Child, Preschool, Female, Femoral Artery, Humans, Infant, Infusions, Intra-Arterial, Male, Meningeal Arteries, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Ophthalmic Artery, Retinal Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Retinal Neoplasms drug therapy, Retinoblastoma diagnostic imaging, Retinoblastoma drug therapy
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Background Superselective ophthalmic artery chemotherapy (SOAC) is a proven therapy for the treatment of retinoblastomas. We describe the technique, results and complications of SOAC performed in our hospital. Objective The aim of this article is to demonstrate that a seemingly complex technique can be carried out with a low morbidity rate. Methods A retrospective analysis of patients receiving SOAC in our department from November 2014 to April 2017 was performed. Data collected were age, gender, number of procedures, arteries approached, bilaterality of treatment, and complications. The procedure was performed using a 3F sheath and a flow-dependent 1.5F microcatheter that was navigated from the femoral artery to the ostium of the ophthalmic artery (OA). When the OA was too small or a stable position could not be achieved, the microcatheter was navigated in the external carotid artery to reach an anastomotic ramus (AR) of the middle meningeal artery (MMA) to the OA. The drugs were then injected through the microcatheter in a pulsatile way. Results Forty-one patients underwent SOAC. A total of 248 procedures were performed in 45 eyes, and 248 arteries were approached (205 OAs and 43 MMAs). Four patients underwent tandem therapy (both eyes treated in the same procedure). Complications were: hypotension and bradycardia during the procedure (five cases), transient thrombosis of the femoral artery (two cases), retinal hemorrhage (one case), alopecia (one case), and anaphylactic shock to carboplatin (one case). No patient showed adverse effects of radiation or ischemic stroke. Conclusion SOAC is a safe technique with a very low complication rate.
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- 2018
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96. Beliefs and Determinants of Use of Traditional Complementary/Alternative Medicine in Pediatric Patients Who Undergo Treatment for Cancer in South America.
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Rocha V, Ladas EJ, Lin M, Cacciavillano W, Ginn E, Kelly KM, Chantada G, and Castillo L
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- Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Male, South America, Complementary Therapies methods, Neoplasms therapy
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Purpose The use of traditional complementary/alternative medicine (TCAM) among children with cancer has been well documented. South America has a rich history of traditional healers and medicinal resources; however, little is known about the use of TCAM among children with cancer. We sought to investigate patterns, beliefs, and determinants of TCAM use among South American children with cancer. Methods A cross-sectional survey was administered to 199 children treated for cancer at institutions located in Buenos Aires, Argentina, and Montevideo, Uruguay. Participants were queried about the type of TCAM and strength of beliefs associated with its use. Logistic regression analysis was used to estimate the odds ratios with 95% CIs. Results We found that the use of TCAM was common in both Argentina (47%) and Uruguay (76%). Variations in the forms of TCAM used were observed between the countries; however, both countries used TCAM primarily for supportive care. Mother's education, wealth index, and TCAM belief system were significant predictors of TCAM. Conclusion To our knowledge, this study is the first to report on the use of TCAM in pediatric oncology in South America. The study identifies several predictors of TCAM use, which may serve as target variables for educational and research initiatives. The finding that most families use TCAM for supportive care suggests that future efforts could evaluate the role of TCAM to enhance existing supportive care regimens, particularly in settings where access to conventional medications are limited.
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- 2017
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97. Metastatic deaths in retinoblastoma patients treated with intraarterial chemotherapy (ophthalmic artery chemosurgery) worldwide.
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Abramson DH, Shields CL, Jabbour P, Teixeira LF, Fonseca JRF, Marques MCP, Munier FL, Puccinelli F, Hadjistilianou T, Bracco S, Chantada G, Ceciliano A, and Gobin YP
- Abstract
Background: Ophthalmic artery chemosurgery [OAC, intra-arterial chemotherapy (IAC)] was introduced in 2006 as treatment modality for intraocular retinoblastoma. The purpose of this commentary is to retrospectively review the incidence of metastatic deaths in retinoblastoma patients treated with OAC worldwide over a 10 year period. Retrospective data regarding metastatic deaths was collected from six international retinoblastoma centers (New York City USA, Philadelphia USA, Sao Paulo Brazil, Siena Italy, Lausanne Switzerland and Buenos Aires Argentina). All retinoblastoma patients from these centers (naive and recurrent, unilateral and bilateral) treated with OAC/IAC since 2006 have been included in this study. Data regarding number of patients, number of OAC/IAC infusions, number unilateral and bilateral, number treated for naive disease or salvage and number of metastatic deaths have been assessed. Over a 10-year period of time 1139 patients received OAC/IAC for 4396 infusions. At last follow-up there were only three metastatic deaths (all treated in Buenos Aires)., Conclusion: The current survey assessed the recorded risk of metastatic deaths in six retinoblastoma centers worldwide in children with retinoblastoma (unilateral or bilateral) treated with OAC/IAC as primary or secondary therapy. Overall, the observed risk for metastatic deaths from retinoblastoma was <1% in OAC/IAC treated children.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
