Abstract

Neuroblastoma is one of the most common solid tumors of childhood, arising from immature sympathetic nervous system cells. The clinical course of patients with neuroblastoma is highly variable, ranging from spontaneous regression to widespread metastatic disease. Although the outcome for children with cancer has improved considerably during the past decades, the prognosis of children with aggressive neuroblastoma remains dismal. The clinical heterogeneity of neuroblastoma mirrors the biological and genetic heterogeneity of these tumors. Ploidy and MYCN amplification have been used as genetic markers for risk stratification and therapeutic decision making, and, more recently, gene expression profiling and genome-wide DNA copy number analysis have come into the picture as sensitive and specific tools for assessing prognosis. The applica tion of new genetic tools also led to the discovery of an important familial neuroblastoma cancer gene, ALK, which is mutated in approximately 8% of sporadic tumors, and genome-wide association studies have unveiled loci with risk alleles for neuroblastoma development. For some of the genomic regions that are deleted in some neuroblastomas, on 1p, 3p and 11q, candidate tumor suppressor genes have been identified. In addition, evidence has emerged for the contribution of epigenetic disturbances in neuroblastoma oncogenesis. As in other cancer entities, altered microRNA expression is also being recognized as an important player in neuroblastoma. The recent successes in unraveling the genetic basis of neuroblastoma are now opening opportunities for development of targeted therapies.

Highlights

  • Neuroblastoma (NB) is the most common extra-cranial solid tumor of childhood

  • The International Neuroblastoma Risk Grouping Staging System takes into account the extent of disease at diagnosis as well as risk factors and stages defined using imaging to classify NBs from patients from all over the world in a uniform manner [3,4]

  • Stage Ms tumors are characterized by spontaneous regression or differentiation even without any form of therapy

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Summary

Introduction

Neuroblastoma (NB) is the most common extra-cranial solid tumor of childhood. It has an incidence of 1 to 5 per million children per year and it is responsible for approximately 15% of all childhood cancer mortality. Amplification of the MYCN gene is most often found in high-stage tumors and is a marker for poor outcome [13,14]. This finding suggests the presence of one or more tumor suppressor gene(s) in this chromosome region.

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