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Multidisciplinary surgical strategy for dumbbell neuroblastoma: A single‐center experience of 32 cases

Authors :
Michel Zerah
Louise Galmiche-Rolland
Hervé Brisse
Luc Joyeux
Sabine Irtan
Christophe Glorion
Jean Michon
Caroline Harte
Sabine Sarnacki
Timothé de Saint Denis
Luca Pio
T. Odent
Dominique Valteau-Couanet
Thomas Blanc
Source :
Pediatric Blood & Cancer. 66
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Wiley, 2019.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Prognosis of dumbbell neuroblastoma (NBL) is mainly determined by the sequelae induced by the tumor itself and the neurosurgical approach. However, after primary chemotherapy, surgical management of the residual tumor, especially the spinal canal component, remains controversial. METHODS: We conducted a single-center retrospective cohort study over the last 15 years (2002-2017) including patients treated for NBL with spinal canal extension focusing on timing and type of surgery, complications, and functional and oncological follow-up. RESULTS: Thirty-two children (14 M, 18 F) were managed for NBL, with the majority (26) presenting with NBL stroma poor while four had ganglioneuroblastoma intermixed, one nodular, and one ganglioneuroma. All but two patients received neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Upfront laminotomy for spinal cord decompression was performed in two patients; nine patients had extraspinal surgery with a follow-up neurosurgical procedure in seven cases; eight patients had initial neurosurgery followed by an extraspinal procedure, while six patients underwent a combined multidisciplinary approach. With a median follow up of 3.6 years (0.1-14.9), 29 patients (90.6) are alive and two out of three (19, 65.5%) have functional sequelae. CONCLUSION: Patients with NBL with persistent spinal canal extension of the tumor after neoadjuvant chemotherapy treated at our center had outcomes that compare favorably with the literature. This is likely due to the multidisciplinary approach to optimal surgical strategy and continuous evaluation of the respective risks of tumor progression. Neurological disability results from initial spinal cord compression or the radicular sacrifice required for tumor resection. ispartof: PEDIATRIC BLOOD & CANCER vol:66 ispartof: location:United States status: published

Details

ISSN :
15455017 and 15455009
Volume :
66
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatric Blood & Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b04635d3d862b26a456b885af232850e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/pbc.27670