eISSN: 1509-572x
ISSN: 1641-4640
Folia Neuropathologica
Current issue Archive Manuscripts accepted About the journal Special Issues Editorial board Reviewers Abstracting and indexing Subscription Contact Instructions for authors Ethical standards and procedures
Editorial System
Submit your Manuscript
SCImago Journal & Country Rank
4/2011
vol. 49
 
Share:
Share:

Original article
Brain metastases in paediatric patients – characteristics of a patient series and review of the literature

Joanna Stefanowicz
,
Ewa Iżycka-Świeszewska
,
Edyta Szurowska
,
Ewa Bień
,
Adam Szarszewski
,
Anna Liberek
,
Mirosław Stempniewicz
,
Wojciech Kloc
,
Elżbieta Adamkiewicz-Drożyńska

Folia Neuropathol 2011; 49 (4): 271-281
Online publish date: 2011/12/20
Article file
- Brain metastases.pdf  [0.60 MB]
Get citation
 
 

Introduction

Metastases are the most common tumours of the central nervous system (CNS) in adults, constituting approximately 30% of all intracranial neoplasms [2,4,16]. In approximately 10% of cases, the CNS is the only site of secondary spread, and in up to 15% of patients, no primary tumour is identifiable [19]. Intracranial metastases of solid tumours can be lo­cated in the meninges and in the brain [2]. In adults, brain metastases (BM) originate mostly from lung and breast carcinomas, melanoma, renal clear cell car­cinoma and gastrointestinal cancer [2,4,15,16]. Brain metastases frequently occur together, and they are found at the junction of grey and white matter, where blood vessels are narrow and blood circulation is very slow. Cerebral metastases are usually surro­und­ed by significant vasogenic brain oedema [4].

Brain metastases of solid tumours are rarely ob­served in children with cancer [3,8]. Interestingly, the CNS, liver, kidneys and lymph nodes are the most common sites of extramedullary spread in leukae­mia [11,12]. Data regarding BM in paediatric solid tumour patients are limited, but clinical reports suggest that their frequency is 1.5-4.9% [3,8,18], and autopsy studies suggest a 6-13% frequency [7,26]. The most common types of cancer in children in­clude soft tissue and osteogenic sarcomas (STS, OSA), neuroblastic tumours (NBL), nephroblastoma, and germ cell tumours (GCT) [23]. Brain metastases are occasionally present in patients with NBL, OSA and STS (mainly in alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma 2.4-8%), but are uncommon in children with Wilms’ tu­mour (1%) [3,10,13,17,18]. In contrast, they are often a feature of very rare tumours such as pleuropulmonary blastoma (PPB) (25%) [20], alveolar soft part sarcoma (15-29%) [27] and melanoma (18%) [21].

In recent years, long-term survival rates in pae­diatric patients treated for malignant solid tumours have gradually increased, while the risk of BM has risen. Brain metastases may be present at the initial diagnosis, but in most cases, they develop later, during disease progression or relapse. The median time from initial diagnosis to BM development is 13-22 months [3,5,8]. The results of treatment of CNS metastases are particularly poor, as most of the children die due to disease progression [3,8,18].

The aim of the current study was to characterise the clinical and pathological picture of a series of uni­que metastatic brain tumours in paediatric patients.

Material and methods

We performed a retrospective analysis of medical records of children and adolescents (up to 18 years of age) treated for malignant extracranial solid tu­mours between 1992 and 2010 in two paediatric on­cological clinics at the Medical University of Gdańsk (Department of Paediatrics, Haematology, Oncology and Endo­crinology and Department of Paediatrics, Paediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition). Patients with intracranial secondary foci were selected, but cases involving direct extension of the tumour from the skull or dura mater were excluded. Finally, only pa­tients with brain metastases (BM) were analysed in detail.

