Childhood cancers

ALSO KNOWN AS: Childhood neoplasms

RELATED CONDITIONS: Leukemia, lymphoma, brain cancer, osteosarcoma

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DEFINITION: Childhood cancers occur in a person from infancy through age nineteen. Significant types of childhood cancers vary by type of histology, site of origin, race, sex, and age. They include leukemias, lymphomas, brain and central nervous system (CNS) tumors, sympathetic nervous system tumors, retinoblastomas, kidney tumors, liver tumors, bone tumors, soft-tissue sarcomas, gonadal and germ-cell tumors, epithelial tumors, and other and unspecified malignant tumors.

According to the American Cancer Society (ACS), the most common types among all childhood cancers are:

  • Leukemias: 33 percent
  • Brain and spinal cord tumors: 26 percent
  • Neuroblastomas: six percent
  • Lymphomas

Risk factors: Childhood cancers result from noninherited mutations or changes in the genes of developing cells. Some risk factors have been associated with different types of childhood cancers such as acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) and acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). If a child has an identical twin who was diagnosed with ALL or AML before the age of six, the child has a 20 to 25 percent greater risk of developing the illness. Nonidentical twins and other siblings of children with leukemia have two to four times the average risk of developing the illness. Children with Down syndrome, Klinefelter syndrome, or other genetic syndromes and those who have received drugs following organ transplants also are at greater risk of developing leukemia. Children who have received radiation therapy or chemotherapy for other types of cancer have an increased risk of developing leukemia within eight years following treatment.

Etiology and the disease process: In childhood leukemia, an abnormal amount of white blood cells, or leukocytes, is produced in the bone marrow; these cells invade the bloodstream and deplete the body’s ability to fight infection. As the disease progresses, it affects the body’s ability to produce red blood cells and platelets, resulting in anemia, bleeding disorders, and continued risk of infection from the overproduction of white blood cells.

Lymphocytes are infection-fighting white blood cells that are made and stored in the lymph nodesorgans in the neck, groin, abdomen, chest, and armpitsspleen, thymus, tonsils, and bone marrow. In lymphoma, the white blood cells of the lymphatic system grow abnormally, producing cancerous cells called Reed-Sternberg cells. Although Hodgkin disease is most often seen in children aged fifteen years or older, nodular lymphocyte predominance (LP) is more common in younger children, accounting for about one-fifth of the incidence of most Hodgkin disease in children. Non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) occurs more often in boys than girls and most often between the ages of two and ten. Unlike the non-Hodgkin lymphoma seen in adults, most cases of NHL in children are of the fast-growing, aggressive typesuch as Burkitt lymphoma, non-Burkitt lymphoma, and lymphoblastic lymphoma.

Another common type of childhood cancer, neuroblastomas (solid tumors), often begins in one of the adrenal glands above the kidneys; the tumors can also can arise in nerve tissues in the neck, abdomen, pelvis, or chest. While the cause of neuroblastomas is unknown, they are believed to originate from anomalies during the normal development of the adrenal glands.

Incidence: Other than accidents, childhood cancer is the leading cause of death in the United States in children from infancy to fourteen years of age. However, childhood cancer is relatively rare. Incidence is higher for boys than girls, and cancer rates are higher for children under five years of age and those between the ages of fifteen and nineteen. The National Cancer Institute (NCI) estimated that, in 2023, 9,910 children and adolescents up to fourteen years old in the United States would be diagnosed with cancer and 1,040 would die of the disease.

According to the ACS, about 28 percent of cancers occurring in childhood are leukemias. Of these, the majority are cases of ALL, followed by acute AML. The next most common type was brain or spinal cord tumors at 26 percent, followed by lymphomas at eight percent. Leukemias are the most common cancer in those under age five (and decrease proportionally in those over age five), and lymphomas are most common in those fifteen to nineteen years old.

NCI's Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program reported that in 2022, the incidence of leukemia for individuals younger than fifteen was 5.6 cases per 100,000 people. For the same age group and time period, the incidence of Hodgkin lymphoma was 0.5 per 100,000, and the incidence of non-Hodgkin lymphoma was 1.0 per 100,000. For the same age group and period, the incidence of brain and other nervous system cancers was 3.1 per 100,000.

