RSS-Feed abonnieren
DOI: 10.1055/s-0031-1271635
© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York
Pediatric Metastatic Sacrococcygeal Chordoma Treated with Surgery
Publikationsverlauf
Publikationsdatum:
21. Februar 2011 (online)

Background
Sacrococcygeal chordomas are extremely rare tumors, especially in the pediatric population [1]. These neurogenic tumors arise from the nucleus pulposus (notochord remnant) and account for less than 1% of all primary spinal tumors [2]. The prognosis is poor with death most commonly due to local invasion and recurrence [3] [4]. In the pediatric population, chordomas are believed to behave like a more aggressive variant [2] with shorter survival times and a shorter time to disease metastasis [4]. A review of the literature on pediatric sacrococcygeal chordomas has revealed less than 25 cases, going back to the first case reported in 1910 [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12]. [Table1] outlines the important characteristics of each case in the literature for which results were reported. Notably, only 7 patients developed metastatic disease [13] [14] [15] [16] [17] [18] [19], and only 3 patients were found to have metastatic disease at the time of presentation [13] [14] [17].
Table 1 Characteristics of Pediatric Sacrococcygeal Chordomas. Authors Cases Age Metastasis (at presentation Y/N) Treatment Status Argaud, M.R. and Lestrade, A. 18 1 14 mo. liver (Y) surgery dead 82 months Montgomery, A.H. and Wolman, I.J. 19 3 3 yr lungs (Y) supportive dead 9 days after admission 3.5 mo. N surgery non-resectable, dead POD 23 22 mo. N surgery+radiation non-resectable, decrease in size with rad. Rosenqvist, H. and Saltzman, G. 21 1 4 yr lungs (N) rad.+surgery+rad. incomplete resection, local recurrence, repeat resection, dead at 1 year Worthy, T.S. 20 1 5 yr liver (N) surgery ×3+radiation dead 18 months Richards, A.T., Stricke, L. and Spitz, L. 22 2 1 yr3 yr NN radiationsurgery+radiation dead 3 monthsdead 2 months Dutton, R.V. and Singleton, E.B. 23 1 newborn N surgery alive at 17 yrs Prignitz, R. and Tauber, R. 24 1 3 yr lung (Y) none dead 1 month after presentation Garofalo, E., Minerva, A. and Baltieri, G. 25 1 19 mo. inguinal nodes (N) supportive dead 7 days after admission Nix, W.L., Steuber, C.P., Hawkins, E.P. and Stenback, W.A. 26 1 1 day N surgery – Azzarelli, A. 13 1 2 yr – – – Kozlowski, K. 27 1 12 yr lung, bone (N) – – Cable, D.G. and Moir, C. 28 1 12 yr N surgery alive at 6 months
References
- 1
Occhipinti E, Mastrostefano R, Pompili A et al.
Spinal chordomas in infancy: report of a case and analysis of the literature.
Child's Brain.
1981;
8
198-206
MissingFormLabel
- 2
Scimeca PG, James-Henry AG, Black KS et al.
Chemotherapeutic treatment of malignant chordoma in children.
J Pediatr Hematol Oncol.
1996;
18
(2)
237-240
MissingFormLabel
- 3
Coffin CM, Swanson PE, Wick MR et al.
Chordoma in childhood and adolescence: a clinicopathologic analysis of 12 cases.
Arch Pathol Lab Med.
1993;
117
927-933
MissingFormLabel
- 4
Sibley RK, Day DL, Dehner LP.
Metastasizing chordoma in early childhood: a pathological and immunohistochemical
study with review of the literature.
Pediatr Pathol.
1987;
7
287-301
MissingFormLabel
- 5
Boriani S, Bandiera S, Biagini R et al.
Chordoma of the mobile spine: fifty years of experience.
Spine.
2006;
31
(4)
493-503
MissingFormLabel
- 6
McPherson CM, Suki D, McCutcheon IE et al.
Metastatic disease from chordoma: a 10-year experience.
J Neurosurg Spine.
2006;
5
277-280
MissingFormLabel
- 7
Sciubba DM, Chi JH, Rhines LD et al.
Chordoma of the spinal column.
Neurosurg Clin N Am.
2008;
19
5-15
MissingFormLabel
- 8
Harvey WF, Dawson EK.
Chordoma.
Edinburgh Medical Journal.
1941;
48
(2)
713-735
MissingFormLabel
- 9
Horton KM, Levey MS, Owl-Smith FA et al.
