Abstract
Wilms tumour (WT) is a childhood embryonal tumour that is paradigmatic of the intersection between disrupted organogenesis and tumorigenesis. Many WT genes play a critical (non-redundant) role in early nephrogenesis. Improving patient outcomes requires advances in understanding and targeting of the multiple genes and cellular control pathways now identified as active in WT development. Decades of clinical and basic research have helped to gradually optimize clinical care. Curative therapy is achievable in 90% of affected children, even those with disseminated disease, yet survival disparities within and between countries exist and deserve commitment to change. Updated epidemiological studies have also provided novel insights into global incidence variations. Introduction of biology-driven approaches to risk stratification and new drug development has been slower in WT than in other childhood tumours. Current prognostic classification for children with WT is grounded in clinical and pathological findings and in dedicated protocols on molecular alterations. Treatment includes conventional cytotoxic chemotherapy and surgery, and radiation therapy in some cases. Advanced imaging to capture tumour composition, optimizing irradiation techniques to reduce target volumes, and evaluation of newer surgical procedures are key areas for future research.
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Introduction
Wilms tumour (WT) is the most common renal tumour of infants and young children1,2. WT is intimately linked to early nephrogenesis, which it resembles morphologically3 and transcriptionally4,5. WT may occur sporadically or in the context of bilateral tumours, multifocal disease and specified genetic predisposition syndromes that frequently include either genitourinary malformation or overgrowth3. Beyond genetic predisposition, external causative factors for WT are not yet defined. The molecular drivers frequently involve blockade of genetic pathways that guide normal embryogenesis of the genitourinary tract but are not restricted to these. Indeed, the cancer genes that underpin WT are diverse and surprisingly involve ~40 genes.
The implementation of international co-operative group trials and studies across North America, Australia, New Zealand, Europe and Brazil has contributed significantly to improving outcomes6,7,8. Two international multidisciplinary cooperative consortia — the Children’s Oncology Group (COG) Renal Tumour Committee, previously known as the National Wilms Tumour Study Group (NWTSG), and the International Society of Paediatric Oncology (SIOP) Renal Tumour Study Group (RTSG) — have conducted large multicentre studies since 1969 and 1971, respectively, which have defined the current diagnostic and therapeutic approach to patients with WT (Fig. 1). These groups continue research to optimize disease and patient risk classification and treatment strategies9,10,11.
In the COG, WTs are treated with primary resection (if possible), followed by risk-adapted adjuvant therapy, whereas in the context of SIOP cooperation, neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by resection and adjuvant therapy is the preferred treatment approach. Regardless of the initial approach, the overall survival of children with WT is remarkable with rates of >90%. Such satisfying survival rates have been achieved at the same time as fine-tuning treatment by adopting well-studied prognostic factors, leading to a two-drug regimen (vincristine and actinomycin D) prescribed in nearly two-thirds of affected children7,10. Notably, striking survival disparities still exist within countries12 and between different parts of the world, which remain to be addressed13,14. However, 20% of patients relapse after first-line therapy and up to 25% of survivors report severe late morbidity of treatment15,16. Addressing the long-term effect of radical nephrectomy on renal function and cardiovascular function will probably drive more attention on expanding the role of nephron-sparing surgery (NSS)17.
Molecular studies are expanding the landscape of cancer genes implicated in WT beyond exclusive roles in nephrogenesis3. The use of next-generation integrative genomic and epigenetic tumour analysis has provided important insights into WT biology. Comparisons of the regulation of progenitor cells in the fetal kidney with the disrupted regulation of their counterparts in WT should provide further insights into tumour formation18. Targeting WT tumour genes with a non-redundant role in nephrogenesis and targeting the fetal renal transcriptome warrant further therapeutic exploration. Interventions that could prevent the evolution of nephrogenic rests to malignant WT could transform therapy in this setting and could even lead to preventive strategies in children known to be at high risk of developing WT.
This Primer describes our current understanding of WT epidemiology, disease susceptibility and mechanisms, as well as elements of clinical care, including diagnostics and risk-stratified treatment of newly diagnosed disease. In addition, we also outline potential opportunities to further translate new biological insights into improved clinical outcomes. We discuss how the widespread implementation of standardized diagnostics and treatments for as many children as possible, regardless of socioeconomic status or geographical region of origin, may propel further clinical advances.
Epidemiology
Global disease burden
Malignant renal tumours comprise 5% of all cancers occurring before the age of 15 years19. Every year ~14,000 children (0–14 years of age) are diagnosed worldwide, and 5,000 children die from these diseases, with regional variation in mortality20 (Fig. 2). The incidence of childhood renal tumours is not associated with economic status, but mortality is higher in low-income areas than high-income areas (0.5 per million in high-income areas versus 7.5 per million in low-income areas).