Other types of childhood cancer include:

  • Wilms’ tumor: affecting one or both kidneys and seen in children between two and three years of age
  • Neuroblastoma: the most common form of solid tumor occurring outside the brain in children, often diagnosed by one year of age
  • Retinoblastoma: eye cancer
  • Rhabdomyosarcoma: developing in cells that become mature voluntary muscle (the most common soft-tissue sarcoma seen in children)
  • Osteosarcoma: primary bone cancer

The NCI reported in 2023 that the mortality rate for childhood cancers had declined by more than 50 percent between 1975–2020, mainly because of early detection and advances in treatment. However, the incidence of all types of invasive cancer in children has increased slightly. The reasons for this increase in incidence are thought to be linked to improved survival rates. Additionally, the increase in the incidence of childhood cancer is in part attributed to advances in early detection, as technologies such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) allow more accurate and differential diagnosing of tumors. Such advances in detection methods have increased the discovery and diagnosis of malignant tumors.

Symptoms: The symptoms of childhood cancer vary by type, may mimic symptoms of other illnesses, and may include:

  • unexplained weight loss
  • headaches and vomiting
  • increased swelling or pain in bone, joints, back, or legs
  • a detectable lump or mass in the abdomen, pelvis, chest, armpit, or neck
  • unusual bleeding, bruising, or rash
  • recurring infections
  • sudden and persistent eye or vision changes
  • nausea or vomiting without nausea
  • a whitish color behind the pupil
  • tiredness or pallor
  • recurring and persistent fevers.

A child in the early stages of leukemia may not have these symptoms but may exhibit other changes in behavior, such as lacking the usual energy to engage in activities.

A painless swelling of the lymph nodes, fever, and fatigue are often symptoms of both Hodgkin disease and non-Hodgkin lymphoma. The type of Hodgkin disease most often seen in young adults ages fifteen and older is associated with these symptoms:

  • swollen lymph node in the neck, groin, or armpit
  • lethargy and weakness
  • facial swelling
  • night sweats
  • unexplained fever and weight loss
  • abdominal pain or swelling
  • difficulty breathing
  • general pain

Non-Hodgkin lymphoma may progress quickly in children, with many initially diagnosed at Stage III or IV, so these children may first complain of abdominal pain, fever, or constipation or decreased appetite originating from an abdominal mass.

Neuroblastoma, or a cancer of the sympathetic nervous system, the most common type of cancer in infants, is usually seen as a lump or mass in the abdomen causing swelling, discomfort, pain, or a feeling of fullness. A neuroblastoma can also occur in the pelvis, neck, or eye. Often the neuroblastoma may spread to bone, causing pain, limping, weakness, numbness, or inability to walk. In about one-quarter of cases, the child may develop fever; less common symptoms include rapid heartbeat, flushed skin, sweating, irritability, high blood pressure, and diarrhea.

Screening and diagnosis: No tests screen for childhood cancers such as leukemia or lymphoma; however, there are standard tests for diagnosing. Typically, a parent notices a change in a child’s behavior and brings the child to the doctor, who will conduct a complete physical and examine the child for enlargement of the lymph nodes, liver, or spleen. If a blood cancer such as leukemia is suspected, the doctor will order a complete blood count (CBC) with differential. A fraction of patients with leukemia may have a normal blood test result when diagnosed. Suspicious cases must have a bone marrow test to confirm leukemia diagnosis.

If Hodgkin disease or non-Hodgkin lymphoma is suspected, the doctor will do a thorough exam and order a CBC and a chest x-ray. If the diagnosis of lymphoma is confirmed, the doctor may refer the child to a specialist, such as a pediatric hematologist or oncologist, for further diagnostic tests such as a biopsy of the tumor to differentially diagnose the type of lymphoma, a bone marrow aspirate, or an imaging test such as a computed tomography (CT) scan.

Neuroblastomas are relatively rare, and screening for them in children with no symptoms is not believed to decrease mortality from the disease, so no screening test is conventionally used. Most neuroblastomas are detected within the first six months of life. A doctor who suspects an infant of having a neuroblastoma will order a urinalysis, which will reveal a higher-than-normal concentration of metabolites from the body’s breakdown of catecholamine neurotransmitters. Suppose the physical exam and urine chemistry results indicate a neuroblastoma. In that case, the doctor will proceed to order other tests, such as an x-ray, CT scan, abdominal ultrasound, CBC, blood test of liver and kidney function, bone scan, metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) scan, and bone marrow aspiration.

As in adult cancers, staging is used to describe the disease at the time of diagnosis and to help the doctor determine the type of therapy, its course, and its prognosis. Leukemia, unlike other childhood cancers, is staged based on its presence and proliferation in organs other than its presence in the bone marrow and blood. Other factors in staging include sex, race, organ spread, types of leukemic cells, presence of abnormal chromosomes, and response to treatment within seven to fourteen days of inception. Staging to assess a child’s prognosis seems to be more important in children with ALL than in those with AML. Age and white blood cell count (WBCC) are important factors in staging ALL, with children younger than one and older than ten at highest riskhaving a high white blood cell count of 50,000 cells per cubic millimeter.

