Pediatric-onset Evans syndrome (pES) is defined by both immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) and autoimmune hemolytic anemia (AIHA) before the age of 18 years. There have been no comprehensive ...long-term studies of this rare disease, which can be associated to various immunopathological manifestations (IM). We report outcomes of the 151 patients with pES and more than 5 years of follow-up from the nationwide French prospective OBS'CEREVANCE cohort. Median age at final follow-up was 18.5 years (range, 6.8-50.0 years) and the median follow-up period was 11.3 years (range, 5.1-38.0 years). At 10 years, ITP and AIHA were in sustained complete remission in 54.5% and 78.4% of patients, respectively. The frequency and number of clinical and biological IM increased with age: at the age of 20 years, 74% had at least one clinical IM (cIM). A wide range of cIM occurred, mainly lymphoproliferation, dermatological, gastrointestinal/hepatic and pneumological IM. The number of cIM was associated with a subsequent increase in the number of second-line treatments received (other than steroids and immunoglobulins; hazard ratio 1.4, 95% Confidence Interval: 1.15-1.60, P=0.0002, Cox proportional hazards method). Survival at 15 years after diagnosis was 84%. Death occurred at a median age of 18 years (range, 1.7-31.5 years), and the most frequent cause was infection. The number of second-line treatments and severe/recurrent infections were independently associated with mortality. In conclusion, long-term outcomes of pES showed remission of cytopenias but frequent IM linked to high second-line treatment burden. Mortality was associated to drugs and/or underlying immunodeficiencies, and adolescents-young adults are a high-risk subgroup.
The purpose was to describe first and subsequent relapses in patients from the OS2006/Sarcome-09 trial, to help future trial design. We prospectively collected and analysed relapse data of all French ...patients included in the OS2006/Sarcome-09 trial, who had achieved a first complete remission. 157 patients experienced a first relapse. The median interval from diagnosis to relapse was 1.7 year (range 0.5-7.6). The first relapse was metastatic in 83% of patients, and disease was not measurable according to RECIST 1.1 criteria in 23%. Treatment consisted in systemic therapy (74%) and surgical resection (68%). A quarter of the patients were accrued in a phase-II clinical trial. A second complete remission was obtained for 79 patients. Most of them had undergone surgery (76/79). The 3-year progression-free and overall survival rates were 21% and 37%, respectively. In patients who achieved CR2, the 3y-PFS and OS rates were 39% and 62% respectively. Individual correlation between subsequent PFS durations was poor. For osteosarcoma relapses, we recommend randomised phase-II trials, open to patients from all age categories (children, adolescents, adults), not limited to patients with measurable disease (but stratified according to disease status), with PFS as primary endpoint, response rate and surgical CR as secondary endpoints.
Abstract BACKGROUND High Risk medulloblastoma (MB) treatment strategy is based on an intensive multimodal treatment including surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy. French adapted PNET HR +5 is ...based on high-dose chemotherapy and age-stratified (18 Gy < 3 yo, 23 for 3-5 yo, 36 Gy for > 5 yo) craniospinal dose irradiation to reduce long-term side-effects of radiotherapy. METHODS To estimate progression-free (PFS) in a national multi-institutional retrospective study, we enrolled children younger than 5 yo with newly diagnosed high-risk MB treated according to adapted PNET HR +5 trial. RESULTS Thirty-seven children from 15 French hospitals (median age, 3.4 yo; range, 0.7-4.8) with confirmed high-risk MB were included. 15 patients (39%) were less than 3 years old. 29 patients (81%) had metastatic disease. Group 3 was the most represented molecular subgroup. 5-year PFS and OS was 59 % and 77 %, respectively. According to dose of craniospinal irradiation, PFS for 18 Gy, 23.4 Gy and 36 Gy patient groups were 100 %, 75 % and 45%, respectively. Treatment was well tolerated. One toxic death was declared. Analysis of longitudinal neurocognitive performance is ongoing. CONCLUSIONS the French strategy comprising high-dose chemotherapy and age-adapted craniospinal irradiation is promising with a high rate of survival in young children and must be confirmed by a prospective trial.
Autoimmune cytopenia (AIC) in children may be associated with positive antinuclear antibodies (ANA) and may progress to systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). We evaluated the risk of progression to SLE ...of childhood-onset ANA-associated AIC. In the French national prospective OBS'CEREVANCE cohort, the long-term outcome of children with ANA-associated AIC (ANA titer ≥1/160) and a subgroup of children who developed SLE were described. ANA were positive in 355 of 1803 (20%) children with AIC. With a median follow-up of 5.8 (range, 0.1-29.6) years, 79 of 355 (22%) patients developed SLE at a median age of 14.5 (1.1-21.4) years; 20% of chronic immune thrombocytopenic purpura, 19% of autoimmune hemolytic anemia, and 45% of Evans syndrome. None of the patients with ANA-negative test developed SLE. Severe manifestations of SLE were observed in 21 patients, and 2 patients died. In multivariate analysis including patients with positive ANA within the first 3 months after AIC diagnosis, age >10 years at AIC diagnosis (relative risk RR, 3.67; 95% confidence interval CI, 1.18-11.4; P = .024) and ANA titer >1/160 (RR, 5.28; 95% CI, 1.20-23.17; P = .027) were associated with the occurrence of SLE after AIC diagnosis. ANA-associated AIC is a risk factor for progression to SLE, especially in children with an initial ANA titer >1/160 and an age >10 years at AIC diagnosis. ANA screening should be recommended in children with AIC, and patients with ANA should be monitored long-term for SLE, with special attention to the transition period. This trial was registered at www.ClinicalTrials.gov as #NCT05937828.