WT is the most common renal tumour in children1 and studies have found variation in incidence between regions or ethnicities2,21 (Fig. 3). The annual incidence of WT in East Asia is lower than in North America or Europe (4.3 per million versus 8–9 per million)2. In the USA, children with African-American ancestry have the highest incidence (9.7 per million) whilst those with Asian-Pacific Islander ancestry have the lowest (3.7 per million)2. However, owing to the lack of population-based childhood cancer registries in resource-constrained regions, or because of the low quality of the data (that is, not all cancers are reported or not all children are reported), the estimation of global incidence has been difficult14,22,23. In addition, 50% of patients from areas with less resources have metastases at diagnosis24.
Up to 17% of WT occur as part of a recognizable malformation syndrome25, 10% of which are associated with known WT predisposition26 (Table 1). Overgrowth syndromes, in particular Beckwith–Wiedemann syndrome, carry ~5% risk of developing WT, ranging from 0.2% to 24% according to the underlying genetic cause27,28,29. Syndromes involving genitourinary anomalies combined with aniridia and variable intellectual disability, or with nephrotic syndrome, are associated with mutations of the gene WT1 on chromosome 11p13 and these patients have a greatly increased risk of developing WT3,30,31.
No temporal trends in the incidence of WT were observed within the period 1996–2010 (ref.2), suggesting that environmental factors play a marginal role in WT aetiology. Nevertheless, modifiable risk factors for WT are not well understood.
Influence of sex and age
WT is one of the few childhood cancers that is more common (~10%) in girls than in boys19. The age-specific incidence of WT peaks at 1 year of age in boys at 17.9 per million person-years. However, in girls, a similar peak remains almost constant at 1, 2 and 3 years of age, with the respective incidences of 17.8, 18.0 and 18.1 per million person-years (Fig. 4).
WT often presents as a solitary lesion, but ~7% are reported to be multifocal and 5–9% bilateral1,2,32. Unilateral tumours occur at a slightly older age than bilateral ones (Fig. 4). The age distribution at diagnosis varies by region and ethnicity, with affected individuals in East Asia being younger at diagnosis than those in the rest of the world, and this observation may be mainly due to earlier onset of the disease2,21,33 (Fig. 4). As one possible reason of the variation in age at onset, somatic tumour genetic analysis has shown a lower frequency of tumours with H19–IGF2 loss of imprinting among Japanese patients with WT than in Caucasian populations34. H19–IGF2 loss of imprinting-driven WTs are associated with overgrowth syndromes and with perilobar nephrogenic rests; both these features are more common in Caucasian children with older age at diagnosis than in Japanese children (median age at diagnosis was 39 months in UK patients with WT versus 28 months in a similar Japanese patient cohort)33,34,35. The observation of the incidence peak in infancy and the lower total incidence in East Asian populations is consistent with genetic factors primarily driving WT. Studies with large samples from many countries and different ethnic groups will be needed to validate the likelihood that the genetic heterogeneity of WT explains this variation in clinical features by ethnicity.
Mechanisms/pathophysiology
WT is an embryonal malignancy thought to arise through abortive or disrupted development36. During kidney embryogenesis, intermediate mesoderm differentiates into metanephric mesenchyme, which condenses around the branching ureteric bud structures. This metanephric mesenchyme undergoes a mesenchymal to epithelial transformation to form renal vesicles, which expand and give rise to the majority of cell types of the functional kidney37. In WT, this process can be disrupted at different levels, leading to variable mixtures of blastemal, epithelial and stromal cells that may even exhibit myogenic differentiation. Histology is partly shaped by the underlying genetic defects but may also reflect the timing of divergence from normal nephrogenesis (Fig. 5).
Our understanding of the genetic causes of WT has long been limited to mutations of WT1, CTNNB1 and WTX as well as loss of H19–IGF2 imprinting, but these alterations only explain a subset of cases38. Additional features such as allele loss on chromosomes 1p and 16q or gain of 1q may underpin aggressive clinical behaviour in some cases, but do not provide mechanistic insights into tumour development or therapeutic targets39,40,41. Next-generation sequencing analyses have unveiled many additional drivers, mostly chromatin-modifying and transcription factors as well as microRNA (miRNA) processing genes, many of which are involved in normal renal development42,43,44 (Table 2; Box 1). A surprisingly large fraction of WT (up to 17%) occur in the context of genetic malformation syndromes associated with tumour predisposition25 (Table 1). The paradigms are WAGR syndrome and Beckwith–Wiedemann syndrome, which led to the understanding that defects in the tumour suppressor gene WT1 and loss of H19–IGF2 imprinting predisposes to WT.
WT1, CTNNB1 and stromal WT
WT1 was originally identified through homozygous deletions in WT45,46. Nevertheless, the functions of this zinc finger protein are more complex — germline inactivation leads to male genitourinary anomalies, such as hypospadias, cryptorchidism, through haploinsufficiency and is associated with an increased risk of developing WT (>50%)47. Additionally, dominant-negative mutations, especially of the zinc finger domains that abrogate DNA binding, lead to Denys–Drash syndrome with intersex and renal failure due to diffuse mesangial sclerosis and the risk of developing WT increased >90%48. Of note, Frasier syndrome, in which intronic mutations alter the balance of WT1 splice isoforms rather than altering the WT1 protein amino acid sequence, includes different forms of intersex and renal failure, and carries a risk of gonadoblastoma in streak gonads rather than WT49,50.