The clinical data included the age of patients at the time of BM diagnosis, the presence of systemic metastases at cancer diagnosis, time from primary diagnosis to BM detection, symptoms and localisation of BM, number of foci and their size (diameter), type of treatment and outcome. The MRI and CT neuroimaging records were reviewed again in all the cases.

The available archival BM slides and tissue material embedded in paraffin blocks were reviewed and additional immunostaining was performed. Monoclonal antibodies (DAKO) raised against glial fibrillary acid protein (GFAP, 1 : 50), CD68 (1 : 50), leucocyte common antigen (LCA, 1 : 50), CD34 (1 : 50), and Ki67 (1 : 50) were used in all cases. In addition, primary tumour type-specific antibodies were used, including alpha fetoprotein (AFP, 1 : 100), desmin (1 : 50), cytokeratin AE1/AE3 (1 : 50), S100 (1 : 100), epithelial membrane antigen (EMA, 1 : 50), beta choriogona­dotropin (BHCG, 1 : 200), CD30 (1 : 100), synaptophy­sin (1 : 100), and Novocastra antibody against placental alkaline phosphatase (PLAP, 1 : 25). The sli­des were stained manually with DAKO and Novocastra reagents. Appropriate positive and negative controls (omission of the primary antibody) were carried out for every antibody. Diaminobenzidine was the chromogen in all reactions, and En Vision (DAKO) was used for visualisation.

The histology of BM and neuropathological changes in the surrounding brain tissue were examined in detail. Furthermore, the histology of the primary and metastatic tumours was compared.

Results

The analysed clinical material included 511 oncolo­gical paediatric patients with malignant neoplasms excluding primary CNS tumours. In this co­hort, only ten patients (2%) had brain metastases. These included three STS – two rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) and one angiosarcoma (ASA); three GCT – two testi­cular and one extragonadal; and single cases of OSA, NBL, clear cell sarcoma of the kidney (CCSK) and PPB. The clinical characteristics of the patients are presented in Table I.

Mean age at the diagnosis of BM was 10.6 years (median 13.8 years). Two patients (p. 8 and 10) were diagnosed with BM at the initial time of cancer diagnosis. In the remaining patients, metastases were detected 1 to 32 months (median 8 months) after the first manifestation of disease. In three cases, the brain was the only site of metastatic disease at the time of BM diagnosis (p. 2, 5, and 6).

The most common initial signs and symptoms of BM were headaches (5), vomiting (4), hemiparesis or muscle weakness in the extremities (3), speech disorders (2), seizures (1), gait and balance problems (1), extra­pyramidal symptoms and chorea (1). Two pa­tients were asymptomatic, including a GCT patient, who underwent brain imaging due to increasing AFP serum levels, and an OSA patient with an abnormal positron emission tomography (PET) scan.

All patients underwent CT/MRI imaging of the brain. Solitary lesions were recognised in five children, while two patients had bifocal lesions. Neuroimaging revealed typical contrast enhancing lesions, with adjacent brain oedema. The size (diameter) of the lesions varied between 9 and 78 mm. All BM were supratentorial, located in the parietal (4), temporal (3) and frontal lobes (1). Three patients had multiple foci localised bilaterally in the cerebral hemispheres. One child presented with signs of tumour haemorrhage – on MRI scans, blood at the stage of methaemoglobin and haemosiderin was visible (Figs. 1A-B). One child had a large lesion in the frontal-parietal region, with concomitant infiltration of the meninges (Fig. 2). One case showing bilateral subdural haematomas was finally diagnosed with BM at the autopsy (Fig. 3).

Patient management varied according to the type of cancer and the clinical course of the disease. Two patients were treated with chemotherapy alone (one GCT, one STS), and in two cases (STS), only symptomatic treatment was used. Six patients underwent surgical resection of metastatic lesions, including two patients who underwent two operations. Four of these patients subsequently received adjuvant chemo- and radiotherapy.

