HomeAnswersMedical oncologymediastinal neuroblastomaWhat are the chances of recurrence of mediastinal neuroblastoma after surgery?

Will a mediastinal neuroblastoma reoccur after surgery?

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The following is an actual conversation between an iCliniq user and a doctor that has been reviewed and published as a Premium Q&A.

Medically reviewed by

Dr. Nithila. A

Published At July 15, 2019
Reviewed AtApril 28, 2022

Patient's Query

Hello doctor,

My son was diagnosed with mediastinal neuroblastoma before nine months. He had undergone surgery and tumor was removed completely he had undergone chemotherapy for six cycles before three months. And the myc test was negative and favorable histology and pathology report. I want to know what the chances of recurrence and how to take care of that are? Is there a chance that it recurs in some other place also?

Hello,

Welcome to icliniq.com.

Can you answer a few questions?

1. What was the baseline stage? Whether bone marrow, lymph nodes, or bones were involved? Baseline imaging?

2. What was the histopathology report after surgery?

3. What was a response after chemotherapy?

4. Any cytogenetic studies?

Neuroblastoma especially if the not high risk is highly curable. As per information available, he will be under the intermediate-risk group. Average five-year survival chance is 90 % in these cases. Usually, we keep patients on the follow-up to see for recurrence. There are no specific treatments to prevent recurrence in a low or intermediate-risk group as recurrences are rare. Transplant and new antibodies like anti GD2 are used in high-risk groups to prevent a recurrence. If you can provide me with the above details, I will be in a better position to answer your question.

Patient's Query

Thank you doctor,

It is not metatised. Bone marrow was not involved only a localized tumor. After surgery, it is like tumor was removed entirely. The response is fine as the doctor said. My doubt is regarding food habits. Is that true that broccoli is the best and eating sugar increases risk, and should we avoid sugar completely?

Hello,

Welcome back to icliniq.com.

As per food habits, nothing is medically proven. All these are just hypothesis, and nobody can say anything conclusive. He can take foods rich in antioxidants and avoid high-calorie diet. It is not in any recommendations to follow particular food habits. A normal balanced diet as per peers of his age is advised.

Same symptoms don't mean you have the same problem. Consult a doctor now!

Dr. Pawar Satyajit Jalinder
Dr. Pawar Satyajit Jalinder

Medical oncology

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