Mutations in WT1 are often paired with frequent alterations of CTNNB1, which lead to constitutive Wnt signalling51. In most cases, point mutations or deletions are observed in the phosphodegron motif in exon 3, leading to β-catenin stabilization and nuclear accumulation, where it acts as co-activator with the TCF–LEF transcription factors. These tumours usually exhibit stromal-predominant histology, decreased response to preoperative chemotherapy and represent up to 15% of cases in Caucasian populations52. Notably, although the incidence of WT in Japanese children is only 50% of that found in Caucasian children, an increased rate of WT1 mutations (81%) is observed in bilateral WTs, which points to differences in genetic constitutions53. WT1-driven stromal tumours occur at a median age of 22 months and are characterized by the presence of intralobar nephrogenic rests as presumed precursor lesions. WTX may likewise facilitate Wnt signalling as it is part of the β-catenin degradation complex. Mutations or loss of expression of WTX are observed in up to 30% across histological subtypes, but with intratumoural heterogeneity, suggestive of a late event54.
H19–IGF2 imprinting
Chromosome 11p15.5 is frequently altered in WT through copy-neutral loss of heterozygosity with invariant loss of the maternal allele or loss of imprinting with epigenetic changes on the maternal allele. The net outcome being hypermethylation of the imprinting centre IC1 with elevated expression of the neighbouring growth factor gene IGF2, among others. With ~70% incidence of such alterations, overexpression of IGF2 is the most frequent change in WT43,44,52. However, tumour initiation may require additional events as loss of imprinting on its own in Beckwith–Wiedemann syndrome only modestly increases WT risk27.
microRNA biogenesis mutations
An unexpected addition to WT driver genes is miRNA processing genes. miRNA biogenesis covers a stepwise maturation process from pri-miRNA via pre-miRNA to mature miRNA. Mutations in WT primarily affect the so-called microprocessor genes DROSHA and DGCR8, which are involved in pri-miRNA processing43,44,55,56. Heterozygous DROSHA mutations tend to inactivate the catalytic core of one of the two RNAse III domains that processes pri-miRNA molecules. DGCR8 mutations affect a single amino acid (E518K) in one of the double-stranded RNA binding domains and the mutations occur homozygously or with monoallelic expression of the mutant. The net result is a reduced and unbalanced miRNA processing. DGCR8 mutations have been observed predominantly in girls, which remains to be explained.
DICER1, which encodes the second RNAse III type enzyme, is rarely mutated in WT, but predisposes to pleuropulmonary blastoma and is implicated in the very rare entity, anaplastic sarcoma of the kidney57,58. The catalytic centre is often mutated on the single functional allele, leading to a partial processing defect with a deficiency in miRNA-5p and largely unaffected miRNA-3p levels.
Studies have found further mutations in XPO5 (encoding exportin 5), the DICER1 cofactor TARBP2 and downstream let-7 miRNA modulators such as DIS3L2 or LIN28B at a lower frequency in the 1% range but the mechanistic details are as yet unclear. Nevertheless, almost all steps of miRNA biogenesis can be critically altered to drive WT formation and several of these mutations are rather specific to WT. The fact that most mutations do not fully abrogate miRNA production implies that specific miRNA subsets are important to control deviation from regular developmental progression or cell proliferation and survival.
MYCN and transcriptional control
Alterations in MYCN may contribute to WT biology in several ways. Elevated expression levels have been described, especially in relapsing and fatal cases. Furthermore, studies have identified specific P44L point mutations or copy number gains with one or a few additional copies44,55,59. Proline 44 is located immediately upstream of the conserved MYC box I that interacts with AURKB, FBXW7 (ref.60) and GSK3 to control N-Myc stability. Stabilization occurs through dephosphorylation at threonine-58 by the phosphatase EYA1, which is recruited to the nucleus by the transcription factor SIX2 (ref.61). This process provides a direct link to the paralogous genes SIX1 and SIX2 that control early kidney development. SIX1 and SIX2 can be found as drivers of blastemal-predominant WT if their DNA binding domain becomes subtly altered by stereotypic Q177R mutations44.
Intriguingly, several MYC-interacting protein complexes can be targets of mutations in WT. The obligate heterodimerization partner MAX can exhibit R60Q mutations in the helix–loop–helix domain to alter its transcriptional potency. N-Myc exerts its effects on transcriptional control through a multitude of interactions with the core transcriptional machinery to regulate polymerase pausing. The PAF1 transcription complex is one of the critical interactors in this respect and several of its components such as CDC73, MLLT1–ENL and CTR9 have been shown to be mutated in familial and sporadic cases of WT62. Collectively, these data indicate that MYCN hyperactivity through various means can contribute to WT through a multitude of mechanisms.
Epigenetic modifiers
A striking genotype–phenotype correlation is observed in epithelial-predominant WT, which is often driven by inactivating TRIM28 mutations (refs63,64,65,66). Gene expression analyses have identified these tumours as more mature, post-induction tumours with excellent prognosis. TRIM28 is part of a chromatin silencing complex that has an important function in the repression of endogenous retroviral transcript in embryonic cells. Indeed, these tumours show strong induction of transcripts from repetitive elements, but the mechanistic links to oncogenic transformation in these tumours with otherwise few mutations remains to be established.
