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PEDIATRICS: RENAL AND ADRENAL ONCOLOGY

Pediatric Abdominal Mass
Neuroblastoma

Neuroblastoma 103

Axial CT scan demonstrating right-sided neuroblastoma

Source: Wikipedia

 

Stage Description
1
  • Localized tumor
  • Complete gross excision
  • Ipsilateral lymph nodes involvement negative under microscopic examination
2A
  • Localized tumor
  • Incomplete gross resection
  • Ipsilateral lymph nodes involvement negative under microscopic examination
2B
  • Localized tumor
  • Complete or incomplete gross resection
  • Ipsilateral ymph nodes involvement positive under microscopic examination
  • Enlarged contralateral lymph nodes but with negative involvement under microscopic examination
3
  • Localized unilateral tumor with contralateral lymph nodes involvement positive under microscopic examination
or
  • Unresectable unilateral tumor infiltrating across the midline with positive or negative regional lymph node involvement
or
  • Unresectable midline tumor with bilateral infiltration or lymph node involvement
4
  • Metastasis of the tumor to distant lymph nodes
  • Metastasis of the tumor to liver, skin, organs (except as defined by Stage 4S)
4S
  • Limited to infants <1 year of age
  • Localized primary tumor (as defined for stage 1, 2A, or 2B)
  • Metastasis of the tumor limited to skin, liver and/or bone marrow
  • Bone marrow involvement in stage 4S should be minimal (<10% of total nucleated cells identified as malignant on bone marrow biopsy)

Wilms Tumour (Nephroblastoma)

Syndrome

Genetics

Associated Features

Risk of WT (%)

Beckwith-Weideman

11p15.5
WT2

Wilm's Tumour

Macroglossia

Nephromegaly

Hepatomegaly
Pre- and post-natal overgrowth
Hemihypertrophy (growth asymmetry)
Anterior abdominal wall defects
Ear creases/pits

7

Denys Drash

WT1

Wilm's Tumour
Genital abnormalities
(under-masculanized male manifested by cryptorchidism and proximal hypospadias)
Nephropathy
(mesangial sclerosis, membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis) with early onset proteinuria (common denominator of syndrome)

74

Frasier

WT1

Wilm's Tumour
Genital abnormalities
Nephropathy (focal segmental glomerulonephritis)
Gonadoblastoma

6

WAGR

11p13
WT1, PAX6

Wilm's Tumour
Aniridia
Genital abnormalities
Mental Retardation

98

 

Stage  
I
  1. Tumour limited to the kidney and completely resected
  2. Renal capsule intact
  3. The tumour was not ruptured or biopsied prior to removal
  4. Renal vein contains no tumour (intrarenal vessel involvement may be present)
  5. No residual tumour apparent beyond the margins of excision
II
  1. Tumour extends beyond the kidney but is completely resected
  2. Regional extension of tumour (vascular invasion outside the renal parenchyma or within the renal sinus and/or capsular penetration with negative excision margin)
  3. Operative tumour spill confined to flank (no peritoneal contamination)
  4. Tumour biopsy (except fine-needle aspiration) prior to surgery
III
  1. Non-haematogenous metastases confined to the abdomen (e.g., tumour in regional lymph nodes), including tumour implants on or penetrating the peritoneum
  2. Gross or microscopic tumour remains post-operative (tumour at the margins of resection)
  3. Tumour spill before or during surgery not confined to flank
  4. Piecemeal excision of the tumour (removal in >1 piece)
IV
  1. Presence of haematogenous metastases or metastases to distant lymph nodes
V
  1. Bilateral renal involvement at the time of initial diagnosis

 

Source: Popov SD, Sebire NJ, Vujanic GM. Wilms’ Tumour – Histology and Differential Diagnosis. In: van den Heuvel-Eibrink MM, editor. Wilms Tumor [Internet]. Brisbane (AU): Codon Publications; 2016 Mar. Table 4. [COG staging system]. Available from: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK373364/table/tab1_4/ doi: 10.15586/codon.wt.2016.ch1

 

 

Other renal tumors
References