V G Bebeshko, K M Bruslova, L O Lyashenko, N M Tsvіetkova, S G Galkina, Zh S Yaroshenko, L O Gonchar, O Y Boyarska, V F Kuzmenko, I V Trykhlib, N V Kavardakova
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective: to assess the thyroid disease in the late observation period in children who had received chemo- andradiotherapy for the acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) taking into account gender, age period and disease sub-type.
Materials and methods: The incidence and nature of thyroid disease (hypothyroidism, thyroiditis, and thyroid can-cer) were studied in children-survivors of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) being in remission from 6 to 25 years.The distribution of patients by leukemia subtypes was as follows: «common» - 67.4 %, pre-B - 23.9 %, pro-B andT-cell - 4.3 %. Children had been receiving chemo- and radiotherapy according to the protocol. Regarding the ageof patients at the time of ALL diagnosis the prepubertal, pubertal and postpubertal periods were taken into account.The endocrine diseases in family history, body weight at birth, serum content of free thyroxine, pituitary thyroid-stimulating hormone, cortisol, iron, ferritin and thyroperoxidase antibodies were evaluated and assayed.
Results: Thyroid disease in children was emerging in the first 2-3 years after the ALL treatment with an incidenceof 22.8 % (hypothyroidism - 14.1 %, autoimmune thyroiditis - 7.6 %, papillary cancer - 1.1 %). Seven children inthis group had received radiotherapy (12-18 Gy doses) on the central nervous system (CNS). No correlation wasfound between the radiation exposure event itself, radiation dose to the CNS and thyroid disease in the long-termfollow-up period. Thyroid cancer had developed in a child 11 years upon chemo- and radiotherapy. Hypothyroidismwas more often diagnosed in the patients of prepubertal age (rs = 0.49). There were endocrine diseases in thefamily history in about a half of children, being significantly higher than in the general sample (р < 0.05). The bodyweight at birth of a child who had later developed hypothyroidism was less than in children having got thyroiditis(rs = 0.57).
Conclusions: Disorders in endocrine regulation and of thyroid in particular can affect the prognosis of blood can-cer course in the long-term follow-up in children, especially in prepubertal age, which requires systematic supervi-sion by hematologist and endocrinologist.