Besides TRIM28, studies have shown that a whole array of epigenetic regulators are potential drivers in WT. These regulators include REST, RERE, CHD4, KDM3B, BCOR and BCORL1, which are all components of large protein complexes with diverse enzymatic activities42,44. There is a spectrum of dominant and recessive as well as truncating or missense mutations, some being heritable. Intriguingly, BCOR is also the main culprit for driving clear cell sarcoma of the kidney, another childhood renal tumour. In this case the gene is not inactivated as in WT, but harbours small carboxy-terminal tandem duplications corresponding to ~30 amino acids that encompass the binding domains for PCGF1 and KDM2B as part of the polycomb repressive complex (PRC1) that controls, for example, mesodermal differentiation67,68.
TP53 and anaplasia
WTs generally have a low mutation load that increases with patient age, and karyotypes tend to be stable43,44. However, the mutation load is different in diffuse anaplastic WT, which frequently harbours oncogenic TP53 mutations. In most cases, the wild-type allele is lost and the cells are characterized by chromosomal instability including chromothripsis and deregulation of cell cycle and DNA repair genes59,69,70,71. TP53-mutated tumours exhibit strong positive p53 staining owing to the accumulation of the mutant protein, although a smaller fraction demonstrate negative staining due to null mutations. TP53 alterations are secondary events in WT progression, in line with WT being reported as a rare feature in Li–Fraumeni syndrome72.
Whether TP53 mutation confers an additional risk independent of the high-risk status of morphological anaplasia is still unknown. Several other genes that fall into the category of genome maintenance and repair, such as BRCA2, PALB2 and TRIP13, have been found to be mutated in WT73. Whether such mutations likewise increase mutation load or chromosomal aberrations remains to be determined, and no reports are available on aneuploidy yet.
Nephrogenic rests
The underlying genetic defects also have an impact on the presence of nephrogenic rests in the kidney that occur in 30–40% of patients74,75. These precursor lesions are foci of embryonic renal cells that abnormally persist beyond 36 weeks of gestation. Nephrogenic rests are histologically and anatomically classified as either perilobar or intralobar74. WT1-related WTs frequently carry few intralobar nephrogenic rests, centrally located within or adjacent to the renal medulla, suggestive of an early developmental lesion. TRIM28-associated or Beckwith–Wiedemann syndrome-associated WTs tend to harbour perilobar nephrogenic rests in the adjacent kidney tissue rather than intralobar nephrogenic rests. These perilobar nephrogenic rests may even encompass the entire renal cortex in extreme cases. Although few samples have been assayed thus far, nephrogenic rests seem to carry even fewer mutations than their adjacent WT5,76,77.
Bilateral Wilms tumour
Almost one in ten children present with bilateral WT or bilateral disease (WT with nephrogenic rests or nephroblastomatosis visible on imaging in the contralateral kidney), especially in syndromic cases32. WT1 is the most prominent driver in these cases32,52, together with specific imprinting abnormalities at 11p15 affecting IGF2, although neither explain the majority of cases. TRIM28 inactivation is also frequent in bilateral and familial tumours64,65,66,73. Importantly, bilateral tumours can be due to early postzygotic founder mutations in somatic cells that emerge before the divergence of left and right kidney primordia5. Individual clones may expand to yield mosaic kidneys with molecular evidence of clonal (mosaic) nephrogenesis. Thus, it may be justified to compare bilateral or multifocal tumours with blood and surrounding normal kidney tissue as controls to differentiate putative germline mutations, postzygotic mosaic events or single tumours with metastatic disease.
Heterogeneity and subclassification
Molecular analysis has unveiled intratumoural heterogeneity of WTs, with either chromosomal copy number alterations or mutations, for example, in WTX or TP53, being present in only a fraction of cells as evidence of tumour evolution78. These differences may become clearer with single-cell or single-nucleus analyses, which already highlighted a great cellular diversity4. Even the main driver genes stratify WTs according to the age of the child (for example, TRIM28, WT1 in WT occurring at younger ages (generally <2 years of age), TP53 (generally >4 years of age) and Beckwith–Wiedemann syndrome occurring at older ages (3–4 years of age)), location of nephrogenic rests (intralobar versus perilobar) or histology (WT1 in stromal WTs, TRIM28 in epithelial WTs and TP53 in anaplastic WTs) (Fig. 5). Nevertheless, the majority of triphasic or blastemal-predominant WTs do not carry defining genetic alterations.
Liquid biopsies
Although WT represents >80% of paediatric renal tumours, other intrarenal tumours exist that are important to differentiate as therapeutic approaches are markedly diverse31. These non-Wilms renal tumours are often characterized by rather specific molecular alterations (Fig. 5). These tumours may become amenable to liquid biopsy diagnostics looking for diagnostic changes or entity-specific patterns of methylation79. In particular, if a neoadjuvant chemotherapy approach is planned and the clinical pattern is unusual, such tests will become helpful to rule out non-WT from the start, or to follow response to treatment during follow-up. The fact that patients with paediatric kidney tumours often have large amounts of circulating tumour DNA makes this approach rather promising80.
