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1.malignant renal tumor of young children characterized by hypertension and blood in the urine and the presence of a palpable mass
1.(MeSH)A malignant kidney tumor, caused by the uncontrolled multiplication of renal stem (blastemal), stromal (STROMAL CELLS), and epithelial (EPITHELIAL CELLS) elements. However, not all three are present in every case. Several genes or chromosomal areas have been associated with Wilms tumor which is usually found in childhood as a firm lump in a child's side or ABDOMEN.
1.(MeSH)A malignant kidney tumor, caused by the uncontrolled multiplication of renal stem (blastemal), stromal (STROMAL CELLS), and epithelial (EPITHELIAL CELLS) elements. However, not all three are present in every case. Several genes or chromosomal areas have been associated with Wilms tumor which is usually found in childhood as a firm lump in a child's side or ABDOMEN.
adenomyosarcoma, embryoma of the kidney, nephroblastoma, Wilms tumour
Cancer of the Urinary Tract, Cancer of Urinary Tract, Neoplasms, Urologic, Urinary Tract Cancer, Urinary Tract Neoplasms, Urological Cancer, Urological Neoplasms, Urologic Cancer, Urologic Neoplasms - Kidney Diseases - Histological Type of Neoplasm, Neoplasms by Histologic Type - Benign Neoplasms, Cancer, carcinoma, Neoplasms, Neoplasms, Benign, Tumors - Genetic Diseases, Inborn, Hereditary Disease, Hereditary Diseases, Inborn Genetic Diseases, Single-Gene Defects[Hyper.]
Cancer of Kidney, Cancer of the Kidney, Kidney Cancer, Kidney Neoplasms, Neoplasms, Kidney, Renal Cancer, Renal Neoplasms - Complex and Mixed Neoplasms, Neoplasms, Complex and Mixed - Cancer Syndromes, Hereditary, Hereditary Cancer Syndromes, Hereditary Neoplastic Syndromes, Neoplastic Syndromes, Hereditary[Hyper.]
Wilms Tumor (n.)
[MeSH]
sarcoma[Hyper.]
Wilms' tumor (n.)
| Wilms' tumor | |
|---|---|
| Classification and external resources | |
![]() Cut section showing two halves of a nephroblastoma specimen. Note the prominent septa subdividing the sectioned surface and the protrusion of tumor into the renal pelvis, resembling botryoid rhabdomyosarcoma. |
|
| ICD-10 | C64 |
| ICD-9 | 189.0 |
| ICD-O: | M8960/3 |
| OMIM | 194070 607102 |
| DiseasesDB | 8896 |
| eMedicine | med/3093 ped/2440 |
| MeSH | D009396 |
Wilms' tumor or nephroblastoma is cancer of the kidneys that typically occurs in children, rarely in adults.[1] Its common name is an eponym, referring to Dr. Max Wilms, the German surgeon (1867–1918) who first described this kind of tumor.[2]
Approximately 500 cases are diagnosed in the U.S. annually. The majority (75%) occurs in otherwise normal children; a minority (25%) is associated with other developmental abnormalities. It is highly responsive to treatment, with about 90% of patients surviving at least five years.
Contents |
Most nephroblastomas are unilateral, being bilateral in less than 5% of cases, although patients with Denys-Drash syndrome mostly have bilateral or multiple tumors.[3] They tend to be encapsulated and vascularized tumors that do not cross the midline of the abdomen. In cases of metastasis it is usually to the lung. A rupture of Wilms' tumor puts the patient at risk of hemorrhage and peritoneal dissemination of the tumor. In such cases, surgical intervention by a surgeon who is experienced in the removal of such a fragile tumor is imperative.
Pathologically, a triphasic nephroblastoma comprises three elements:
Wilms' tumor is a malignant tumor containing metanephric blastema, stromal and epithelial derivatives. Characteristic is the presence of abortive tubules and glomeruli surrounded by a spindled cell stroma. The stroma may include striated muscle, cartilage, bone, fat tissue, fibrous tissue. The tumor is compressing the normal kidney parenchyma.
The mesenchymal component may include cells showing rhabdomyoid differentiation. The rhabdomyoid component may itself show features of malignancy (rhabdomyosarcomatous Wilms).
Wilms' tumors may be separated into 2 prognostic groups based on pathologic characteristics:
Typical symptoms are:
The first sign is normally a painless abdominal tumor that can be easily felt by the doctor. An Ultrasound, Computed Tomography, or MRI are done first. Once a kidney tumor is found, a surgical biopsy is done. A sample of tissue from the tumor is sent to a pathologist, who looks at it under a microscope to check for signs of cancer.
The overall 5-year survival is estimated to be approximately 90%,[4] but for individuals the prognosis is highly dependent on individual staging and treatment. Early removal tends to promote positive outcomes.
Tumor-specific loss-of-heterozygosity (LOH) for chromosomes 1p and 16q identifies a subset of Wilms' tumor patients who have a significantly increased risk of relapse and death. LOH for these chromosomal regions can now be used as an independent prognostic factor together with disease stage to target intensity of treatment to risk of treatment failure.[5][6] Genome-wide copy number and LOH status can be assessed with virtual karyotyping of tumor cells (fresh or paraffin-embedded).
