Incidence and trends in pediatric malignancies medulloblastoma/primitive neuroectodermal tumor: a SEER update

DE McNeil, TR Coté, L Clegg… - Medical and Pediatric …, 2002 - Wiley Online Library
DE McNeil, TR Coté, L Clegg, LB Rorke
Medical and Pediatric Oncology: The Official Journal of SIOP …, 2002Wiley Online Library
Background It has been suggested that cerebellar medulloblastoma (M) and primitive
neuroectodermal tumors (PNET) arising elsewhere in the nervous system, represent a
single entity (M/PNET), although this concept is controversial. Cancer registries permit
population‐based description of cases reported as medulloblastoma, those reported as
PNET and description of the aggregate, M/PNET. Procedure We reviewed the 768 cases of
M/PNET (633 diagnosed medulloblastoma and 135 diagnosed PNET) among persons …
Background
It has been suggested that cerebellar medulloblastoma (M) and primitive neuroectodermal tumors (PNET) arising elsewhere in the nervous system, represent a single entity (M/PNET), although this concept is controversial. Cancer registries permit population‐based description of cases reported as medulloblastoma, those reported as PNET and description of the aggregate, M/PNET.
Procedure
We reviewed the 768 cases of M/PNET (633 diagnosed medulloblastoma and 135 diagnosed PNET) among persons under 20 years of age in the National Cancer Institute's Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) database.
Results
The incidence of M/PNET rose 23%, from 4 per 106 person‐years in 1973–77 to 4.9 per 106 person‐years in 1993–98. Cases reported as PNET were more likely than those reported as medulloblastoma to be supratentorial (30.4% vs. 1.9%, P < 0.001) and to be female (42.2% vs. 35.4%, P = 0.13). The difference in 5‐year survival between the 600 children with infratentorial medulloblastoma vs. the 49 children with infratentorial PNET was not statistically significant (55% vs. 43%). Regardless of reporting diagnosis, survival was poorer among children age 0–3 years and those with supratentorial tumors. Children diagnosed in the more recent period from 1985–1998 had a longer median survival than children diagnosed in 1973–84 (4.9 years vs. 10 years, P < 0.05). Rates were 42% higher among Whites compared to Blacks (4.5/106 person‐years vs. 3.1/106 person‐years, P < 0.01).
Conclusions
We found M/PNET is increasing in incidence and more frequent among Whites. Given that medulloblastoma and PNET are histologically identical and have similar epidemiologic profiles, future studies should provide analyses that combine these entities. Med Pediatr Oncol 2002;39:190–194. Published 2002 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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