Tumour models
Modelling WT in the mouse has been difficult with only a few successful scenarios, the first using Wt1 ablation together with Igf2 upregulation81. Other researchers have successfully employed Lin28 overexpression or Dis3l2 mutation82,83. On the other hand, prototypic Drosha mutations or Wtx deletions did not yield evidence of WT formation but led to either kidney agenesis or aberrant kidney development and functional impairment84,85.
Modelling efforts, including patient-derived xenografts (PDX)86, can now be complemented with spheroid and organoid techniques to grow tumour cells in vitro for genetic and histological characterization and for therapeutic compound testing87,88,89. These models will become an invaluable resource to test novel agents in patients with relapse who respond poorly to conventional regimens, provided a time frame suitable for clinical feedback can be accomplished90.
Diagnosis, screening and prevention
Clinical presentation
Most children with WT are asymptomatic at presentation and predominantly have a distended abdomen with a palpable mass91. Frequently, the parents notice such a mass during dressing or cuddling. Alternatively, WT is identified by the general practitioner or the paediatrician during a regular clinical assessment of a well child or a child with non-specific symptoms. WT usually reveals a non-tender, large flank mass, which does not move with respiration in contrast to splenomegaly. Approximately only one in five children have distinct symptoms; pain, haematuria, fever, hypertension, urinary tract infections, constipation and weight loss are among the most common complaints at presentation31,91. Although rare, symptoms related to metastases, such as dyspnoea (lung), abdominal pain (liver) or tumour thrombus in the renal vein or vena cava or varicocele, may occur92. Ultimately, a few children with severe subcapsular haemorrhage may present with rapid abdominal enlargement, anaemia and severe pain. Age at presentation is typically in the range 2–5 years and the incidence of WT in children >10 years is rare. In children with known predisposing syndromes, WT may be captured during routine screening and often at an earlier age or stage, and these children are even more likely to be asymptomatic than children without predisposing syndromes93.
In low-income countries (LICs), interactions between multiple factors usually contribute to a delayed diagnosis compared with diagnosis in high-income regions94,95 (Box 2). These factors include family or relatives’ awareness of a possible cancer, contacting and arrival in primary care, health-care staff recognition of cancer and transfer to tertiary care. Furthermore, a much higher number of children in LICs have a distended abdomen due to other conditions, for example, malnutrition, parasitic infections and benign blood diseases than in high-income regions. Hence, identifying, differentiating and prioritizing investigations of the relatively few cases of WT is challenging. Moreover, the latency to diagnosis (patient interval and diagnostic interval) prolongs further, as diagnosis is not only dependent on the recognition by the family, but also by the lack of awareness by the primary care medical personnel and poor referral networks96. These factors result in a larger proportion of children presenting with symptoms, a large tumour volume, advanced local stage and metastases in low-income regions than in high-income regions14,24.
Diagnosis, classification and staging
Diagnosis of WT can be made reliably on histology, especially WTs in which all three characteristic components — blastemal, epithelial and stromal — are evident. These components may be mixed in any proportion, but WTs showing one or two components are not rare. Epithelial and stromal components may show different lines of differentiation and degrees of differentiation, resulting in a countless number of histological appearances (Fig. 6). WTs composed of only one component may represent a diagnostic challenge and ancillary techniques may be needed to establish the diagnosis97. However, no immunohistochemical markers or molecular biology findings are 100% specific for WT. In addition, preoperative chemotherapy, when used, alters the histological appearance of WT, and may result in marked tumour necrosis, or maturation of tumour components. Approximately 7–8% of WTs demonstrate anaplasia, defined as the presence of cells with hyperchromatic, pleomorphic nuclei that are three times larger than adjacent cells and have atypical mitotic figures98, and it may occur in any tumour component (blastemal, epithelial or stromal). The definition of anaplasia was further refined to specify whether the anaplasia is diffuse or focal based on the anatomical distribution of anaplastic cells within the tumour99. The diagnosis of focal anaplasia is based on the presence of clearly defined one or two foci showing the above-mentioned nuclear criteria with sharp demarcation within the primary intrarenal tumour and without evidence of anaplasia or prominent nuclear atypia (defined as nuclear unrest) in other areas. According to SIOP, up to two foci up to 15 mm in size is allowed for the diagnosis of focal anaplasia9 whereas according to COG, up to four foci up to 20 mm in size is allowed99. Diffuse anaplasia is defined as non-localized anaplasia, which may present in any of these situations: focal anaplasia with marked nuclear unrest in the non-anaplastic tumour; anaplasia beyond the tumour capsule; anaplastic cells in intrarenal or extrarenal vessels, renal sinus or extracapsular sites, in metastases, or in biopsy. Despite well-established criteria, anaplasia represents a diagnostic problem, with ~30–50% discrepancy between institutional pathologists and central pathology review100,101. Anaplasia is very rare in the first 2 years of life, and increases after 4 years of age. Anaplasia is usually neither obliterated nor induced by preoperative chemotherapy.
