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Dive into the research topics where Edith P. Hawkins is active.

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Featured researches published by Edith P. Hawkins.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1999

Complete Surgical Excision Is Effective Treatment for Children With Immature Teratomas With or Without Malignant Elements: A Pediatric Oncology Group/Children's Cancer Group Intergroup Study

Neyssa Marina; Barbara Cushing; Roger Giller; Lewis Cohen; Stephen J. Lauer; Arthur R. Ablin; Robert M. Weetman; John W. Cullen; Paul C. Rogers; Charles Vinocur; Charles J.H. Stolar; Fred Rescorla; Edith P. Hawkins; Stephen A. Heifetz; Pejaver V. Rao; Mark Krailo; Robert P. Castleberry

PURPOSE To determine whether the 3-year event-free survival (EFS) of children with completely resected immature teratomas is greater than 85%. PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients with immature teratomas treated at Pediatric Oncology Group or Childrens Cancer Group institutions were eligible. Pathology was centrally reviewed to confirm diagnosis and tumor grading. Follow-up included physical examination, measurement of tumor markers (alpha fetoprotein and human chorionic gonadotropin), and imaging. All patients were monitored for events, defined as tumor recurrence, second malignancy, or death. RESULTS Seventy-three children (median age, 7.8 years) with extracranial immature teratomas were enrolled on study. Primary tumor sites included ovarian (n = 44), testicular (n = 7), and extragonadal (n = 22). However, on review, 23 patients had foci of yolk sac tumor (n = 21) or primitive neuroectodermal tumor (n = 2), whereas 50 had pure immature teratomas. Twenty-five patients had increased alpha fetoprotein (n = 18), human chorionic gonadotropin (n = 5), or both (n = 2); nine had foci of yolk sac tumor on review. Pathology review identified 23 patients with grade 1, 29 with grade 2, and 21 with grade 3 immature teratomas. With a median follow-up of 35 months, the overall 3-year EFS was 93% (95% confidence interval, 86% to 98%), with 3-year EFS of 97.8%, 100%, and 80% for patients with ovarian, testicular, and extragonadal tumors, respectively. Only four of 23 patients with immature teratoma and malignant foci developed recurrence, suggesting that surgical resection followed by close observation are effective treatment. Overall, five patients had disease recurrence 4 to 7 months from diagnosis, and four (80%) are disease free after platinum-based therapy. The fifth patient has residual tumor after cisplatin, etoposide, and bleomycin treatment requiring further therapy. CONCLUSION Surgical excision is safe and effective treatment for 80% to 100% of children with immature teratoma.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1999

Surgical resection alone is effective treatment for ovarian immature teratoma in children and adolescents: A report of the Pediatric Oncology Group and the Children’s Cancer Group☆☆☆★★★

Barbara Cushing; Roger Giller; Arthur R. Ablin; Lewis Cohen; John W. Cullen; Edith P. Hawkins; Stephen A. Heifetz; Mark Krailo; Stephen J. Lauer; Neyssa Marina; Pejaver V. Rao; Frederick J. Rescorla; Charles Vinocur; Robert M. Weetman; Robert P. Castleberry