Metastasizing chordoma in early childhood: report of a case at 1.5 T.
Magn Reson Imaging.
1989;
7
(6)
689-691
MissingFormLabel
- 10
Chetty R, Levin CV, Kalan MR.
Chordoma: a 20-year clinicopathologic review of the experience at Groote Schuur Hospital,
Cape Town.
J Surg Oncol.
1991;
46
261-264
MissingFormLabel
- 11
Matsumoto J, Towbin RB, Ball Jr WS.
Cranial chordomas in infancy and childhood. A report of two cases and review of the
literature.
Pediatr Radiol.
1989;
20
(1-2)
28-32
MissingFormLabel
- 12
Windeyer BW.
Chordoma.
Proc R Soc Med.
1959;
52
1088-1100
MissingFormLabel
- 13
Azzarelli A, Quagliuolo V, Cerasoli S et al.
Chordoma: natural history and treatment.
J Surg Oncol.
1988;
37
185-191
MissingFormLabel
- 14
Casali PG, Stacchiotti S, Sangalli C et al.
Chordoma.
Curr Opin Oncol.
2007;
19
(4)
367-370
MissingFormLabel
- 15
Pearlman AW, Friedman M.
Radical radiation therapy of chordoma.
Am J Roentgenol Radium Nucl Med.
1970;
108
(2)
332-341
MissingFormLabel
- 16
Casali PG, Messina A, Stacchiotti S et al.
Imatinib mesylate in chordoma.
Cancer.
2004;
101
(9)
2086-2097
MissingFormLabel
- 17
Geoerger B, Morland B, Ndiaye A et al.
On behalf of the Innovative Therapies for Children with Cancer (ITCC) European Consortium.
Target-driven exploratory study of imatinib mesylate in children with solid malignancies
by the Innovative Therapies for Children with Cancer (ITCC) European Consortium.
Eur J Cancer.
2009;
DOI: doi:10.1016/j.ejca.2009.03.007
MissingFormLabel
- 18
Argaud R, Lestrade A.
Sur la précocité de certains chordomes sacrococcygiens.
Bulletin de L’Academie de Médecine.
1926;
95
375-377
MissingFormLabel
- 19
Montgomery AH, Wolman IJ.
Sacrococcygeal chordomas in children.
Am J Dis Child.
1930;
35
(187)
1263-1281
MissingFormLabel
- 20
Worthy TS.
Sacrococcygeal chordoma – Two cases with unusual features.
Clin Radiol.
1965;
16
(4)
412-413
MissingFormLabel
- 21
Rosenqvist H, Saltzman G.
Sacrococcygeal and vertebral chordomas and their treatment.
Acta Radiol.
1959;
52
177-193
MissingFormLabel
- 22
Richards AT, Stricke L, Spitz L.
Sacrococcygeal chordomas in children.
J Pediatr Surg.
1973;
8
(6)
911-914
MissingFormLabel
- 23
Dutton RV, Singleton EB.
Tuberous sclerosis: a case report with aortic aneurysm and unusual rib changes.
Pediatr Radiol.
1975;
3
(3)
184-186
MissingFormLabel
- 24
Prignitz R, Tauber R.
Sacrococcygeal chordoma in childhood.
Strahlentherapie.
1975;
149
(4)
368-374
MissingFormLabel
- 25
Garofalo E, Minerva A, Baltieri G.
Sacrococcygeal chordoma in a 19-month-old boy.
Minerva Pediatr.
1976;
28
(31)
1909-1914
MissingFormLabel
- 26
Nix WL, Steuber CP, Hawkins EP et al.
Sacrococcygeal chordoma in a neonate with multiple anomalies.
J Pediatr.
1978;
93
(6)
995-998
MissingFormLabel
- 27
Kozlowski K, Barylak A, Campbell J et al.
Primary sacral bone tumours in children (report of 16 cases with a short literature
review).
Australas Radiol.
1990;
34
(2)
142-149
MissingFormLabel
- 28
Cable DG, Moir C.
Pediatric sacrococcygeal chordomas: a rare tumor to be differentiated from sacrococcygeal
teratoma.
J Pediatr Surg.
1997;
32
(5)
759-761
MissingFormLabel
Correspondence
Dr. David Al-Adra
University of Alberta
Surgery
2D2 Department of Surgery
T6G 2B7 Edmonton
Canada
eMail: daladra@ualberta.ca