Children with cancer are vulnerable to severe infections. Balancing the intensive treatment of cancer, with the potential risk of coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) related morbidity and mortality is a unique challenge. Children with cancer testing positive for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 virus by reversetranscription polymerase chain reaction at our center were studied. Thirty-seven children tested positive for COVID-19 during the study period. The severity of the illness was mild, moderate, severe, and critical in 10 (27%), 13 (35%), 12 (32%), and 2 (5%) patients, respectively. Of the 14 patients with a severe/critical illness, 2 had oncological emergencies, 4 had dengue co-infection, and 1 had an inguinal bacterial abscess. All patients were discharged in a stable condition. Modification of the treatment protocol was performed in 11 (33%) of 33 patients who were on active treatment for cancer. There was a median delay of 32.5 days to administer the next cycle of chemotherapy in patients who acquired COVID-19 during cancer treatment. Six of 7 patients who were retested after 14 days remained positive by reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction. Children with cancer with COVID-19 recover with good supportive care. Curative chemotherapy can be administered safely with appropriate modifications in children with cancer with COVID-19.
Background: Optimal risk stratification is the key to minimizing relapse and toxicity in children with Wilms tumor (WT). The study evaluated poor tumor volume response to chemotherapy as a risk factor that predicts relapse. Procedure: Children with WT who were treated between 2005 and 2020 at the center were analyzed. Tumor volumes at the time of diagnosis and after preoperative chemotherapy were calculated from cross-sectional imaging. The International Society of Paediatric Oncology (SIOP)-WT-2001 protocol was used for treatment. The area under a receiver operating characteristic curve was estimated to ascertain the ability of tumor volume to predict relapse.Results: Ninety-five patients with a median age of 40 months were included. A postchemotherapy tumor volume cutoff of 270 ml was ascertained to have the best predictive value for relapse. Patients with a tumor volume of <270 ml following preoperative chemotherapy had a better 3-year event-free survival (EFS) than those with a tumor volume of ≥270 ml (89.8% ± 4.0% vs. 57.4% ± 12.5%, p = .001). The data demonstrated that a tumor volume of ≥270 ml after chemotherapy was associated with an increased risk of relapse (hazard ratio [HR]: 5.3, p = .006). The EFS in patients with an epithelial or stromal type of histopathology was not affected by the tumor volume response (p = .437). Conversely, patients with other types of intermediate-risk histopathology who had a poor tumor volume response had an inferior survival (3-year EFS 51.4% ± 18.7%, p = .001).
Conclusion:A postchemotherapy tumor volume cutoff of ≥270 ml emerged as a strong predictor of relapse in a low-and middle-income country (LMIC) center study of WT treated with the SIOP protocol.
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