Three GCT patients lived with remission for 1, 3 and 16 years after completing the oncological treatment. Five patients died 2-12 months after diagnosis of BM due to disease progression. Two patients (with OSA and NBL) died after successful BM therapy due to systemic cancer dissemination.

Characteristics of the cases analysed

Soft tissue sarcomas



Tissue slides were available from the autopsy of an alveolar RMS case (p. 5). This child developed bilateral subdural haematoma and died due to progression of neurological symptoms. The post-mortem gross neuropathological findings included occipital invagination, brain oedema, haemorrhages in the dura mater and subacute subdural haema­tomas in the temporo-occipital regions. Histological examination showed disseminated neoplastic infiltrations in the haematoma capsule, made of small spindle desmin-positive cells. Moreover, neoplastic dissemination was present in the perivascular areas in all sections of the brain taken and was the most intense in the occipital lobes (Fig. 4A).

Germ cell tumours

Two cases were suitable for pathological examination. The first (p. 9) was a 2.5-year-old girl with sacrococcygeal mixed GCT (immature teratoma mixed with yolk sac tumour) with a single BM excised from a parietal lobe. Histologically, BM consisted of a yolk sac tumour component made of delicate tubular structures. The neoplastic tissue showed confluent multi­nodular growth. Immunohistochemically, the neoplastic cells were positive for CK, AFP, and PLAP, and negative for EMA and CD30 (Figs. 4B-C).

The second case (p. 7) concerned an adolescent boy with a testicular tumour and a focus in a parietal lobe detected in parallel with pulmonary lesions a month after admission. The testicular tumour show­ed features of a mature teratoma with a microfocus of cytotrophoblasts (Fig. 4D). Interestingly, its meta­static foci were consistent with pure choriocarcinoma, as it was composed of malignant syncytio- and cyto­trophoblasts with necrotic and haemorrhagic fractions. The neoplastic cells were positive for CK, BHCG, EMA, PLAP (focally) and negative for AFP (Fig. 4E).

The other tumours

In a girl with CCSK (p. 1), BM was composed of the most aggressive component of the tumour. In this case, the differential diagnosis included the blastematous component of nephroblastoma because this case was initially diagnosed as Wilms’ tumour. Fast local recurrence of the tumour and BM forced a re-diagnosis of this case. The pattern of a primary renal tumour was nested and microcystic, but BM showed a solid cellular pattern with a very high mitotic activity, focal anaplasia and formation of an abortive rosette. The BM tissues from the first and the second neurosurgical resection showed a similar picture (Figs. 5A-B).

A 4-year-old boy (p. 2) with PPB type II (solid-cystic PPB of the right lung) (Fig. 5C) developed BM with a diameter of 5 cm approximately four months after completion of the first-line treatment. He was operated on twice – at the moment of BM diagnosis, and 10 months later. Histologically, the metastatic tumour was solid, consistent with type III PPB. It was composed of rhabdomyosarcomatous, spindle sarcomatous component, blastemal areas and fields with early chondroid differentiation (Fig. 5D). Immu­nohistochemically, the tumour was cytokeratin-negative and focally positive for desmin and S-100.

The female patient with adrenal neuroblastoma (p. 6) (neuroblastoma poorly differentiated, Schwannian stroma poor) was initially diagnosed as stage IV, with bone and bone marrow metastases. After a few months of chemotherapy, the residual primary tu­mour was excised and showed differentiation of up to ganglioneuroma maturation (Schwannian stroma predominant). Eight months after completion of the primary line of therapy, the girl developed a solitary BM in the temporal lobe. The tumour was subtotally resected. Histologically, it showed small round blue cell tumour morphology with neuropile islands, consistent with a Schwannian stroma poor neuroblastoma. Immunohistochemically, the neoplastic cells were positive for synaptophysin and negative for desmin, CK and LCA.

The BM of a patient with osteosarcoma (p. 10) had histology indicative of osteoblastic OSA, similar to his primary bone tumour. It was composed of malignant polymorphic hyperchromatic osteoblastic cells with focal osteoid production in the stroma.

