Results 171 to 180 of about 21,170 (204)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Pediatric Blood & Cancer, 2012
AbstractSuccessful treatment of recurrent hepatoblastoma (HB) relies largely on surgical resection. When tumors are responsive, chemotherapy can be used to render patients resectable. Various chemotherapeutic regimens studied in small numbers of patients on phase I/II trials have shown few responses.
Angela D, Trobaugh-Lotrario +1 more
openaire +2 more sources
AbstractSuccessful treatment of recurrent hepatoblastoma (HB) relies largely on surgical resection. When tumors are responsive, chemotherapy can be used to render patients resectable. Various chemotherapeutic regimens studied in small numbers of patients on phase I/II trials have shown few responses.
Angela D, Trobaugh-Lotrario +1 more
openaire +2 more sources
Fetal and Pediatric Pathology, 2008
We present the case of a Middle Eastern child, diagnosed and treated at 8 months of age for a hepatic neuroblastoma. After surgical removal of a 7 cm mass of the left liver lobe at our institution when the child was 15 months of age, the tumor was reclassified as a teratoid hepatoblastoma.
A. M. Buccoliero +8 more
openaire +3 more sources
We present the case of a Middle Eastern child, diagnosed and treated at 8 months of age for a hepatic neuroblastoma. After surgical removal of a 7 cm mass of the left liver lobe at our institution when the child was 15 months of age, the tumor was reclassified as a teratoid hepatoblastoma.
A. M. Buccoliero +8 more
openaire +3 more sources
Seminars in diagnostic pathology, 1995
Hepatoblastoma is the most frequently occurring liver tumor in children, accounting for over 25% pediatric hepatic tumors and nearly 50% of those that are malignant. Histologically, the tumor can be divided into the following six patterns: (1) fetal epithelial; (2) embryonal and fetal epithelial; (3) macrotrabecular; (4) small cell undifferentiated ...
openaire +1 more source
Hepatoblastoma is the most frequently occurring liver tumor in children, accounting for over 25% pediatric hepatic tumors and nearly 50% of those that are malignant. Histologically, the tumor can be divided into the following six patterns: (1) fetal epithelial; (2) embryonal and fetal epithelial; (3) macrotrabecular; (4) small cell undifferentiated ...
openaire +1 more source
Cisplatin versus Cisplatin plus Doxorubicin for Standard-Risk Hepatoblastoma
New England Journal of Medicine, 2009Giorgio Perilongo +2 more
exaly

