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. 2007 Sep;49(3):274-9.
doi: 10.1002/pbc.20893.

Desmoplastic small round cell tumor in childhood: the St. Jude Children's Research Hospital experience

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Desmoplastic small round cell tumor in childhood: the St. Jude Children's Research Hospital experience

Raya Saab et al. Pediatr Blood Cancer. 2007 Sep.

Abstract

Background: Desmoplastic small round cell tumor (DSRCT) is a rare, primarily intra-abdominal tumor that has a poor outcome with current therapies.

Procedure: We retrospectively reviewed patient characteristics, presenting symptoms, tumor pathology, treatment, and outcome of 11 pediatric patients with DSRCT at our institution.

Results: The cohort included 1 female and 10 male patients. Median age at diagnosis was 14 years (range 5-21 years). In eight (73%) patients, the primary tumor was abdominal or pelvic, and in one patient each, it was submental, mediastinal, and paratesticular. Nine (82%) patients had metastatic disease. All tumors showed polyphenotypic differentiation by immunohistochemistry. The EWS-WT1 transcript was detected in six of seven tumors tested. One tumor showed rhabdomyoblastic differentiation after therapy. All patients received chemotherapy; eight underwent surgical resection, seven received primary site radiation, and four received myeloablative chemotherapy with stem-cell support. Three (27%) patients are alive 23 months, 8 years, and 10 years from diagnosis. Two died of treatment-related toxicity, six died of disease. None of the patients in whom surgery and initial chemotherapy failed to induce complete remission survived.

Conclusions: DSRCT is an aggressive malignancy that does not respond well to contemporary treatments, and patients who do not enter complete remission after initial chemotherapy and surgery appear to have a particularly dismal outcome. Patients with localized extra-abdominal disease have a better prognosis, most likely due to increased feasibility of resection. Better understanding of molecular and genetic mechanisms of tumorigenesis and treatment-related changes may contribute to development of more effective therapy for DSRCT.

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