Abstract

Subfractionation of serum alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) is a useful method to discriminate between yolk sac tumors, hepatic malignancies, and benign liver diseases in adults but has not been validated in infants and children. AFP subfractionation was performed on AFP-positive sera from 73 infants and children. AFP subfraction profiles were classified into three common types: (1) yolk sac type, (2) hepatoblastoma type, and (3) benign hepatic type, according to the reactivity of individual AFP samples to lectins. In 68 of 73 samples (93.2%), AFP subfraction profiles were accurately classified into these three types, and an atypical AFP subfraction profile resembling the hepatoblastoma type was found in sera from five infants (6.8%). Differentiation between hepatoblastoma and hepatitis when patients are very young can be difficult. Subfractionation is more accurate when patients are older. This technique was found to be useful in the diagnosis of neonatal ovarian tumors, in recurrent hepatoblastoma/yolk sac tumor with low serum AFP, and in the differential diagnosis of hepatic mass (malignancy versus hyperplastic nodule) in the liver with long-standing cholestasis. Estimation of serum AFP subfraction profiles facilitates the differential diagnosis of various AFP-positive pediatric diseases, such as hepatoblastoma, hepatoma, hepatitis or germ cell tumors. This test is inexpensive, can be carried out within 48 hours, and should be performed for the differnetial diagnosis of pediatric liver disease.

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