Lymphoma is staged based on the extent of the disease. Stage I lymphoma is limited to one primary area of the lymph node or organ, while Stage IV indicates the lymphoma has spread to one or more tissues or organs outside the lymphatic system.

Neuroblastomas are staged I to IV-S, with Stage I being a tumor that is visible, localized, and can be removed. Stage IV is a cancer that has spread to distant lymph nodes or other parts of the body. In Stage IV-S, limited to a child under one year of age, the cancer has spread to skin, liver, or bone marrow but not to bone. Alternatively, neuroblastomas may be staged on the basis of low, intermediate, and high risk, depending on the features of the cancer cells, the age at which the child is diagnosed, and the stage of the disease.

Treatment and therapy: Childhood cancers are treated with surgery, chemotherapy, radiation therapy, or a combination of two or more therapies. Cancers in children, unlike those in many adults, typically are fast-growing and respond well to chemotherapy. Children are often treated in children’s cancer centers, which tend to offer new therapies and the latest treatment with clinical trials. The NCI recommends that children with cancer be treated by a multidisciplinary team consisting of a pediatric oncologist and other specialists and that all children be considered for clinical trials to test the effectiveness of existing treatments and evaluate the benefits and side effects of experimental therapies. The ACS recommends that parents ask their pediatric cancer team about the potential side effects of treatment before the regimen begins. Side effects include hair loss, fatigue, risk of infection, easy bruising or bleeding, vomiting, diarrhea, bone marrow changes leading to anemia, lower white blood cell counts leading to reduced ability to fight infections, and reduced platelet production leading to easy bleeding and bruising.

Treatment for the most common forms of cancer seen in children, acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) and acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), consists of three phases: induction, consolidation, and maintenance. Once the risk group stages the cancer, induction therapy is designed to induce remission. Leukemic cells are no longer present in bone marrow, normal cells return, and blood counts return to normal. Although induction therapy is intense and risks infection, more than 95 percent of children with ALL who receive this treatment experience remission following one month of treatment. Although the cancer is in remission, consolidation treatment lasting four to six months and maintenance therapy lasting at least two years are required to destroy all cancerous cells. These intravenous chemotherapies are coupled with intrathecal chemotherapy (drugs injected into the fluid surrounding the brain and spinal cord) to kill cancer cells that may have spread to the central nervous system. In addition, radiation therapy may be directed at the brain or spinal cord if the leukemia was present in cerebrospinal fluid at the time of diagnosis; however, the side effects and long-term effects of radiation on the brain are such that this type of radiation therapy is avoided whenever possible.

The three main types of therapy for Hodgkin's disease include radiation therapy to decrease tumors and destroy cancerous cells, chemotherapy or systemic drug therapy, and bone marrow and peripheral blood transplants, particularly for those whose disease recurs. The four types of non-Hodgkin lymphoma seen in childrenBurkitt, lymphoblastic, anaplastic large-cell lymphoma, and large B-cell lymphomamay be localized in a swollen lymph node, but often the disease has spread to other organs at the time of diagnosis.

Some neuroblastomas go away without treatment, while others commonly require surgery. Approximately half of the tumors spread to bone and bone marrow, requiring chemotherapy, radiation therapy, stem cell transplantation, or immunotherapy. The location of the tumor, age of the child, and diffusion of the tumor are factors in determining the recommended treatment.

Prognosis, prevention, and outcomes: Overall, death rates have declined, and five-year survival rates have increased for most types of childhood cancers. The increase in survival rates is attributable to new treatments resulting in cures or long-term remission for many children with cancer. Although the majority of cancers respond well to treatment, some will recur and require the child’s doctor to develop a new treatment plan.

Children with cancer respond to chemotherapies and tolerate treatment better than adults do, making their prognoses bright. However, children who survive cancer may have long-term effects that require lifelong follow-up. These late or delayed effects can include hormonal disturbances or other disorders in the endocrine system causing short stature, problems in puberty, thyroid or fertility disturbances, secondary learning difficulties, and other health consequences of the disease or treatment. Published data on long-term survivors of childhood cancers indicate that those most at risk of developing secondary sarcomascancers of connective or supportive tissue such as in bone, fat, or muscleare children whose primary cancer was in soft tissue, bone, or renal tissue, or was Hodgkin disease. Because sarcomas can occur anywhere in the body and are more difficult to detect, long-term aggressive follow-up of childhood cancer patients is critical to their staying healthy. Furthermore, data published in an analysis in the Journal of the American Medical Association in 2023 indicated that childhood cancer survivors are extremely likely to face further health issues, with 95 percent of the surveyed population developing a major health problem by age forty-five.

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