Mutations of the WT1 gene on chromosome 11 p 13 are observed in approximately 20% of Wilms' tumors.[7][8] At least half of the Wilms' tumors with mutations in WT1 also carry mutations in CTNNB1, the gene encoding the proto-oncogene beta-catenin.[9]
A gene on the X chromosome, WTX, is inactivated in up to 30% of Wilms' tumor cases, according to research published in 2007.[10]
Most cases do not have mutations in any of these genes.[11]
Staging is determined by combination of imaging studies and pathology findings if the tumor is operable. Treatment strategy is determined by the stage:
For stage I Wilms' tumor, 1 or more of the following criteria must be met:
For Stage II Wilms' tumor, 1 or more of the following criteria must be met:
For Stage III Wilms' tumor, 1 or more of the following criteria must be met:
Stage IV Wilms' tumor is defined as the presence of hematogenous metastases (lung, liver, bone, or brain), or lymph node metastases outside the abdomenopelvic region.
Stage V Wilms’ tumor is defined as bilateral renal involvement at the time of initial diagnosis. Note: For patients with bilateral involvement, an attempt should be made to stage each side according to the above criteria (stage I to III) on the basis of extent of disease prior to biopsy.
Statistics may sometimes show more favorable outcomes for more aggressive stages than for less ones, which may be caused by more aggressive treatment and/or random variability in the study groups. Also, a stage V tumor is not necessarily worse than a stage IV tumor.
| Stage[12] | Histopathology[12] | 4 Year relapse-free survival (RFS) or event-free survival (EFS)[12] | 4 Year overall survival (OS)[12] | Treatment[12] |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stage I [12] | Favorable histology in children younger than 24 months or tumor weight less than 550g | 85% | 98% | Surgery only (should be done only within the context of a clinical trial) |
| Favorable histology in children older than 24 months or tumor weight more than 550g | 94% RFS | 98% | Nephrectomy + lymph node sampling followed by regimen EE-4A | |
| Diffuse anaplastic | 68% EFS | 80% | Nephrectomy + lymph node sampling followed by regimen EE-4A and radiotherapy | |
| Stage II[12] | Favorable histology | 86% RFS | 98% | Nephrectomy + lymph node sampling followed by regimen EE-4A |
| Focal anaplastic | 80% EFS | 80% | Nephrectomy + lymph node sampling followed by abdominal radiotherapy and regimen DD-4A | |
| Diffuse anaplastic | 83% EFS | 82% | Nephrectomy + lymph node sampling followed by abdominal radiotherapy and regimen I | |
| Stage III[12] | Favorable histology | 87% RFS | 94% | Nephrectomy + lymph node sampling followed by abdominal radiotherapy and regimen DD-4A |
| Focal anaplastic | 88% RFS | 100% (8 people in study) | Nephrectomy + lymph node sampling followed by abdominal radiotherapy and regimen DD-4A | |
| Focal anaplastic (preoperative treatment) | 71% RFS | 71% | Preoperative treatment with regimen DD-4A followed by nephrectomy + lymph node sampling and abdominal radiotherapy | |
| Diffuse anaplastic | 46% EFS | 53% | Preoperative treatment with regimen I followed by nephrectomy + lymph node sampling and abdominal radiotherapy | |
| Diffuse anaplastic | 65% EFS | 67% | Immediate nephrectomy + lymph node sampling followed by abdominal radiotherapy and regimen I | |
| Stage IV[12] | Favorable histology | 76% RFS | 86% | Nephrectomy + lymph node sampling, followed by abdominal radiotherapy, bilateral pulmonary radiotherapy, and regimen DD-4A |
| Focal anaplastic | 61% EFS | 72% | Nephrectomy + lymph node sampling, followed by abdominal radiotherapy, bilateral pulmonary radiotherapy, and regimen DD-4A | |
| Diffuse anaplastic | 33% EFS | 33% | Immediate nephrectomy + lymph node sampling followed by abdominalradiotherapy, whole-lung radiotherapy, and regimen I | |
| Diffuse anaplastic (preoperative treatment) | 31% EFS | 44% | Preoperative treatment with regimen I followed by nephrectomy + lymph node sampling followed by abdominalradiotherapy, whole-lung radiotherapy | |
| Stage V[12] | Overall | 61% EFS | 80% | |
| Favorable histology | 65% | 87% | Bilateral renal biopsies and staging of each kidney followed by preoperative treatment with regimen EE-4A (if disease in both kidneys ≤ stage II) or regimen DD-4A (if disease in both kidneys > stage II), followed by second-look surgery and possibly more chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy | |
| Focal anaplastic | 76% | 88% | Bilateral renal biopsies and staging of each kidney followed by preoperative treatment with regimen I, followed by second-look surgery and possibly more chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy | |
| Diffuse anaplastic | 25% | 42% | Bilateral renal biopsies and staging of each kidney followed by preoperative treatment with regimen I, followed by second-look surgery and possibly more chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy |
People of African descent have the highest rates of Wilms' tumor. Most instances of cancer occur among children between 3 to 3.5 years old.[citation needed]
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