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  • A retrospective study of the preoperative treatment of advanced Wilms tumor in children with chemotherapy versus transcatheter arterial chemoembolization alone or combined with short-term systemic chemotherapy.

A retrospective study of the preoperative treatment of advanced Wilms tumor in children with chemotherapy versus transcatheter arterial chemoembolization alone or combined with short-term systemic chemotherapy.

Journal of vascular and interventional radiology : JVIR (2011-03-01)
Min-Ju Li, Yin-Bao Zhou, Yong Huang, Da-Xing Tang, Shan Xu, De-Hua Wu, Yi-Ying Zhang, Hong-Feng Tang
ABSTRACT

To evaluate the therapeutic effect of preoperative transcatheter arterial chemoembolization (TACE) combined with short-term systematic chemotherapy in the treatment of advanced Wilms tumor. This was a retrospective study on 66 patients with unilateral advanced Wilms tumor, age 5 months to 11 years (median, 2.9 years; 30 boys and 36 girls), treated at our institution between 1995 and 2007. Characteristics of the patient population were maximal tumor diameter > 10 cm, or involvement of periaortic lymph nodes, or inferior vena cava invasion, or distal metastasis, or tumor with anaplastic histology. Patients were divided into three groups. Twenty patients were treated with conventional preoperative chemotherapy (PC group) using vindesine, actinomycin D, and pirarubicin for 4 weeks; 21 patients were treated in the TACE group with preoperative renal arterial chemoembolization using Lipiodol-pirarubicin-vindesine emulsion; and 25 patients were treated with preoperative chemoembolization combined with short-term systematic chemotherapy (T+S) for 2 weeks. No drug-induced cardiotoxicity, nephrotoxicity, or hepatic dysfunction was observed. Complete surgical removal of the tumor was achieved in 12 (65.0%), 17 (80.9%), and 22 (88.0%) patients in the PC, TACE, and T+S groups, respectively (T+S group vs PC group, P = .030). The 2-year relapse-free survival rates were 65.0%, 80.9%, and 100.0% in the PC, TACE, and T+S groups, respectively (T+S vs PC, P = .001). From our experience, preoperative chemoembolization combined with short-term systematic chemotherapy is able to achieve higher rates of complete tumor resection and relapse-free survival in the treatment of advanced Wilms tumor.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Vindesine sulfate salt hydrate, ≥95% (HPLC)