In the neuropathological examination, the neoplastic growth was quite well delineated or nodular in GCT and NBL. CCSK and PPB BM had widely infiltrative irregular borders. The proliferative index differed between the primary tumour and BM in three cases. It was approximately 20% higher in BM of CCSK, PPB and diffuse infiltrating RMS. In all cases, the changes in the surrounding nervous tissue included significant vasogenic oedema, prominent astrogliosis (cellular and fibrous) and inflammatory response. A vascular reaction in the form of prolife­ration of small blood vessels (angiogenesis) and vascular dilatations was present in the cerebral tissue. The immunological reaction to the BM was observed in the form of macrophage infiltrates (positive for LCA and CD68) with ramified forms, foamy cells or haemosiderin-laden macrophages as well as lymphocytic perivascular infiltrates (Fig. 4F, 5E, 5F).

Discussion

Brain metastases constitute a rare complication in paediatric tumours. The reasons for the difference between paediatric and adult tumours in this regard are not fully understood. One possible explanation involves the histological spectrum of paediatric tumours. The rarity of BM in paediatric cancer pa­tients can also be explained by the different therapeutic oncological approaches used compared to those used for adults. Most paediatric malignancies are chemosensitive and are treated aggressively, and it is possible that the less mature blood-brain barrier in children enables penetration of the drugs into the cerebral parenchyma. However, most systemic treatments can transiently weaken the blood-brain barrier and allow neoplastic cells to be seeded in the CNS, so the brain may be a “sanctuary site”, that is, a place where neoplastic cells may persist [10]. In general, there are two main pathophysiolo­gical hypotheses for BM development that involve either haemodynamics or “molecular recognition”. Roughly 20% of the cardiac output goes to the brain, so it is obvious why lung tumours, both primary and secondary, are a frequent source of BM. The mole­cular recognition hypothesis involves an affinity bet­ween tumour cells and the host tissue. An example is the predilection of breast cancer with a HER2 am­plification to generate BM, which can be explained by the fact that HER2 ligands (heregulins) are widely expressed in brain tissue [6].

Some of the current treatment protocols used in paediatric oncology practice recommend performing brain imaging studies at the time of cancer diagnosis and later on at certain phases of treatment. Imaging studies that are useful for BM detection include CT and MR. In a non-enhanced phase, meta­stases may have different densities as found by CT examination. Hypodense foci indicate necrosis while hyperdense ones may reflect intratumoural bleeding or calcifications. Contrast-enhanced CT usually re­veals peripheral enhancement and a surrounding oedema. Contrast-enhanced MRI detects two to three times as many lesions as contrast-enhanced CT, especially le­sions smaller than 5 mm in diameter. In T2-weighted images, BM have elevated signals, while in T1-weighted images, their signal is reduced or not visible. Intratumoural bleeding during the methaemoglobin phase is visible as a hyperintensity in T1-weighted images. The characteristic oedema surrounding the metastatic foci is most visible in T2-weighted images and FLAIR sequences [14]. Neuroimaging findings in our series of patients were typical for BM, except from a case of RMS with subdural haematomas. The haemorrhagic picture of the metastases is quite typical for choriocarcinoma, which is angioinvasive, as it is devoid of blood vessels [9,24].

Neuropathological studies on BM in children are very few [7,26]. In the current study, the frequency of BM in children with malignant solid tumours was 2%. All lesions were located in the supratentorial region of the brain, as in the report by Matthay et al. [14]. In six of our patients, the pulmonary metastases or pulmonary tumour locations coexisted with BM, which was also found in other reports [3,8,18]. This suggests that the haemodynamic hypothesis of metastatic processes is more suitable in paediatric cancer.

