The role of surgical management in pediatric germ cell tumors (GCTs)‎, NCI case series

Joint Authors

Khalil, al-Sayyid Ashraf
Farahat, Iman G.
Fakhr, Ibrahim M. Y.
al-Baradii, Tariq S.
Shalabi, Lubna M.
Nasif, Shayma L. A.
Shalan, Muhammad A.

Source

Journal of the Egyptian National Cancer Institute

Issue

Vol. 20, Issue 1 (31 Mar. 2008), pp.70-79, 10 p.

Publisher

Cairo University National Cancer Institute

Publication Date

2008-03-31

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

10

Main Subjects

Medicine

Topics

Abstract EN

Purpose: To review the experience of a tertiary referral center in pediatric germ cell tumors (GCTs) in the last 8 years and to investigate the impact of surgery and site of disease on prognosis.

Patients and Methods: We retrospectively analyzed the cases of pediatric germ cell tumors at National Cancer Institute over an 8 years period.

Data concerning diagnosis, surgery and medical decisions were reviewed and analyzed for all patients.

A total of 34 children with (GCTS) were found, with a mean age, at presentation, of 6.7 years and a follow-up period ranging from 3-52 months.

One patient with benign GCT was excluded during analysis of the results.

Results: Among the 34 patients, there were 14 males and 20 females with mean age of 6.7 years (range: 9 months-15 years), with male to female ratio 1:1.4.

All patients were symptomatic at presentation, most commonly with abdominal swelling (18 patients; 52.9%).

Anatomic distribution of GCTs according to sex organ involvement was either gonadal in 21 patients (61.8%) or extragonadal in 13 patients (38.2%).

All patients had surgery either in the form of curative resection or biopsy after formal exploration and evidence of irresectability.

No significant surgical morbidity or mortality were encountered in our patients.

Yolk sac tumor and malignant teratoma were the commonest histologic subtypes in our series.

Metastatic disease was encountered in nine out of 33 patients (27.2%).

Adjuvant chemotherapy was administered in 28 out of 33 patients (84.8%), following surgery, including all patients with extragonadal disease.

Our patients were followed-up to 52 months.

Twentytwo patients (66.7%) had no recurrence while two patients (6.1%) died from disease.

Pelvic extragonadal site was the worst site regarding resectability.

Complete surgical resection showed better disease free survival, while those with irresectable disease had comparable overall survival while none could be rendered disease free with chemotherapy.

Conclusion: The initial surgical approach to malignant GCTs at all sites should be complete resection when possible; the morbidity of extensive surgical resection should be weighed carefully against the good tumor control with chemotherapy.

Surgical staging does not preclude preservation of fertility, which should always be considered in this young age.

The site of primary disease plays a role in the prognosis of pediatric germ cell tumors with the extragonadal pelvic tumors being the worst regarding resectability.

Good tumor response can be achieved with surgery and chemotherapy even for advanced stage and metastatic disease.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Fakhr, Ibrahim M. Y.& Khalil, al-Sayyid Ashraf& al-Baradii, Tariq S.& Shalan, Muhammad A.& Shalabi, Lubna M.& Nasif, Shayma L. A.…[et al.]. 2008. The role of surgical management in pediatric germ cell tumors (GCTs), NCI case series. Journal of the Egyptian National Cancer Institute،Vol. 20, no. 1, pp.70-79.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-355801

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Fakhr, Ibrahim M. Y.…[et al.]. The role of surgical management in pediatric germ cell tumors (GCTs), NCI case series. Journal of the Egyptian National Cancer Institute Vol. 20, no. 1 (Mar. 2008), pp.70-79.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-355801

American Medical Association (AMA)

Fakhr, Ibrahim M. Y.& Khalil, al-Sayyid Ashraf& al-Baradii, Tariq S.& Shalan, Muhammad A.& Shalabi, Lubna M.& Nasif, Shayma L. A.…[et al.]. The role of surgical management in pediatric germ cell tumors (GCTs), NCI case series. Journal of the Egyptian National Cancer Institute. 2008. Vol. 20, no. 1, pp.70-79.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-355801

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references : p. 78-79

Record ID

BIM-355801