Suprarenal Masses in Very Young Infants: Is It Safe to Watch and Wait? Report of a SIOPEN Observational Study Results

Author:

Papadakis Vassilios,Segura Vanessa,Conte MassimoORCID,Plantaz Dominique,Di Cataldo AndreaORCID,Schleiermacher GudrunORCID,Wheeler Kate,Bermúdez Jose D.ORCID,Ash Shifra,Brichard Bénédicte,Ladenstein Ruth,Combaret Valérie,Sarnacki SabineORCID,Fagnani Anna Maria,Granata ClaudioORCID,Cañete Adela

Abstract

Background: To assess whether expectant observation of infants ≤ 90 days old with small suprarenal masses (sSRMs) could avoid unnecessary surgery without impacting outcome. Methods: Infants ≤ 90 days with a ≤ 5 cm mass, without midline extension or lymph node or distant spread were registered (ClinicalTrials.org:NCT01728155). Once staging was completed, they were followed with ultrasound, MRI and urinary catecholamines. Surgical resection was only planned if there was a ≥40% mass volume increase or for a mass persisting after 48 weeks of the planned observation. Results: Over a 5-year period, 128 infants were registered. No infant had detectable MYCN amplification in the peripheral blood. Surgery was performed in 39 (30.5%) patients, in 18 during and in 21 after the planned 48-week observation, and 74% were confirmed to be neuroblastomas. Non-life-threatening surgical complications occurred in two cases. The 3-year overall survival and event-free survival were 100% and 87.1%, respectively. The 16 events observed were volume increase (N = 11) and progression to neuroblastoma stage MS (N = 5). Patients with solid masses or MIBG-positive masses had lower EFS. Conclusions: Expectant observation for infants with sSRMs with clinical follow-up and timely imaging (including MRI scan) is safe and effective, allowing surgery to be avoided in the majority of them.

Funder

European Union's Seventh Framework Programme

Fondazione Italiana per la Lotta al Neuroblastoma

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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