As SIOP and COG have different treatment initial strategies, relevant differences exist in histological classifications of WTs between the two groups. The COG classification includes anaplastic (focal and diffuse) and non-anaplastic (favourable histology) WTs based on assessment of a chemonaive tumour after up-front surgery. The SIOP classification is based on the assessment of the percentage of preoperative chemotherapy-induced changes and viable tumour components, and includes three major WT risk groups: low-risk tumours (completely necrotic WT), high-risk tumours (blastemal type and diffuse anaplasia), and intermediate-risk tumours (all other types) (Table 3). To correctly subclassify the WT, the percentages of chemotherapy-induced changes and viable tumour components are assessed and taken into account9. COG has reported histology and outcomes in patients not eligible for up-front surgery using the SIOP post-chemotherapy histological classification system but to date has not used this system to guide subsequent treatment in patients with a unilateral tumour102. The staging criteria between COG and SIOP also differ, making a direct comparison of outcomes stage-by-stage difficult (Supplementary Table 1).
Diagnostic imaging
Abdominal ultrasonography is efficient and globally the most available means of investigating suspected WT103. Ultrasonography provides information about the organ of origin, extension into the renal and inferior cava veins or urinary collecting system, the contralateral kidney and associated urogenital abnormalities, and may identify liver or lymph node metastases. In resource-limited regions, ultrasonography is sufficient for abdominal staging and can be complemented by chest plain radiography, recognizing that plain radiography may miss smaller pulmonary lesions (typically <1 cm)95,104. In better-resourced settings, cross-sectional imaging is usually undertaken preoperatively with abdominal CT or MRI105. The main drawback of CT is radiation exposure, but the procedure is rapid, allows continuous imaging of the chest and abdomen, has moderate specificity for detection of preoperative spill, may help distinguish nephrogenic rests from WT and gives excellent pulmonary detail106,107,108. It is noteworthy that COG and SIOP incorporate centrally reviewed CT identification and response to therapy of lung nodules into current risk stratification treatment algorithms10,109. The main hurdle of abdominal MRI is that moderate to deep sedation is often required in young children but it provides excellent organ details in those with bilateral disease or liver metastases. Abdominal MRI is preferentially recommended for better assessment of potential nephrogenic rests and their distinction from true WT, and by SIOP to attempt to correlate apparent diffusion coefficient mapping with histopathology prediction after preoperative chemotherapy105,110.
Fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) PET is not routinely used for imaging WT105. Bone scan or cross-sectional imaging of other sites is reserved for patients with signs or symptoms suspicious for distant extrapulmonary metastases. Non-pulmonary and non-hepatic metastatic disease is very rare at primary diagnosis of non-anaplastic WT and is more likely observed in anaplastic WT, clear cell sarcoma of the kidney, malignant rhabdoid tumour and renal cell carcinoma, or at WT relapse111,112,113.
Laboratory testing
Baseline blood work should be performed to confirm adequate renal function, support subsequent chemotherapy and rule out acquired von Willebrand’s disorder, which although uncommon may be associated with substantial bleeding risks and can be pre-emptively managed114.
SIOP diagnostic algorithms recommend percutaneous image-guided coaxial core needle biopsy through a retroperitoneal approach in patients 7 years of age or older or in patients with imaging findings unusual for WT (psoas muscle infiltration, numerous calcifications, vessel encasement or massive lymphadenopathy)10,115,116. The currently used cut-off of 7 years to consider a biopsy is under revision, and based on epidemiological data showing the peak incidence of WT versus other non-WTs2, a new consensus towards raising the age threshold for biopsy providing there are no other atypical presenting features is forming105,115. COG recommends that primary nephrectomy should be strongly considered in all patients, but if not feasible, open or Tru-Cut needle biopsy should be undertaken with a minimum of 10–12 cores. Notably, needle biopsy cannot reliably distinguish WT from nephrogenic rests, and often misses anaplasia115.
Patients with syndromic features should be referred to medical genetics for counselling and possible testing. Circulating blood or urine tumour DNA is being explored for diagnostic and response or relapse assessment but is not yet standard of care80,117,118.
Prognosis and prognostic features
It is important to recognize that prognostic markers must be interpreted in the context of the accompanying treatment regimen. This principle is relevant to WT as COG advocates for immediate nephrectomy in most patients, whereas SIOP advocates for preoperative chemotherapy119. Thereafter, prognostic factors used for clinical treatment stratification differ between COG and SIOP120,121. According to both groups, tumour histology and stage are key prognostic indicators, although applied differently and together with other factors in clinical practice. Diffuse anaplasia is regarded as a high-risk tumour by COG and SIOP, whereas focal anaplasia is regarded as an intermediate-risk tumour by SIOP but as a high-risk tumour by COG. A blastemal-type WT after preoperative chemotherapy is also regarded by SIOP as a high-risk tumour and a completely necrotic-type WT as a low-risk tumour122 (Table 3). Similarly, staging criteria are also different; for example, according to COG, any tumour biopsy results in upstaging to local stage III, whereas according to SIOP, fine-needle aspiration and percutaneous core needle biopsy are ignored for staging purposes31, and according to SIOP, the presence of necrotic tumour or chemotherapy-induced changes in the renal sinus, renal veins and/or the perirenal fat is not a reason for upstaging to stage II9 (Supplementary Table 1). Some SIOP criteria have undergone important changes in comparison with the previous SIOP–2001 trial and study criteria. For example, in the current SIOP protocol, the presence of non-viable tumour or chemotherapy-induced changes only at a resection margin is not regarded as stage III9.