The optimal treatment for patients with BM depends on the tumour type, the number of brain lesions and the presence of other systemic metastases. For patients with solitary metastases and no systemic disease, surgery followed by radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy may be the best treatment [3,8]. It is recommended to use high-dose radiotherapy ± surgery in such patients [5]. For patients with multiple BM, chemotherapy and radiotherapy only, without surgery, may be of value [18].

It is generally acknowledged that the prognosis of patients with extracranial solid tumours with BM is poor. The majority of children die from disease progression even if the brain lesions remain under control [18]. In the present group of patients, seven died, all due to disease progression. In five cases, CNS involvement was the direct cause of death. Three patients are still alive, all diagnosed with GCT.

Our series includes three children with STS and BM. A 14-year-old girl with angiosarcoma of the right atrium and ventricle of the heart developed rapid and direct spread of cancer to the lungs and brain. In the patient with alveolar RMS, neurological signs due to bilateral subdural haematomas occurred during pancytopenia after chemotherapy. Massive neoplastic perivascular infiltration of the CNS was detected histologically in the autopsy sections.

The third STS patient primarily had disseminated RMS with disseminated intravascular coagulation, and multiple cortical BM were also present in this unusual course of disease [1].

In GCT patients, BM are most common in extra­­gonadal tumours, in advanced stages of the disease [24] and in tumours with choriocarcinoma elements [8,24]. Previously, the frequency of brain involvement in GCT was estimated at 3.7%, but in recent years this level has gradually begun to drop. This decrease is a result of both intensive multi-drug chemotherapy protocols and accurate monitoring of the course of the disease using BHCG and/or AFP levels [24]. In our series, there were three GCT cases with BM – two testicular tumours in adolescents and one extragonadal tumour in a young girl. Two of these GCT were mixed tumours, and the third case was a pure choriocarcinoma.

Over 50% of NBL cases are diagnosed with disseminated disease at the time of initial diagnosis. A high frequency of haematogenous bone, liver and bone marrow metastases is in contrast to infrequent BM, constituting only 5% in a large dataset [14]. In the course of NBL, CNS invasion usually results from direct extension of the disease from the foci in the adjacent cranial bones and orbital metastases [10,14,18]. One of our patients had a solitary meta­static relapse in the brain. She underwent subtotal surgical resection of the brain lesion and received multimodal oncological treatment. Permanent CNS remission was achieved; however, the patient died from bone metastases 39 months after BM diagnosis. Similarly, a boy with OSA with totally resected BM died 11 months after neoplasm diagnosis because of multiple lung, abdomen, skin and bone metastases.

Among paediatric cancers, PPB is the tumour with the highest rates of BM, especially in types II and III, where CNS involvement is detected in up to 25% of patients [20]. Pleuropulmonary blastoma is an extre­mely rare and particularly aggressive tumour originating from the pleura and pulmonary mesenchyme in young children. BM are also frequent in another very rare type of paediatric tumour, CCSK. This tumour disseminates frequently to the bones. In CCSK, haematogenous CNS disease is observed in 5-11% of children [22]. Our series included one patient with CCSK and one with PPB type II. In both patients, BM showed an even more aggressive histological character than the primary tumours.

The neuropathological diagnosis of BM in pae­diatric oncology is simpler than in adult patients. In adults, a primary neoplastic focus is relatively often investigated, or the overall therapy is established based on the neuropathological BM diagnosis. In such cases, careful differential diagnostics with wide immunohistochemical analyses are frequently neces­sary [2]. In children, the primary focus is almost always recognised. However, the possibility of erroneous primary diagnosis does exist and occurred in one of our patients.

