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Incidence and management of pleural effusions in patients with Wilms tumor: A Pediatric Surgical Oncology Research Collaborative study

Authors :
Ameer Al‐Hadidi
Hannah N. Rinehardt
Pattamon Sutthatarn
Lindsay J. Talbot
Andrew J. Murphy
Richard Whitlock
Sienna Condon
Bindi Naik‐Mathuria
Alan F. Utria
David H. Rothstein
Stephanie Y. Chen
Shannon Wong‐Michalak
Eugene S. Kim
Scott S. Short
Rebecka L. Meyers
Zachary J. Kastenberg
Michael E. Johnston
Tiffany Zens
Roshni Dasgupta
Marcus M. Malek
Kristen Calabro
Nelson Piché
Hannah Callas
Timothy B. Lautz
Katlyn McKay
Harold N. Lovvorn
Sarah Jane Commander
Elisabeth T. Tracy
Sarah B. Lund
Stephanie F. Polites
Jacob Davidson
Janel Dhooma
Natashia M. Seemann
John P. Marquart
Haley Gainer
Dave R. Lal
Barrie S. Rich
Richard D. Glick
Lauren Maloney
Stephani Radu
Elizabeth A. Fialkowski
Pei En Kwok
Rodrigo L. P. Romao
Nathan Rubalcava
Peter F. Ehrlich
Erika Newman
Thomas Diehl
Hau D. Le
Valerie Polcz
Robin T. Petroze
Joseph Stanek
Jennifer H. Aldrink
Source :
International journal of cancerREFERENCES. 151(10)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Wilms tumor (WT) is the most common renal malignancy in children. Children with favorable histology WT achieve survival rates of over 90%. Twelve percent of patients present with metastatic disease, most commonly to the lungs. The presence of a pleural effusion at the time of diagnosis of WT may be noted on staging imaging; however, minimal data exist regarding the significance and prognostic importance of this finding. The objectives of our study are to identify the incidence of pleural effusions in patients with WT, and to determine the potential impact on oncologic outcomes. A multi-institutional retrospective review was performed from January 2009 to December 2019, including children with WT and a pleural effusion on diagnostic imaging treated at Pediatric Surgical Oncology Research Collaborative (PSORC) participating institutions. Of 1259 children with a new WT diagnosis, 94 (7.5%) had a pleural effusion. Patients with a pleural effusion were older than those without (median 4.3 vs 3.5 years; P = .004), and advanced stages were more common (local stage III 85.9% vs 51.9%; P .0001). Only 14 patients underwent a thoracentesis for fluid evaluation; 3 had cytopathologic evidence of malignant cells. Event-free and overall survival of all children with WT and pleural effusions was 86.2% and 91.5%, respectively. The rate and significance of malignant cells present in pleural fluid is unknown due to low incidence of cytopathologic analysis in our cohort; therefore, the presence of an effusion does not appear to necessitate a change in therapy. Excellent survival can be expected with current stage-specific treatment regimens.

Details

ISSN :
10970215
Volume :
151
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International journal of cancerREFERENCES
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c046ef7645b6f80a28040e2eac0a47f2