Risk-based treatment approaches for neuroblastoma have been ongoing for decades. However, the criteria used to define risk in various institutional and cooperative groups were disparate, limiting the ability to compare clinical trial results. To mitigate this problem and enhance collaborative research, homogenous pretreatment patient cohorts have been defined by the International Neuroblastoma Risk Group classification system. During the past 30 years, increasingly intensive, multimodality approaches have been developed to treat patients who are classified as high risk, whereas patients with low- or intermediate-risk neuroblastoma have received reduced therapy. This treatment approach has resulted in improved outcome, although survival for ...
Neuroblastoma is an embryonic cancer arising from neural crest stem cells. This cancer is the most c...
Background: Risk stratification is crucial to treatment decision-making in neuroblastoma. This study...
Background: The incidence of second malignant neoplasm (SMN) within the first ten years of diagnosis...
Close international collaboration between pediatric oncologists has led to marked improvements in th...
Through international collaboration we are at the start of a new age in the management of this enigm...
Neuroblastoma is a tumor with great clinical heterogeneity. Patients in North America are risk-strat...
IntroductionChildren with neuroblastoma have widely divergent outcomes, ranging from cure in >90%...
Neuroblastoma is one of the commonest childhood cancers and typically affects very young children. I...
Neuroblastoma, once called "enigmatic", due to "unpredictable" clinical behaviors, is composed of bi...
Neuroblastoma (NBL) is the most common extracranial solid tumor of childhood, with about 700 new cas...
Neuroblastoma serves as a paradigm for utilising tumour genomic data for determining patient prognos...
The clinical hallmark of neuroblastoma is heterogeneity, with the likelihood of cure varying widely ...
Neuroblastoma is one of the most common solid tumors of childhood, arising from immature sympathetic...
Neuroblastoma is the most common extracranial solid tumor in children. One subset, high-risk neurobl...
One of the main challenges in clinical cancer research remains to be accurate outcome prediction at ...
Neuroblastoma is an embryonic cancer arising from neural crest stem cells. This cancer is the most c...
Background: Risk stratification is crucial to treatment decision-making in neuroblastoma. This study...
Background: The incidence of second malignant neoplasm (SMN) within the first ten years of diagnosis...
Close international collaboration between pediatric oncologists has led to marked improvements in th...
Through international collaboration we are at the start of a new age in the management of this enigm...
Neuroblastoma is a tumor with great clinical heterogeneity. Patients in North America are risk-strat...
IntroductionChildren with neuroblastoma have widely divergent outcomes, ranging from cure in >90%...
Neuroblastoma is one of the commonest childhood cancers and typically affects very young children. I...
Neuroblastoma, once called "enigmatic", due to "unpredictable" clinical behaviors, is composed of bi...
Neuroblastoma (NBL) is the most common extracranial solid tumor of childhood, with about 700 new cas...
Neuroblastoma serves as a paradigm for utilising tumour genomic data for determining patient prognos...
The clinical hallmark of neuroblastoma is heterogeneity, with the likelihood of cure varying widely ...
Neuroblastoma is one of the most common solid tumors of childhood, arising from immature sympathetic...
Neuroblastoma is the most common extracranial solid tumor in children. One subset, high-risk neurobl...
One of the main challenges in clinical cancer research remains to be accurate outcome prediction at ...
Neuroblastoma is an embryonic cancer arising from neural crest stem cells. This cancer is the most c...
Background: Risk stratification is crucial to treatment decision-making in neuroblastoma. This study...
Background: The incidence of second malignant neoplasm (SMN) within the first ten years of diagnosis...