Alfaar Ahmad S, Hassan Waleed M, Bakry Mohamed Sabry, Qaddoumi Ibrahim
Ophthalmology Department, Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin (Charité - Berlin Medical University), Berlin, Germany.
Research Department, Children's Cancer Hospital Egypt, Cairo, 57357, Egypt.
Cancer Med. 2017 Jul;6(7):1817-1826. doi: 10.1002/cam4.1122. Epub 2017 Jun 22.
Neonatal tumors are rare with no standard treatment approaches to these diseases, and the patients experience poor outcomes. Our aim was to determine the distribution of cancers affecting neonates and compare survival between these cancers and older children. We analyzed SEER data (1973-2007) from patients who were younger than 2 years at diagnosis of malignancy. Special permission was granted to access the detailed (i.e., age in months) data of those patients. The Chi-square Log-rank test was used to compare survival between neonates (aged <1 month) and older children (>1 month to <2 years). We identified 615 neonatal cancers (454 solid tumors, 93 leukemia/lymphoma, and 68 CNS neoplasms). Neuroblastoma was the most common neonatal tumor followed by Germ cell tumors. The 5-year overall survival (OS) for all neonates was 60.3% (95% CI, 56.2-64.4). Neonates with solid tumors had the highest 5-year OS (71.2%; 95% CI, 66.9-75.5), followed by those with leukemia (39.1%; 95% CI, 28.3-49.9) or CNS tumors (15%; 95% CI, 5.4-24.6). Except for neuroblastoma, all neonatal tumors showed inferior outcomes compared to that in the older group. The proportion of neonates who died from causes other than cancer was significantly higher than that of the older children (37.9% vs. 16.4%; P < 0.0005). In general, the outcome of neonatal cancers has not improved over the last 34 years. The distribution of neonatal cancer is different than other pediatric age groups. Although the progress in neonatal and cancer care over the last 30 years, only death from noncancer causes showed improvement. Studying neonatal tumors as part of national studies is essential to understand their etiology, determine the best treatment approaches, and improve survival and quality of life for those patients.
新生儿肿瘤较为罕见,且针对这些疾病没有标准的治疗方法,患者预后较差。我们的目的是确定影响新生儿的癌症分布情况,并比较这些癌症患儿与大龄儿童的生存率。我们分析了监测、流行病学和最终结果(SEER)数据库中诊断为恶性肿瘤时年龄小于2岁的患者数据(1973 - 2007年)。已获得特别许可以获取这些患者的详细数据(即月龄)。采用卡方对数秩检验比较新生儿(年龄<1个月)和大龄儿童(>1个月至<2岁)的生存率。我们共识别出615例新生儿癌症(454例实体瘤、93例白血病/淋巴瘤和68例中枢神经系统肿瘤)。神经母细胞瘤是最常见的新生儿肿瘤,其次是生殖细胞肿瘤。所有新生儿的5年总生存率(OS)为60.3%(95%置信区间,56.2 - 64.4)。实体瘤新生儿的5年OS最高(71.2%;95%置信区间,66.9 - 75.5),其次是白血病患儿(39.1%;95%置信区间,28.3 - 49.9)或中枢神经系统肿瘤患儿(15%;95%置信区间,5.4 - 24.6)。除神经母细胞瘤外,所有新生儿肿瘤的预后均比大龄儿童组差。死于癌症以外原因的新生儿比例显著高于大龄儿童(37.9%对16.4%;P < 0.0005)。总体而言,在过去34年中,新生儿癌症的预后并未得到改善。新生儿癌症的分布与其他儿科年龄组不同。尽管在过去三十年里新生儿护理和癌症治疗有所进步,但仅非癌症原因导致的死亡情况有所改善。将新生儿肿瘤研究纳入国家研究对于了解其病因、确定最佳治疗方法以及提高这些患者的生存率和生活质量至关重要。