Other prognostic factors according to SIOP include tumour histological response to preoperative chemotherapy and tumour volume (>500 ml) after chemotherapy for certain WT types. Additional prognostic factors according to COG include age, tumour weight and biomarkers or tumour biology, that is, loss of heterozygosity at chromosomes 1p/16q, loss of heterozygosity at chromosome 11p15, and gain at chromosome 1q121. For both groups, response of lung metastases to neoadjuvant chemotherapy indicates chemosensitivity and dictates the intensity of subsequent treatment; for example, if lung lesions are not present at 6 weeks after induction chemotherapy, radiotherapy can be omitted in some patients109,123.
Although the SIOP and COG strategies differ in their upfront treatment approach, they lead to similar overall survival rates of ~90%7,39,124. Patients with stage IV anaplastic WT and/or blastemal type WT have substantially poorer outcomes, with an overall survival rate of <50% despite very intensive therapy125,126.
Despite the good prognosis in most children with WT, ~20% of patients will relapse, predominantly within 2 years of diagnosis113,127,128. The overall survival rate after relapse is ~50% but varies considerably according to the initial treatment received (which in turn reflects initial tumour stage and histology), time to relapse, site of relapse, and patient age113,129,130. Surveillance with abdominal ultrasonography and chest plain radiography are offered, and patients with asymptomatic relapse detected by surveillance seem to have better outcomes113. Evidence from COG shows a lack of benefit in terms of longer survival after relapse if CT imaging had been used instead of plain radiography and ultrasonography in follow-up surveillance128. SIOP data also suggest that surveillance beyond 2 years after completion of therapy has a low yield because of the extremely low relapse rate thereafter113.
Screening
Genetic testing in children with cancer but also in other (potentially) unhealthy children presenting with certain abnormalities or syndromes is emerging. This testing includes formalized national and regional whole-exome or genome sequencing programmes to detect cancer predisposition in many high-income regions. Accordingly, both novel genes and syndromes associated with WT are revealed and additional children with an increased risk of developing WT are identified, expanding the criteria for screening programmes131. Regular screening for early diagnosis in children with a known WT predisposition syndrome has been reported to detect smaller and lower-stage tumours but robust evidence is lacking regarding the balanced clinical benefits93. In addition, the benefits should outweigh the costs and burden. The latter is reflected in the different thresholds for performing screening, which typically varies between 1% and 5% for the childhood risk of developing WT29.
Screening is typically offered to children with various cancer predisposition syndromes, such as WT1-related syndromes and Beckwith–Wiedemann syndrome or isolated hemihypertrophy (with at least one Beckwith–Wiedemann syndrome feature). Renal ultrasonography is the recommended screening modality, as it avoids radiation and does not require anaesthesia in young children. The screening interval is every 3 months based on the rather rapid growth rate of the tumour and imaging should be performed by an experienced paediatric ultrasonographer93. Screening should start when the WT predisposition is established and should continue, irrespective of the underlying condition, until the child is approximately 7 years old. At this age, the risk of WT development is greatly reduced29.
The purpose of WT screening is to enable early NSS, to give less-intensive (that is, less-toxic) chemotherapy, and to avoid radiotherapy. Patients with predisposition syndromes may develop metachronous WT in the contralateral kidney. Hence, the aim is, on balance, to preserve maximal kidney function and ultimately avoid end-stage renal disease whilst still maintaining oncological control. Genetic testing, screening and NSS in LICs are rarely available and consequently, more children progress and succumb to end-stage renal diseases in low-income settings with limited options for dialysis and/or renal transplantation than in high-income regions132. High-income regions are researching the potential for (epi)mutation detection in circulating tumour DNA for early diagnosis; however, this detection technique is not yet ready to be used as an alternative to surveillance with ultrasonography in clinical practice117,118,133.
Management
Nephrectomy with adequate lymph node sampling is universally the mainstay of treatment for WT. However, the timing of surgery differs between the SIOP and COG recommendations, and underpins the differences in risk stratification134,135. The SIOP WT studies have centred around pre-nephrectomy therapy since their beginning in 1971. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy allows assessment of in vivo histological response to treatment (that is, completely necrotic tumour indicates high responsiveness whilst a predominance of remaining blastemal cells is a marker of chemotherapy resistance), which may be used to guide therapeutic stratification after nephrectomy. According to SIOP protocols, patients are divided into low-risk, intermediate-risk and high-risk groups mainly on the basis of the degree of tumour necrosis and the relative proportion of each of the three cell types (epithelial, stromal or blastemal) remaining in the viable component of the resected tumour. On the other hand, the COG approach of upfront nephrectomy allows immediate histological diagnosis, molecular analysis of tumour samples unaltered by chemotherapy, and drug-naive local staging assessment (such as the presence of tumour spill or lymph node involvement). This knowledge can identify a subset of children with very low-risk tumours who may be treated with nephrectomy alone136. Each approach has its pros and cons, yet survival rates are similar with an overall survival rate of >90%. According to both groups, the management of WT incorporates risk-based adjuvant chemotherapy and radiotherapy informed by multiple prognostic factors6 (Supplementary Table 2).
