1. Retrospective French nationwide survey of childhood aggressive vascular anomalies of bone, 1988-2009.
- Author
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Héritier, Sébastien, Le Merrer, Martine, Jaubert, Francis, Bigorre, Michèle, Gillibert-Yvert, Marion, de Courtivron, Benoit, Ziade, Makram, Bertrand, Yves, Carrie, Christian, Chastagner, Pascal, Bost-Bru, Cécile, Léonard, Jean-Claude, Ouache, Marie, Boccon-Gibod, Liliane, Pierre Mary, de Blic, Jacques, Pin, Isabelle, Wendling, Daniel, Revillon, Yann, and Houdoin, Véronique
- Subjects
HEALTH surveys ,VASCULAR diseases ,BONE injuries ,JUVENILE diseases ,PEDIATRIC respiratory diseases ,RADIOTHERAPY - Abstract
Objective: To document the epidemiological, clinical, histological and radiological characteristics of aggressive vascular abnormalities of bone in children. Study design: Correspondents of the French Society of Childhood Malignancies were asked to notify all cases of aggressive vascular abnormalities of bone diagnosed between January 1988 and September 2009. Results: 21 cases were identified; 62% of the patients were boys. No familial cases were observed, and the disease appeared to be sporadic. Mean age at diagnosis was 8.0 years [0.8-16.9 years]. Median follow-up was 3 years [0.3- 17 years]. The main presenting signs were bone fracture (n = 4) and respiratory distress (n = 7), but more indolent onset was observed in 8 cases. Lung involvement, with lymphangiectasies and pleural effusion, was the most frequent form of extraosseous involvement (10/21). Bisphosphonates, alpha interferon and radiotherapy were used as potentially curative treatments. High-dose radiotherapy appeared to be effective on pleural effusion but caused major late sequelae, whereas antiangiogenic drugs like alpha interferon and zoledrenate have had a limited impact on the course of pulmonary complications. The impact of bisphosphonates and alpha interferon on bone lesions was also difficult to assess, owing to insufficient follow-up in most cases, but it was occasionally positive. Six deaths were observed and the overall 10-year mortality rate was about 30%. The prognosis depended mainly on pulmonary and spinal complications. Conclusion: Aggressive vascular abnormalities of bone are extremely rare in childhood but are lifethreatening. The impact of anti-angiogenic drugs on pulmonary complications seems to be limited, but they may improve bone lesions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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