OBJECTIVE In both adult women and children the potential for malignant recurrence from ovarian immature teratoma has prompted the standard use of chemotherapy after complete resection of the primary tumor. The efficacy of postoperative chemotherapy in children and adolescents with ovarian immature teratoma, however, has not been established. A pediatric intergroup trial (INT 0106) was designed to determine the need for postoperative chemotherapy in patients with ovarian immature teratoma after management with surgical resection only. STUDY DESIGN Between 1990 and 1995, 44 patients with completely resected ovarian immature tumor and without postoperative chemotherapy, who were able to undergo assessment, were accrued. Tumor tissue was evaluated by central pathology review to confirm diagnosis and determine tumor grading of immature neural elements. Patients were followed carefully for recurrence of disease with appropriate diagnostic imaging and serum marker studies. RESULTS Thirty-one patients had pure ovarian immature teratoma with a tumor grade of 1 (n = 17), 2 (n = 12), or 3 (n = 2). Age at diagnosis ranged between 1.5 and 15 years (median, 10). Of the 29 patients studied, the serum alpha-fetoprotein level was elevated in 10 (34%); the median level was 25 ng/ml. Thirteen patients had ovarian immature teratoma plus microscopic foci of yolk sac tumor. Tumor grade was 1, 2, or 3 in 1, 6, and 6 patients, respectively. Age ranged between 6 and 20 years (median, 12). In the 12 patients evaluated for serum alpha-fetoprotein, 10 (83%) had elevated levels; the median level was 262 ng/ml. The 4-year event-free and overall survival for the ovarian immature teratoma group and for the ovarian immature teratoma plus yolk sac tumor group was 97.7% (95% confidence interval, 84.9%-99.7%) and 100%, respectively. The only yolk sac tumor relapse occurred in a child with ovarian immature teratoma and yolk sac tumor who was then treated with chemotherapy and is alive and free of disease 57 months after recurrence. CONCLUSION The results of this study suggest that surgery alone is curative for most children and adolescents with resected ovarian immature teratoma of any grade, even when elevated levels of serum alpha-fetoprotein or microscopic foci of yolk sac tumor are present. This experience strongly supports avoiding the long-term effects of chemotherapy in most children with ovarian immature teratoma by reserving postoperative therapy for cases with relapse.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 1998

Immature teratomas in children : Pathologic considerations a report from the combined Pediatric Oncology Group/Children's Cancer Group

Stephen A. Heifetz; Barbara Cushing; Roger Giller; Jonathan Shuster; Charles J.H. Stolar; Charles D. Vinocur; Edith P. Hawkins

Pediatric germ cell tumors (n = 135) with a major component of immature teratoma (IT) registered on Pediatric Oncology Group/Childrens Cancer Group treatment protocols from 1990 to 1995 were reviewed. Sixty cases were pure IT with no malignant component and 75 were mixed tumors with a major component of IT. Foci of yolk sac tumor (YST) were present in all 75 mixed tumors; additional malignant components were present in 15. The IT component was as follows: 47% grade 3, 29% grade 2, 24% grade 1. There were no significant correlations between tumor grade and patient age by specific subsets or overall (all p > 0.10). Significant correlations were detected between stage and the presence of foci of YST (p = 0.0145) and grade and the presence of foci of YST (p < 0.001). Serum alpha-fetoprotein concentrations were elevated at diagnosis in 96% of ovarian tumors with foci of YST and were mildly elevated (< 60 ng/dL) in only 16% of tumors without YST. Overall 2- to 6-year survival rate was 96% and was related to the presence of YST. Central pathologic review revealed aspects of morphologic diagnosis that were most frequently misinterpreted by contributing pathologists. These included the classification of differentiating tissues as immature and the failure to recognize two well-differentiated patterns of YST (the hepatoid pattern resembling fetal liver and the well-differentiated glandular pattern resembling fetal lung or intestine). Such foci were often overlooked. The authors conclude that the presence of microscopic foci of YST, rather than the grade of IT, per se, is the only valid predictor of recurrence in pediatric IT at any site.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1987

Incessant ventricular tachycardia in infants: myocardial hamartomas and surgical cure.

