Neuroblastoma is a neuroendocrine tumor that arises from developing sympathetic nerve tissue, the part of the nervous system responsible for regulating the body's response to stress by adjusting heart rate, blood pressure, hormone levels, and digestion. This specialized nervous tissue is located alongside the spinal cord, along nerve fiber pathways, and in the adrenal glands—two organs above the kidneys that produce essential hormones. Neuroblastoma primarily affects infants and young children and is rarely seen in children over ten years of age. It is the most common cancer in infants and the leading type of solid extracranial tumor in children. In the United States, approximately 800 cases of neuroblastoma are diagnosed each year. Prognosis depends on factors such as age (with infants having a better outcome), disease stage, and the presence or absence of specific molecular and genetic markers in the tumor cells.
Neuroblastoma tumors can develop anywhere along the sympathetic chain, but they most commonly occur in the abdomen. Nearly all cases of neuroblastoma result from sporadic mutations. The MYCN gene, a transcription factor, is amplified in approximately 25% of cases.
Most patients with neuroblastoma present with signs and symptoms that are related to primary and metastatic tumor growth. Tumors located in the abdomen can cause abdominal pain, constipation, bladder dysfunction and abdominal swelling. Tumors located in the thorax may cause breathing difficulties, facial swelling (due to superior vena cava syndrome), and droopy eyes (due to ipsilateral Horner syndrome). Tumors located along the spinal cord or nerve fibers can result in neurological dysfunction, including weakness, loss of sensation, pain, bladder or bowel incontinence, or paralysis. Spinal tumors can also cause scoliosis (abnormal curvature of the spine).
Other symptoms associated with neuroblastoma include bulging eyes or dark circles around the eyes (due to metastasis to the orbital sockets), heterochromia (two differently colored eyes), painless bluish lumps under the skin in infants, and complaints of back or limb pain (from spinal or bone metastasis). Other symptoms include watery diarrhea (from elevated levels of vasoactive intestinal peptide, or VIP), opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome (characterized by jerky body movements or uncontrolled eye movements due to the presence of autoimmune antibodies), swelling of body parts (from lymphatic blockage), hypertension, fatigue, bruising or bleeding (due to decreased blood cell counts when cancer infiltrates the bone marrow).
A physician will perform a detailed history and physical examination, schedule imaging tests, and order laboratory tests to determine if a child has neuroblastoma. This will also aid in cancer staging and treatment.
A tissue sample is needed for the diagnosis of neuroblastoma and helps determine cancer staging and prognosis. Biopsies will be taken from the tumor site and bone marrow aspirations will be performed in both the right and left hip bones. These samples will be examined under a microscope to identify small round blue cells. They will also be analyzed for specific molecular and genetic markers.
Neuroblastoma is a heterogeneous disease. There are several factors that affect prognosis and response to therapy:
Treatment for neuroblastoma depends on the stage of disease. In low and intermediate risk tumors, the primary treatment is surgical removal, with chemotherapy added as needed.
For high-risk tumors where the long-term survival rates are less than 15%, treatment involves intensive combinations of chemotherapy, surgery, bone marrow transplantation, and radiation therapy. Retinoids are routinely used, as they can induce differentiation of neuroblastoma cells, limiting their ability to divide. The immunotherapy dinutuximab may also be used, though it carries a risk of toxicity. In one trial, the combination of dinutuximab and retinoids improved both event-free survival and overall survival at two years.
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