Introduction: Pediatric adrenal cortical tumors are characterized by a wide spectrum of behavior. Questions remain regarding intermediate disease stages with isolated tumor rupture or relapse.
Objectives: To describe clinical characteristics, treatment strategy, and outcome of patients depending on disease stage, tumor rupture, or in case of a refractory tumor, to discuss optimal management.
Material and methods: Pediatric patients with histological material reviewed and treated between 2000 and 2018 in 23 French oncology centers were included.
Results: Among 95 cases, 59% of patients had stage I tumors (n = 55), 16% had stage II tumors (n = 16), 19% had stage III tumors (n = 17), and 5% had stage IV tumors (n = 5) (missing data: 2). Overall, 27% of patients (n = 25) had an unfavorable histology. Initial tumor resection was performed for 90% of patients (n = 86). Systemic therapies included mitotane in 20 cases and chemotherapy in 13 cases. Among 17 stage III patients, 12 had microscopic residual tumor due to an initial biopsy (n = 5), intraoperative rupture (n = 8), or surgical resection with microscopic residue or tumor spillage surgery (n = 1) (two patients with two modalities). After a median follow-up of 96 months (25-119), four early progressions and two relapses occurred. A total of seven patients died, including five of disease. Stage III diseases due to microscopic residual disease correlated with a worse prognosis: 5-year progression-free survival 44% (95% CI, 22-87%) versus 82% (95% CI, 73-91%) for the whole cohort (P < .0001). Among the 14 patients with refractory disease, only 3 were alive and free of disease after multimodal second-line therapy.
Conclusions: Stage III diseases due to a microscopic residual tumor have a dismal prognosis, arguing for the systematic use of adjuvant therapy. Patients with a relapsed disease should be included in experimental studies.
Keywords: adrenal cortical tumors; children; risk stratification; second-line therapy; tumor rupture.
© 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.