Arthur Garson; Richard T. Smith; Jeffrey P. Moak; Debra L. Kearney; Edith P. Hawkins; Jack L. Titus; Denton A. Cooley; David A. Ott

Infants with incessant ventricular tachycardia (occurring greater than 10% of the day) have generally been described in pathologic studies. This report describes 21 patients with incessant ventricular tachycardia present greater than 90% of the day and night; the age at diagnosis ranged from birth to 30 months (mean 10.5 months). The most common clinical presentation was cardiac arrest (11 patients, in 5 after digitalis for presumed supraventricular tachycardia); another 6 patients had congestive heart failure and 4 were asymptomatic. Three patients had coexisting Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome. The rate of incessant ventricular tachycardia ranged from 167 to 440 (mean 260 beats/min) and the QRS duration from 0.06 to 0.11 second. The most common electrocardiographic (ECG) pattern (10 of 21) was right bundle branch block with left axis deviation, but other right and left bundle branch block patterns were observed. Conventional and investigational antiarrhythmic agents (nine patients received amiodarone) failed to eliminate incessant ventricular tachycardia in all. Electrophysiologic studies localized incessant ventricular tachycardia to the left ventricle in 17 (to the apex in 2, the free wall in 9 and the septum in 6) and to the right ventricular septum in 4. No structural abnormalities were found on the echocardiogram or angiocardiogram. All 21 patients had surgery at an age of 3.5 to 31 months (mean 16). In 15 a tumor was found: 13 myocardial hamartomas (9 discrete, 4 diffuse throughout both ventricles) and 2 rhabdomyomas (1 multiple). Myocarditis was found in one patient (the oldest). In four, only myocardial fibrosis was found; results of one biopsy were normal.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Cancer | 1986

Comparison of adrenal cortical tumors in children and adults

Philip T. Cagle; Aubrey J. Hough; T. Pysher Jeffrey; David L. Page; Ed H. Johnson; Rebecca T. Kirkland; John H. Holcombe; Edith P. Hawkins

Morphologic features (abnormal mitoses, necrosis, vascular and capsular invasion, broad fibrous bands, cellular pleomorphism, size) previously suggested to be predictors of malignant behavior in adrenal cortical tumors were assessed individually in 23 (17 benign, 6 malignant) pediatric and 42 (29 benign, 13 malignant) adult tumors. Of these features, size was the only predictor of malignancy in pediatric tumors. All pediatric tumors weighing more than 500 g were malignant and all but one weighing less than 500 g were benign. The remaining features were present in both benign and malignant pediatric tumors, and pediatric benign tumors were significantly more likely to have mitoses (P <0.01), necrosis (P <0.001), broad fibrous bands (P <0.005), and moderate to severe pleomorphism (P <0.01) than were adult benign tumors. The authors conclude that pediatric tumors are more likely to be benign than previously thought, and that size is the only morphologic predictor of their biologic behavior.


Fetal and Pediatric Pathology | 1994

Cytogenetic analysis of childhood endodermal sinus tumors: A pediatric oncology group study

Elizabeth J. Perlman; Barbara Cushing; Edith P. Hawkins; Constance A. Griffin

Most adult germ cell tumors have a consistent cytogenetic abnormality, i(12p), and are aneuploid. Many pediatric germ cell tumors are biologically distinct from their adult counterparts, particularly endodermal sinus tumors (ESTs) of young children. We report cytogenetic and ploidy analysis of nine ESTs involving children under 3 years of age (four extragonadal and five testicular). Structural abnormalities were present in seven tumors and were identifiable in six: 5/6 had a structural abnormality of chromosome 1, usually terminal deletion of 1p; 5/6 showed 6q deletion; 3/6 had structural abnormalities of 3p; 2/6 showed abnormalities of chromosome 2. None showed an i(12p) or abnormality of chromosome 12. Ploidy analysis of the tumors correlated with the cytogenetic analysis; in particular, the tumor that was cytogenetically normal showed no aneuploid peaks. To determine if a marker chromosome was derived from chromosome 12 or if karyotypically normal cases included nondividing tumor cells, interphase fluorescence in situ hybridization using an alpha satellite probe for chromosome 12 was performed. These studies showed no evidence of an i(12p). We conclude that ESTs in young children show cytogenetic differences from their adult counterparts and that loci on 1p, 6q, and 3q need to be further studied.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1984

Surgical Treatment of Ventricular Tachycardia in Infants

Arthur Garson; Paul C. Gillette; Jack L. Titus; Edith P. Hawkins; Debra L. Kearney; David A. Ott; Denton A. Cooley; Dan G. McNamara

VENTRICULAR tachycardia is a rare arrhythmia in infancy,1 , 2 and is usually associated with the long-QT-interval syndrome,3 myocardial disease such as that found in myocarditis, congestive or hype...