Nevertheless, the histological characteristics of the presented series are interesting in several aspects. For example, in the case of NBL, the primary untreated adrenal tumour and its BM had a similar appearance because the local residual abdominal mass after chemotherapy showed a mature histolo­gy. However, it relapsed in the form of a single BM, which showed immature morphology. It seems that this tumour was derived from a residual chemoresistant immature neuroblastic cell population that may have been dormant in the CNS “niche”. Furthermore, in three cases, we observed that BM showed more primitive histology with a higher proliferation index than did the primary tumours. This phenomenon concerned patients with PPB, CCSK and RMS. In these tumours, the brain infiltration pattern was also very invasive. Two initial malignancies arose from tumours with widely infiltrative spread because the third was disseminated via perivascular and perineural infiltration without tumour mass formation. We next looked at GCT, in which the metastatic foci can differ histologically from the primary mass [25]. These histological differences are detected in mature teratomas, which can create secondary foci of immature germ cell components, for instance, in the case of choriocarcinoma. Ano­ther rare possibility is a “burnt out” gonadal GCT with metastases of choriocarcinoma tissue [24,25]. This is connected with the specific biology and differen­tiation pathways in this group of tumours. One of our patients had testicular mature teratoma and meta­sta­ses composed of choriocarcinoma tissue. In another patient, the metastatic component from mixed GCT consisted of yolk sac tumour.

In conclusion, our study confirms that BM in paediatric solid tumour patients are rarely encountered. The best prognosis occurs in children with GCT. The histopathological picture of BM can be different from that of the primary tumour, showing dediffe­rentiation or a diverse neoplastic component. An au­topsy examination can still be helpful in the establishment of the final diagnosis in certain cases with an atypical clinical presentation.

References

 1. Bień E, Maciejka-Kapuścińska L, Niedźwiecki M, Stefanowicz J, Szołkiewicz A, Krawczyk M, Małdyk J, Iżycka-Swieszewska E, Tokarska B, Balcerska A. Childhood rhabdomyosarcoma meta­static to bone marrow presenting with disseminated intravascular coagulation and acute tumour lysis syndrome: a review of the literature apropos of two cases. Clin Exp Metastasis 2010; 27: 399-407.  

2. Biernat W. Metastatic tumours of the central nervous system – a pathological approach. Folia Neuropathol 2009; 47: 228-233.  

3. Bouffet E, Doumi N, Thiesse P, Mottolese C, Jouvet A, Lacroze M, Carrie C, Frappaz D, Brunat-Mentigny M. Brain metastases in children with solid tumors. Cancer 1997; 79: 403-410.  

4. Buckner JC, Brown PD, O’Neill BP, Meyer FB, Wetmore CJ, Uhm JH. Central nervous system tumors. Mayo Clin Proc 2007; 82: 1271-1286.  

5. Deutsch M, Orlando S, Wolmann M. Radiotherapy for metasta­ses to the brain in children. Med Pediatr Oncol 2002; 39: 60-62.  

6. Eccles S, Welch D. Metastasis: recent discoveries and novel treatment strategies. Lancet 2007; 369: 1742-1757.  

7. Graus F, Walker RW, Allen JC. Brain metastases in children. J Pediatr 1983; 103: 558-561.  

8. Kebudi R, Ayan I, Gorgun O, Agaoglu F, Vural S, Darendeliler E. Brain metastasis in pediatric extracranial solid tumors: survey and literature review. J Neurooncology 2005; 71: 43-48.  

9. Kobayashi T, Kida Y, Yoshida J, Shibuya N, Kageyama N. Brain metastasis of chorioncarcinoma. Surg Neurol 1982; 17: 395-403.

10. Kramer K, Kushner B, Heller G, Cheung N-K. Neuroblastoma metastatic to the central nervous system. Cancer 2001; 91: 1510-1519.

11. Laningham FH, Kun LE, Reddick WE, Ogg RJ, Morris EB, Pui Ch-H. Childhood central nervous system leukemia: historical perspectives, current therapy, and acute neurological sequelae. Neuroradiology 2007; 49: 873-888.

12. Margolin JF, Steuber CP, Poplack D. Acute lymphoblastic leu­kemia. In: Pizzo PA, Poplack DG (ed.). Principles and practice of pediatric oncology. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Philadelphia 2002; pp. 489-544.

