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"Soft tissue neoplasms"

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"Soft tissue neoplasms"

Original Article

[English]
Soft Tissue Hemangioendothelioma in Children
Joong Kee Youn, Do-Hyun Jung, Soo-Hong Kim, Sung-Eun Jung, Kwi-Won Park, Hyun-Young Kim
J Korean Assoc Pediatr Surg 2017;23(2):19-23.   Published online December 20, 2017
DOI: https://doi.org/10.13029/jkaps.2017.23.2.19
Purpose

Soft tissue hemangioendothelioma (STHE) is a rare vascular tumor, which has a similar prognosis to borderline malignancy. The disease is poorly understood in pediatric cases because of its low incidence; therefore, we investigated treatment strategies for STHE in children.

Methods

We retrospectively analyzed 8 patients with STHE, who were pathologically confirmed between January 1995 and June 2015. The median duration of follow-up was 72 months.

Results

Five were male and the median age at the time of surgery was 1.2 years. Six patients presented with a palpable mass, and 2 patients experienced facial paralysis. The median tumor size was 4.0 cm. The following tumor locations were observed head (2 patients), neck (2 patients), chest wall (1 patient), sacrococcyx (1 patient), upper limb (1 patient), and lower limb (1 patient). The patients underwent either microscopic complete resection (R0) (3 patients), macroscopic complete resection (R1) (2 patients), or macroscopic incomplete resection (R2) (3 patients). After histopathological examination, 6 patients were diagnosed with kaposiform hemangioendothelioma (HE), one with retiform HE, and one with epithelioid HE. Postoperative sequelae occurred as gait disturbance, hearing impairment, and vocal cord palsy. Tumor recurrence or regrowth occurred in 4 patients. These patients underwent reoperation and IFN therapy; however, in the patient with epithelioid HE, metastasis to the scalp occurred after these therapies. The patient with the head tumor who underwent R2 resection, underwent resection three more times, but died 11 months after the first surgery.

Conclusion

When treating STHE in children, R0 resection should be first considered, but recurrence and metastasis should be monitored depending on the size, pathology, and location of the lesion. When major sequelae are expected, function-preserving surgery could be considered, depending on tumor location, size, and nearby organs.

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Case Report

[English]
Infantile Extraosseous Ewing's Sarcoma in the Left Arm: A Case Report
Eunyoung Jung, Soon Ok Choi, Woo Hyun Park
J Korean Assoc Pediatr Surg 2009;15(1):80-85.   Published online June 30, 2009
DOI: https://doi.org/10.13029/jkaps.2009.15.1.80

Extraosseous Ewing's sarcoma is a rare primary malignant soft tissue tumor which is histologically identical to Ewing's sarcoma. This tumor tends to involve the soft tissue of the lower extremity and paravertebral region of adolescents and young adults but particularly rare in infants. We recently experienced a case of extraosseous Ewing's sarcoma which presented in the left arm of 4 months infant.

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