Cancer | 1986

Nongerminomatous malignant germ cell tumors in children: a review of 89 cases from the pediatric oncology group, 1971-1984

Edith P. Hawkins; Milton J. Finegold; Hal K. Hawkins; Jeffrey P. Krischer; Kenneth A. Starling; Arthur G. Weinberg

Clinical and morphologic features of 89 cases of childhood yolk sac tumor (YS) and embryonal carcinoma (EC) (29 associated with teratomas) submitted to the Rare Tumor Registry of the Southwest Oncology Group (1971–1979) or the Pediatric Oncology Group (1980–1984) between 1971 and 1984 were reviewed and submitted to statistical analysis. This review showed an improved survival for each 5‐year period regardless of tumor site, no statistically significant difference between “pure” tumors and those mixed with other teratomatous components, no statistically significant difference between YS and EC in children, a better than reported prognosis for sacrococcygeal tumors occurring after the neonatal period, a particularly poor prognosis for neonatal “benign” sacrococcygeal teratomas respected without coccygectomy when they recur as YS, excellent survival for all testicular tumors regardless of age or the presence of EC, and the occurrence of mediastinal tumors in females.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1980

X-Linked Lymphoproliferative Syndrome Registry report

Janet K. Hamilton; Louise A. Paquin; John L. Sullivan; Helen S. Maurer; Frank G. Cruzi; Arthur J. Provisor; C. Philip Steuber; Edith P. Hawkins; David H. Yawn; Jo Ann Cornet; Kathryn Clausen; Gerald Z. Finkelstein; Benjamin H. Landing; Margaret L. Grunnet; David T. Purtilo

Immune deficiency, especially to the Epstein-Barr virus, and increased susceptibility to fatal infectious mononucleosis, acquired agammoglobulinemia, and lymphoma are the cardinal features of the X-linked lymphoproliferative syndrome. Since the establishment of the XLP Registry in September, 1978, 59 affected males in seven unrelated kindreds were comprehensively studied. A spectrum of lymphoproliferative phenotypes was observed. Thirty-four patients (57%) died from infectious mononucleosis, eight (14%) had fatal infectious mononucleosis with lymphoma (immunoblastic sarcoma), nine (15%) had depressed immunity following EBV infection, and eight (14%) developed lymphoma. Several patients with XLP lacked EBV antibodies despite infection by EBV. The results of this study suggest that EBV can be an oncogenic agent in patients who are immune deficient with XLP.


Cancer | 1980

Congenital generalized fibromatosis with visceral involvement. A case report.

Victor L. Roggli; Han-Seob Kim; Edith P. Hawkins

A case of congenital generalized fibromatosis in a black male infant with involvement of lungs, subcutaneous tissue, pancreas, adrenal, lymph nodes, and bone is described. Fifteen prior cases with pulmonary involvement are reviewed, emphasizing the poor prognosis associated with pulmonary lesions. This case demonstrated, in addition to previously described histologic features, broad bands of fibroblastic proliferation in the interlobular septa producing retraction of the visceral pleura. Possible etiologic factors are discussed, with suggestions for additional studies in future cases.

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Roger Giller

University of Colorado Denver

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Sheldon L. Kaplan

Baylor College of Medicine

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Edward O. Mason

Baylor College of Medicine

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Charles Vinocur

Riley Hospital for Children

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Claire Langston

Baylor College of Medicine

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Eileen D. Brewer

Baylor College of Medicine

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