13. Marina NM, Pratt CB, Shema SJ, Brooks T, Rao B, Meyer WH. Brain metastases in osteosarcoma: report of a long-term survivor and review of the St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital Experience. Cancer 1993; 71: 3656-3660.

14. Matthay K, Brisse H, Couanet D, Couturier J, Benard J, Mosseri V, Edeline V, Lumbroso J, Valteau-Couanet D, Michon J. Central nervous metastases in neuroblastoma. Radiologic, clinical and biologic features in 23 patients. Cancer 2003; 98: 155-165.

15. Matyja E, Naganska E, Gorski R, Zabek M. Multiple brain metastases from malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor (MPNST). Folia Neuropathol 2004; 42: 43-48.

16. Nussbaum ES, Djalilian HR, Cho KH, Hall WA. Brain metastases. Histology, multiplicity, surgery, and survival. Cancer 1996; 78: 1781-1788.

17. Parasuman S, Langston J, Rao BN, Poquette CA, Jenkins JJ, Merchant T, Cain A, Pratt CB, PappoAS. Brain metastases in pediat­ric Ewing sarcoma and rhabdomyosarcoma. The St Jude Children’s Research Hospital experience. J Ped Hematol-Oncol 1999; 21: 370-377.

18. Paulino AC, Nguyen TX, Barker JL. Brain metastasis in children with sarcoma, neuroblastoma and Wilms’ tumor. Int J Radiation Biol Phys 2003; 57: 177-183.

19. Pavlidis N. Cancer of unknown primary: biological and clinical characteristics. Ann Oncol 2003; 14 (Suppl 3): iii11-8.

20. Priest JR, Magnuson J, Williams GM, Abromowitch M, Byrd R, Sprinz P, Finkelstein M, Moertel CL, Hill DA. Cerebral metastasis and other central nervous system complications of pleuropulmonary blastoma. Pediatr Blood Cancer 2007; 49: 266-273.

21. Rodriguez-Galindo C, Pappo AS, Kaste SC, Rao BN, Cain A, Jenkins JJ, Kun LE, Pratt CB. Brain metastases in children with mela­noma. Cancer 1997; 79: 2440-2445.

22. Seibel NL, Li S, Breslow NE, Beckwith JB, Green DM, Haase GM, Ritchey ML, Thomas PR, Grundy PE, Finklestein JZ, Kim T, Shochat SJ, Kelalis PP, D’Angio GJ. Effect of duration of treatment on treatment outcome for patients with clear-cell sarcoma of the kidney: a report from the National Wilms’ Tumor Study Group. J Clin Oncol 2004; 3: 468-473.

23. Smith MA, Gloeckler Ries LA. Childhood cancer: incidence, survival and mortality. In: Pizzo PA, Poplack DG (ed.). Principles and practice of pediatric oncology. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Philadelphia 2002; pp. 1-12.

24. Spunt SL, Walsh MF, Krasin MJ, Helton KJ, Billups CA, Alvida MC, Pappo AS. Brain metastases of malignant germ cell tumors in children and adolescents. Cancer 2004; 101: 620-626.

25. Ulbright TM. Germ cell tumors of the gonads: a selective review emphasizing problems in differential diagnosis, newly appreciated, and controversial issues. Modern Pathol 2005; 18: S61-79.

26. Vanucci RC, Baten M. Cerebral metastatic disease in childhood. Neurology 1974; 24: 981-985.

27. Wang CH, Lee N, Lee LS. Succcessful treatment for solitary brain metastasis from alveolar soft part sarcoma. J Neurooncol 1995; 25: 161-166.
Copyright: © 2011 Mossakowski Medical Research Centre Polish Academy of Sciences and the Polish Association of Neuropathologists. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/), allowing third parties to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and to remix, transform, and build upon the material, provided the original work is properly cited and states its license.
Quick links
© 2024 Termedia Sp. z o.o.
Developed by Bentus.