OBJECTIVES: We reviewed our 23-year monoinstitutional exprience with childhood malignant ovarian germ cell tumors (MOGCT), with respect to survival and iatrogenic sequelae. METHODS: Twenty-nine patients (median age 12 years) with newly diagnosed MOGCT were treated: all girls but 2 underwent surgery as initial treatment. There were 9 pure dysgerminomas and 20 nondysgerminoma tumors (5 immature teratomas, 4 yolk sac tumors, and 11 mixed histology tumors). According to the FIGO classification, 9 girls were classified as stage I, 4 as II, 11 as III, and 3 as IV, and 2 were not evaluable because they were submitted to primary chemotherapy. Twenty-four received chemotherapy with VAC, PVB, or PEB regimens, according to the ongoing protocols through the years. Three stage I girls did not receive adjuvant chemotherapy because of their histology (2 dysgerminomas, 1 immature teratoma) and stage. In the early years, postoperative radiotherapy was given alone in advanced dysgerminoma stages. RESULTS: Five patients died of their disease: 2 dysgerminomas (stage IIIc and IV) and 3 nondysgerminomas (2 stage II and 1 stage IIIc). OS and EFS rates at a median of 112 months were 81.8%. Among 24 survivors, 4 experienced iatrogenic amenorrhea because of radiotherapy and/or bilateral oophorectomy. CONCLUSIONS: MOGCT are highly chemosensitive and curable, with preservation of reproductive function. The management of recurrent disease remains an open issue.
Childhood Malignant Ovarian Germ Cell Tumors: A Monoinstitutional Experience / M. Terenziani, M. Massimino, M. Casanova, G. Cefalo, A. Ferrari, R. Luksch, F. Spreafico, D. Polastri, R. Fontanelli, L. Piva, F. Fossati-Bellani. - In: GYNECOLOGIC ONCOLOGY. - ISSN 0090-8258. - 81:3(2001), pp. 436-440. [dx.doi.org/10.1006/gyno.2001.6177]
Childhood Malignant Ovarian Germ Cell Tumors: A Monoinstitutional Experience
A. Ferrari;
2001
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: We reviewed our 23-year monoinstitutional exprience with childhood malignant ovarian germ cell tumors (MOGCT), with respect to survival and iatrogenic sequelae. METHODS: Twenty-nine patients (median age 12 years) with newly diagnosed MOGCT were treated: all girls but 2 underwent surgery as initial treatment. There were 9 pure dysgerminomas and 20 nondysgerminoma tumors (5 immature teratomas, 4 yolk sac tumors, and 11 mixed histology tumors). According to the FIGO classification, 9 girls were classified as stage I, 4 as II, 11 as III, and 3 as IV, and 2 were not evaluable because they were submitted to primary chemotherapy. Twenty-four received chemotherapy with VAC, PVB, or PEB regimens, according to the ongoing protocols through the years. Three stage I girls did not receive adjuvant chemotherapy because of their histology (2 dysgerminomas, 1 immature teratoma) and stage. In the early years, postoperative radiotherapy was given alone in advanced dysgerminoma stages. RESULTS: Five patients died of their disease: 2 dysgerminomas (stage IIIc and IV) and 3 nondysgerminomas (2 stage II and 1 stage IIIc). OS and EFS rates at a median of 112 months were 81.8%. Among 24 survivors, 4 experienced iatrogenic amenorrhea because of radiotherapy and/or bilateral oophorectomy. CONCLUSIONS: MOGCT are highly chemosensitive and curable, with preservation of reproductive function. The management of recurrent disease remains an open issue.Pubblicazioni consigliate
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