98. Ocular topotecan pharmacokinetics following topical administration to rabbits for diffused anterior retinoblastoma.
- Author
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Taich P, Del Sole M, Buontempo F, Williams G, Winter U, Sgroi M, Chantada G, and Schaiquevich P
- Subjects
- Administration, Topical, Animals, Aqueous Humor drug effects, Cornea drug effects, Rabbits, Tissue Distribution, Ophthalmic Solutions administration & dosage, Ophthalmic Solutions pharmacokinetics, Retinoblastoma drug therapy, Topotecan administration & dosage, Topotecan pharmacokinetics, Vitreous Body drug effects
- Abstract
Objectives: We characterized and compared the in-vivo absorption of topotecan into the aqueous humor after instillation of aqueous and ointment formulations., Methods: A lanolin/petrolatum ointment was used. New Zealand rabbits were instilled with topotecan solution (6 μg, group A), a single 10 μg dose of topotecan ointment (group B) or with five 10 μg doses of topotecan ointment (group C). Aqueous humor samples were collected at different times. Corneal samples were collected only for group A. Topotecan was quantified using HPLC, and pharmacokinetic parameters were calculated. Acute corneal epithelial toxicity was assessed after multiple instillations of topotecan ointment., Key Findings: Total topotecan maximum aqueous humor concentration (C
max ) was 16.1, 69.9 and 287 ng/ml in group A, B and C, respectively. A single dose of topotecan ointment increased threefold and sevenfold the aqueous humor Cmax , and exposure compared to the aqueous formulation. Aqueous humor concentrations from group C eyes were substantially above the cytotoxic concentration for retinoblastoma cells. No corneal toxicity was evident after ointment instillation., Conclusions: Topotecan penetrated into the aqueous humor of the rabbit eye after multiple doses of an ointment in concentrations pharmacologically active against retinoblastoma cells without eliciting acute toxicity. Topotecan ointment may translate to the clinical treatment of anterior segment disseminated retinoblastoma., (© 2016 Royal Pharmaceutical Society.)- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
99. Intra-arterial Chemotherapy for Retinoblastoma.
- Author
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Chantada G and Schaiquevich P
- Subjects
- Antineoplastic Agents, Alkylating, Humans, Infant, Infusions, Intra-Arterial, Melphalan, Ophthalmic Artery, Retinal Neoplasms, Retinoblastoma
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
100. Highlights from the 1st Latin American meeting on metronomic chemotherapy and drug repositioning in oncology, 27-28 May, 2016, Rosario, Argentina.
- Author
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Rosé A, André N, Rozados VR, Mainetti LE, Menacho Márquez M, Rico MJ, Schaiquevich P, Villarroel M, Gregianin L, Graupera JM, García WG, Epelman S, Alasino C, Alonso D, Chantada G, and Scharovsky OG
- Abstract
Following previous metronomic meetings in Marseille (2011), Milano (2014), and Mumbai (2016), the first Latin American metronomic meeting was held in the School of Medical Sciences, National University of Rosario, Rosario, Argentina on 27 and 28 of May, 2016. For the first time, clinicians and researchers with experience in the field of metronomics, coming from different countries in Latin America, had the opportunity of presenting and discussing their work. The talks were organised in three main sessions related to experience in the pre-clinical, and clinical (paediatric and adult) areas. The different presentations demonstrated that the fields of metronomic chemotherapy and repurposing drugs in oncology, known as metronomics, constitute a branch of cancer therapy in permanent evolution, which have strong groups working in Latin America, both in the preclinical and the clinical settings including large, adequately designed randomised studies. It was shown that metronomics offers treatments, which, whether they are combined or not with the standard therapeutic approaches, are not only effective but also minimally toxic, with the consequent improvement of the patient's quality of life, and inexpensive, a feature very important in low resource clinical settings. The potential use of metronomic chemotherapy was proposed as a cost/effective treatment in low-/middle-income countries, for adjuvant therapy in selected tumours. The fundamental role of the governmental agencies and non-governmental alliances, as the Metronomic Global Health Initiative, in supporting this research with public interest was underlined.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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