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Rhabdomyosarcoma Treatment and Outcome at a Multidisciplinary Pediatric Cancer Center in Lebanon
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20
References
2012
Year
Surgical OncologyCancer ManagementRhabdomyosarcoma TreatmentPathologyChildhood RmsSurgeryOncologySurgical PathologyClinical Radiation OncologyNeck OncologyRadiation OncologyCancer ResearchHealth SciencesRadiation TherapyCancer RecurrenceCancer TreatmentMalignant DiseaseLocal RelapsePediatric PatientsHead And Neck CancerMedicineCancer Therapeutics
Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is the most common soft tissue sarcoma in children. Outcome of patients treated on standard protocols, in a multidisciplinary cancer center setting outside of clinical trials, is not well reported. We reviewed characteristics and outcome of 23 pediatric patients treated at a single, multidisciplinary cancer center in Lebanon, between April 2002 and December 2010. Median follow-up was 41 months. The most commonly affected primary site was the head and neck (48%, n = 11). Nineteen tumors (82.6%) were of embryonal histology. Tumor size was ≥5 cm in eight (34.8%) patients. Sixteen patients (69.6%) had localized disease, and one (4.4%) had metastatic disease. Fifteen (65.2%) had Group III tumors. All patients received chemotherapy, for a duration ranging 21-51 weeks. Upfront surgical resection was performed in 10 patients (43.5%). Eighteen patients (78.3%) received radiation therapy. The 5-year overall and disease-free survival rates were 83% and 64%, respectively. Relapse correlated with absence of surgery. Treatment of childhood RMS in a multidisciplinary cancer center in Lebanon results in similar survival to that in developed countries when similar protocols are applied. There was a higher incidence of local relapse, but those were salvageable with further therapy and surgical local control.
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