Selected aspects of the epidemiology of tumors and tumor-like diseases of the spine and spinal cord in children: A 19-year regional cohort study in the Leningrad region

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Abstract

Background. Statistical analysis of spinal tumors in children is difficult because of its rarity and different morphology. Benign tumor and tumor-like processes are not included in modern oncology literature even though intracanal tumors have the most severe prognosis and influence on a patient’s quality of life.

Aim. To evaluate the incidence, epidemiological structure (anatomical, sex, morphological structure), clinical characteristics, and survival of pediatric patients with tumors and tumor-like diseases of the spine and spinal cord in a single region of Russia.

Materials and methods. The data of 110 children with tumors and tumor-like diseases of the spine and spinal cord from the Leningrad region who received surgical treatment in Leningrad regional children's hospitals between 1998 and 2016 were included in the study. The authors evaluated the incidence, mortality, and survival rates adjusted for age, sex, morphology, and primary site of growth.

Results. The average annual morbidities of pediatric spinal tumors (including the spine and spinal canal) in the Leningradsaya oblast region from 1998 to 2016 were 1.93 per 100 000 pediatric patients and 0.3 per 100 000 for neuro-epithelial tumors of the spinal cord. The mortality rate was 0.2 per 100 000 pediatric patients. Spinal cord tumors of the cranio-vertebral and cervical zones as intramedullary low-malignant and extramedullary malignant metastatic spinal tumors had a negative effect on survival.

Conclusions. The Leningrad regional data were generally comparable with the cancer registry data of other countries. The data suggest that pediatric spinal cord patients should be treated in regional neurosurgical pediatric clinics.

About the authors

Viktor P. Snishuk

The Turner Scientific Research Institute for Children’s Orthopedics; Leningrad Region Children’s Hospital

Author for correspondence.
Email: v_p_s@list.ru

MD, Neurosurgeon

Russian Federation, 64, Parkovaya str., Saint-Petersburg, Pushkin, 196603; Saint-Petersburg

Maria D. Vladovskaya

First State Pavlov Medical University of Saint Petersburg, R. Gorbacheva Memorial Research Institute for Pediatric Oncology, Hematology and Transplantation

Email: marydeton@mail.ru

MD, PhD, Hematologist, Oncologist

Russian Federation, Saint Petersburg

Sergey V. Vissarionov

The Turner Scientific Research Institute for Children’s Orthopedics

Email: turner01@mail.ru
ORCID iD: 0000-0003-4235-5048

MD, PhD, Professor, Deputy Director for research and academic affairs, Head of the Department of Spinal Pathology and Neurosurgery

Russian Federation, 64, Parkovaya str., Saint-Petersburg, Pushkin, 196603

Nikolay A. Krutelev

The Turner Scientific Research Institute for Children’s Orthopedics; Leningrad Region Children’s Hospital

Email: n.krutelev@mail.ru

MD, Neurosurgeon

Russian Federation, 64, Parkovaya str., Saint-Petersburg, Pushkin, 196603; Saint-Petersburg

Alexander V. Kaminskiy

Leningrad Region Children’s Hospital

Email: kamin_al@mail.ru

MD, Neurosurgeon

Russian Federation, Saint-Petersburg

Irina S. Petrova

The Turner Scientific Research Institute for Children’s Orthopedics

Email: iskorchagina@gmail.ru

MD, Neurosurgeon

Russian Federation, 64, Parkovaya str., Saint-Petersburg, Pushkin, 196603

References

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Supplementary files

Supplementary Files
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1. JATS XML
2. Fig. 1. Dynamics of the number of surgical interventions performed in the "DKB" LOGO in children with tumors and tumor-like diseases in 1998-2016.

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3. Fig. 2. Age distribution of the patients who underwent surgery

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4. Fig. 3. Histological structure of the operated tumors

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5. Fig. 4. Special aspects of the distribution of patients by age and morphological group of tumors

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6. Fig. 5. Distribution of surgical interventions depending on the localization (level) of the neoplasm

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7. Fig. 6. Level and histological structure of the neoplasms

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8. Fig. 7. Total cumulative survival rate

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9. Fig. 8. Cumulative survival rates of patients with tumors of the spinal canal according to tumor location

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10. Fig. 9. Cumulative survival rates of patients with different histological variants of the spinal canal tumor

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Copyright (c) 2018 Snishuk V.P., Vladovskaya M.D., Vissarionov S.V., Krutelev N.A., Kaminskiy A.V., Petrova I.S.

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