1. Types of Pediatric Cancers Requiring Surgery
A. Solid Tumors in the Abdomen & Pelvis
- Wilms Tumor (Nephroblastoma)
- Origin: Kidney
- Treatment: Nephrectomy (kidney removal), sometimes partial kidney removal in smaller tumors.
- Survival Rate: ~90% with surgery + chemotherapy.
- Neuroblastoma
- Origin: Nerve tissue (commonly in the adrenal glands)
- Treatment: Tumor resection, often combined with chemotherapy.
- High-risk Cases: May require bone marrow transplant after surgery.
- Hepatoblastoma & Hepatocellular Carcinoma (Liver Cancer)
- Origin: Liver
- Treatment: Liver tumor resection or liver transplant in advanced cases.
- Rhabdomyosarcoma (Soft Tissue Cancer)
- Origin: Muscles, tendons, or connective tissues
- Treatment: Surgery combined with chemotherapy/radiation.
B. Brain & Spinal Cord Tumors
- Medulloblastoma (Most Common Brain Cancer in Kids)
- Treatment: Craniotomy & tumor resection, followed by radiation/chemotherapy.
- Gliomas & Astrocytomas
- Treatment: Partial or total tumor removal; difficult-to-reach tumors may be treated with targeted therapies.
- Ependymomas (Brain & Spinal Tumors)
- Treatment: Surgical removal + radiation therapy for complete eradication.
C. Thoracic (Chest) & Bone Tumors
- Ewing Sarcoma & Osteosarcoma
- Origin: Bones (often in arms, legs, or pelvis)
- Treatment: Limb-sparing surgery or amputation if necessary, followed by chemotherapy.
- Germ Cell Tumors (Testicular or Ovarian Tumors)
- Treatment: Surgical removal; chemotherapy in malignant cases.
2. Pediatric Cancer Surgery Techniques
A. Open Surgery (Traditional Surgery)
- Used for large tumors, deep-seated cancers, and complex surgeries like nephrectomy (kidney removal) or hepatectomy (liver tumor removal).
B. Minimally Invasive Surgery (Laparoscopy & Thoracoscopy)
- Used for small, localized tumors to reduce pain, scarring, and recovery time.
- Common in kidney, liver, and ovarian tumors.
C. Limb-Sparing Surgery for Bone Cancers
- In cases of osteosarcoma & Ewing sarcoma, instead of amputation, surgeons remove the affected bone and replace it with an implant or bone graft.
D. Fetal Surgery for Rare Tumors
- Some tumors, like sacrococcygeal teratoma, can be partially treated before birth to improve survival rates.
3. Post-Surgical Care & Recovery
A. Immediate Postoperative Care
- ICU Monitoring: Some children may need ventilator support in complex surgeries.
- Pain Management: Medications to ensure comfort.
- Nutritional Support: Some children may need feeding tubes if they cannot eat after surgery.
B. Long-Term Follow-Up
- Physical Therapy: Especially after limb-sparing surgeries or brain tumor removals.
- Regular Scans (MRI/CT/PET): To detect recurrences or complications.
- Psychosocial Support: Counseling for both the child and family.
4. Advances in Pediatric Cancer Surgery
- Robotic-Assisted Surgery – Offers better precision in delicate areas (e.g., brain & spine tumors).
- 3D Imaging & AI in Tumor Mapping – Helps plan complex surgeries with greater accuracy.
- Targeted Therapy & Immunotherapy – Combined with surgery for aggressive cancers.
5. Prognosis & Survival Rates
- Wilms Tumor → ~90% survival with surgery & chemotherapy.
- Neuroblastoma → Early-stage: 95% survival, High-risk: 50-70%.
- Osteosarcoma & Ewing Sarcoma → 60-80% if localized, lower if spread.
- Brain Tumors (Medulloblastoma, Astrocytoma) → 50-80% depending on type & location.