Forgie Sarah E, Robinson Joan L
Department of Pediatrics and Stollery Children's Hospital, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
BMC Infect Dis. 2007 May 22;7:44. doi: 10.1186/1471-2334-7-44.
The clinical, laboratory, and radiological features of malignancy can overlap with those of infection. The purpose of this study was to determine the findings in children who were initially thought to have an infectious disease but ultimately proved to have a malignancy.
The database of patients diagnosed with a malignancy in the Northern Alberta Children's Cancer Program (NACCP) January 1, 1993 to December 31, 2003 was merged with the database of inpatients referred to the infectious diseases service at the Stollery Children's Hospital and charts were reviewed on all patients referred to the infectious diseases consult service prior to the diagnosis of malignancy.
An infectious diseases consultation for diagnosis was requested in 21 of 561 patients prior to the confirmation of malignancy, and 3 of these 21 patients had both infection and malignancy (leukemia (N = 13), lymphoma (N = 3), rhabdomyosarcoma (N = 1), Langerhan's cell histiocytosis (N = 1), fibrous histicocytosis (N = 1), ependymoma (N = 1), and neuroblastoma (N = 1). The most common reason for infectious diseases consultation was suspected muskuloskeletal infection (N = 9). A palpable or radiographically enlarged spleen was noted in 11 patients (52%). All but 2 patients had abnormal hematologic parameters while an elevated lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) occurred in 10 patients (48%). Delay of diagnosis because of investigation or therapy for an infectious disease occurred in only 2 patients.
It is not common for treatment of pediatric malignancies to be delayed because infection is thought to be the primary diagnosis. However, pediatric infectious diseases physicians should consider malignancy in the differential diagnosis when they see patients with fever and bone pain, unexplained splenomegaly or abnormal complete blood cell counts. Other clues may include hepatomegaly or elevated LDH.
恶性肿瘤的临床、实验室及影像学特征可能与感染的特征相重叠。本研究的目的是确定那些最初被认为患有传染病但最终被证实患有恶性肿瘤的儿童的相关发现。
将1993年1月1日至2003年12月31日在北艾伯塔儿童癌症项目(NACCP)中被诊断为恶性肿瘤的患者数据库与斯托里儿童医院传染病科住院患者数据库合并,并对所有在恶性肿瘤诊断之前被转诊至传染病咨询服务的患者病历进行审查。
在561例患者中,有21例在恶性肿瘤确诊之前因诊断而被请求进行传染病会诊,这21例患者中有3例同时患有感染和恶性肿瘤(白血病(n = 13)、淋巴瘤(n = 3)、横纹肌肉瘤(n = 1)、朗格汉斯细胞组织细胞增多症(n = 1)、纤维组织细胞增多症(n = 1)、室管膜瘤(n = 1)和神经母细胞瘤(n = 1))。进行传染病会诊最常见的原因是怀疑肌肉骨骼感染(n = 9)。1里患者(52%)有可触及的或影像学上增大的脾脏。除2例患者外,所有患者血液学参数均异常,10例患者(48%)乳酸脱氢酶(LDH)升高。仅2例患者因对传染病进行检查或治疗而导致诊断延迟。
因认为感染是主要诊断而导致儿童恶性肿瘤治疗延迟的情况并不常见。然而,儿科传染病医生在诊治发热和骨痛、不明原因脾肿大或全血细胞计数异常的患者时,应在鉴别诊断中考虑恶性肿瘤。其他线索可能包括肝肿大或LDH升高。