ANALIZE MEDICALE DE LABORATOR
Aici gasiti analizele medicale grupate pe categorii precum si detalii generale si specifice pentru categoriile respective.
Selectati o categorie din lista de mai jos:
Solutie antistress!
Construieste poduri :)
Prinde pisica neagra :)
High risk of second cancers in survivors of childhood soft tissue sarcomas
Children treated for soft tissue sarcomas have a significantly higher risk of developing subsequent cancers later in
life, according to a new study. The study appears in the June 1, 2005 issue of CANCER , a peer-reviewed journal of the
American Cancer Society, and indicates children treated with combined chemotherapy and radiation therapy, in particular, had
greater risks of developing a new malignancy.
http://www.interscience.wiley.com/cancer-newsroom
With improvements in cancer treatments over the last two decades, children with soft tissue sarcomas are living longer.
Several investigations have reported that these children have an increased risk of second cancer, but estimates of the risk
have varied widely, ranging from three to thirteen times the risk among the general population. Moreover, due to the small
size of many previous studies, few have evaluated risk by type of soft tissue sarcoma or have estimated risks for specific
second cancers.
Randi J. Cohen, M.S. and a team of researchers from the National Cancer Institute (NCI) evaluated data from 1499 children
included in one of the largest, most comprehensive cancer databases in the U.S., called the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and
End Results (SEER) Program of the National Cancer Institute. Their goal was to quantify the risk of developing a second
malignancy in soft tissue sarcoma patients by second cancer site, initial therapy, histologic type of the primary sarcoma,
age at primary cancer diagnosis, and gender.
The investigators found that survivors of pediatric soft tissue sarcomas had a six-fold increased risk of developing a second
cancer, as compared to the general population. However, the authors noted that while the relative risk appears high, the
absolute risk is quite low. The NCI study found that approximately 3 percent of children with soft tissue sarcoma would be
expected to develop a second malignancy by 20 years after their initial diagnosis. The relative risk was highest within the
first five years of post-treatment follow-up. Females had slightly higher risks of second cancers than males; however, when
gender-specific cancers of the breast and genital tract were excluded, the risks were identical.
Cohen et al. also found that second cancer risks were increased for all subtypes of childhood soft tissue sarcoma, with
estimates ranging from 6-fold elevations in risk for fibromatous neoplasms to nearly 8-fold risks for rhabdomyosarcoma.
Children initially treated with radiation or those with radiation combined with chemotherapy had substantially higher risks
of second cancers than those treated with surgery alone.
Previous studies have reported increased risks of acute myelogenous leukemia following treatment of children with soft tissue
sarcoma, particularly in those receiving chemotherapy for rhabdomyosarcoma. In addition, both clinical and registry-based
surveys have reported that these children have an increased risk of second bone or soft tissue sarcoma, many of which were
related to high dose radiation and chemotherapy or, in some cases, to genetic predisposition. In the current NCI study, the
research team confirmed the excess of subsequent leukemia and sarcomas, but also found an increased risk of melanoma and
cancers of the breast and oral cavity, although the results were based on small numbers. For several children the pattern of
multiple cancers including soft tissue sarcomas was consistent with underlying genetic syndromes, particularly Li-Fraumeni
syndrome and neurofibromatosis type 1.
The authors concluded, "both treatment effects and genetic factors contributed to the increased risk of second cancers in
this series of children with soft tissue sarcomas."
Article: "The Risk of Developing Second Cancers among Survivors of Childhood Soft Tissue Sarcoma," Randi J. Cohen, Rochelle
E. Curtis, Peter D. Inskip, Joseph F. Fraumeni, Jr., CANCER; Published Online: April 25, 2005 (DOI: 10.1002/cncr.21040);
Print Issue Date: June 1, 2005.
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
http://www.interscience.wiley.com
Risc ridicat de douã tipuri de cancer în supravieþuitorilor din copilãrie tesutului moale sarcoame - High risk of second cancers in survivors of childhood soft tissue sarcomas - articole medicale engleza - startsanatate