Objective
To describe characteristics and outcome of pediatric ovarian immature teratomas (IT) to better define the place of chemotherapy.
Methods
Children with ovarian IT enrolled in TGM95 and ...TGM2013 studies were analyzed. Norris grading and International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics staging system were used.
Results
Thirty‐six cases were identified with a median age of 11 years (range = 1‐18): 35 of 36 stage I (17 stage IA, 13 stage IC, and 5 stage IX), including seven patients with gliomatosis peritonei (GP), and 1 stage IIIB (IT peritoneal implants). Centrally reviewed Norris grading was performed in 31 cases: 14 grade I and 17 grade II/III tumors. All patients underwent upfront surgery: 19 unilateral oophorectomy, 14 unilateral adnexectomy, 2 unilateral cystectomy, and 1 bilateral cystectomy. No extensive GP surgery was performed. Six patients received adjuvant vinblastin, bleomycin, and cisplatinum because of tumor rupture (n = 5, including two patients with GP) or stage III (n = 1). After a median follow‐up of 39.5 months (range = 6‐238), two events occurred 10 and 11 months after diagnosis: one bilateralization (initial stage IX, grade I) and one IT peritoneal relapse (initial stage IA, grade II), respectively. Both were successfully rescued by platinum‐based chemotherapy and delayed surgery. No stage IC patients treated without adjuvant chemotherapy relapsed (four grade I and three grade III). None of the seven patients with GP progressed. Five‐year event‐free survival and overall survival were 94% (95% CI = 81‐98%) and 100%.
Conclusions
The current series confirms the excellent prognosis of pediatric ovarian IT, arguing for conservative surgical approach in GP and against systematic adjuvant chemotherapy, even in ruptured tumors.
Objective
To describe the clinical characteristics and outcome of patients with Li‐Fraumeni–associated rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS).
Method
Retrospective analysis of data from 31 French patients with RMS ...diagnosed before the age of 20 years associated with a TP53 pathogenic germline variant. Cases were identified through the French Li‐Fraumeni database. Central histologic review was performed in 16 cases.
Results
The median age at diagnosis was 2.3 years, and the median follow‐up was 9.1 years (0.3‐34.8). The main tumor sites were head and neck (n = 13), extremities (n = 8), and trunk (n = 8). The local pathology report classified the 31 tumors in embryonal (n = 26), alveolar (n = 1), pleomorphic (n = 1), and spindle‐cell (n = 1) RMS (missing = 2). After histological review, anaplasia (diffuse or focal) was reported in 12/16 patients. Twenty‐five patients had localized disease, three had lymph node involvement, and three distant metastases. First‐line therapy combined surgery (n = 27), chemotherapy (n = 30), and radiotherapy (n = 14) and led to RMS control in all, but one patient. Eleven patients relapsed, and 18 patients had second malignancies. The 10‐year event‐free, progression‐free, and overall survival rates were 36% (95% CI: 20‐56), 62% (95% CI: 43‐77) and 76% (95% CI: 56‐88), respectively. The 10‐year cumulative risk of second malignancies was 40% (95% CI: 22‐60).
Conclusion
The high incidence of multiple primary tumors strongly influences the long‐term prognosis of RMS associated with TP53 pathogenic germline variants. Anaplastic RMS in childhood, independently of the familial history, should lead to TP53 analysis at treatment initiation to reduce, whenever possible, the burden of genotoxic drugs and radiotherapy in carriers and to ensure the early detection of second malignancies.
Refractory chronic immune thrombocytopenia (r‐cITP) is one of the most challenging situations in chronic immune thrombocytopenia (cITP). Pediatric r‐cITP is inconsistently defined in literature, ...contributing to the scarcity of data. Moreover, no evidence is available to guide the choice of treatment. We compared seven definitions of r‐cITP including five pediatric definitions in 886 patients with cITP (median min‐max follow‐up 5.3 1.0–29.3 years). The pediatric definitions identified overlapping groups of various sizes (4%–20%) but with similar characteristics (higher proportion of immunopathological manifestations IM and systemic lupus erythematosus SLE), suggesting that they adequately captured the population of interest. Based on the 79 patients with r‐cITP (median follow‐up 3.1 0–18.2 years) according to the CEREVANCE definition (≥3 second‐line treatments), we showed that r‐cITP occurred at a rate of 1.15% new patients per year and did not plateau over time. In multivariate analysis, older age was associated with r‐cITP. One patient (1%) experienced two grade five bleeding events after meeting r‐cITP criteria and while not receiving second‐line treatment. The cumulative incidence of continuous complete remission (CCR) at 2 years after r‐cITP diagnosis was 9%. In this analysis, splenectomy was associated with a higher cumulative incidence of CCR (hazard ratio: 5.43, 95% confidence interval: 1.48–19.84, p = 7.8 × 10−4). In sum, children with cITP may be diagnosed with r‐cITP at any time point of the follow‐up and are at increased risk of IM and SLE. Second‐line treatments seem to be effective for preventing grade 5 bleeding. Splenectomy may be considered to achieve CCR.