COG perspective
COG has a recommended strategy of primary nephrectomy for unilateral renal masses in patients without WT predisposition (achievable in >90% of patients) or failing feasibility of nephrectomy, core needle or open biopsy to guide subsequent therapy135. Exceptions to upfront biopsy is patients with bilateral disease or patients with a bilaterally predisposed syndrome who should receive neoadjuvant chemotherapy (without biopsy) with the aim of preserving renal units, with surgery at 6–12 weeks after initiation of chemotherapy137,138. The primary surgery using a transabdominal or thoracoabdominal approach allows accurate prechemotherapy staging including assessment of chemotherapy-naive histology and prognostic molecular testing. Essential surgical tasks in completing a tumour-related nephrectomy include avoidance of tumour spill, ipsilateral hilar and regional lymph node sampling, and assessment and control of extrarenal tumour extension including the renal vein and ureter139,140,141,142. Less conventional approaches such as laparoscopic nephrectomy, partial nephrectomy and split renal techniques may be carefully considered in patients with selected small tumours and in expert hands but at this point is confined to a small number of patients143,144,145,146.
Chemotherapy is a mainstay of adjuvant therapy except in very low-risk tumours (defined as stage I, favourable histology WT, <550 g with negative lymph nodes and no syndromic features) where observation alone following nephrectomy may be sufficient, especially in the absence of loss of heterozygosity at chromosome 11p15 (ref.147). Based on COG staging, the bulk of patients with favourable histology WT without certain adverse biomarkers receive regimen EE4A (vincristine and actinomycin D for 18 weeks) for stage I and II, or regimen DD4A (vincristine, doxorubicin and actinomycin D for 24 weeks) for stage III and stage IV favourable histology WTs102,109,148,149,150. COG recommends the use of CT imaging to identify lung metastases, although it is recognized that up to one-third of lesions <1 cm in diameter may be benign nodules. Biopsy of lung nodules is encouraged if there is any doubt about the nature of the lesion. In addition, round, non-calcified lung nodules not in a fissure visible on chest CT are considered stage IV, regardless of size, unless histologically proven not to be WT102. The COG study AREN0533 demonstrated that ~40% of patients have complete resolution of pulmonary metastases after 6 weeks of three-drug induction therapy (regimen DD4A) and of these patients, those with tumours without 1q gain can safely have radiation omitted109. Patients with an incomplete response of lung nodules after 6 weeks of DD4A chemotherapy receive whole-lung irradiation and are escalated to chemotherapy regimen M.
In the setting of loss of heterozygosity at 1p/16q, evidence shows that intensifying therapy to regimen DD4A for stage I and II or to regimen M (DD4A + cyclophosphamide or etoposide) for stage III and IV improves event-free survival outcome39,151. Patients with diffuse anaplastic tumours seem to benefit from a multiagent regimen UH-2 (ref.125). This regimen is associated with considerable toxicity and further modifications are currently being tested in COG protocol AREN1921 (NCT04322318) (Supplementary Table 3). A variety of strategies for salvage treatment in patients with relapse are used based on risk. Patients with low-risk relapse are usually managed with stratum B with an expected outcome of ~71% event-free survival rate152 and patients with higher-risk relapse are typically managed with regimen C153 or ICE (ifosfamide, carboplatin and etoposide) with an expected outcome of ~42% event-free survival rate. Some centres use autologous bone marrow transplantation as consolidation therapy in patients with a high-risk tumour but this strategy has never been the subject of a randomized trial to confirm efficacy154. A detailed summary of the impacts of the first generation of COG studies on WT was published in 2021 and forms the basis of standard management approaches in the COG for those patients not participating in a research study155.
Newer COG research protocols are testing further refined chemotherapy algorithms incorporating stage, lymph node status, additional somatic molecular biomarkers, cardioprotection with dexrazoxane and new agents40,102,125,151. WT is highly radiosensitive;156 radiation therapy is utilized for the regional management of stage III or IV favourable histology WT, and relapsed and anaplastic WT. COG protocols are incorporating intensity-modulated radiation therapy157 with doses ranging from 10.6 to 30.6 Gy depending upon residual tumour and site156,158. National Cancer Cooperative Network159 guidelines provide further detailed management guidelines and recommend that all children with renal tumours participate in a clinical trial.
SIOP perspective
According to the SIOP strategy, all patients >6 months of age with suspected WT receive either 4 weeks of preoperative chemotherapy with actinomycin D and vincristine (if localized) or 6 weeks of actinomycin D, vincristine and doxorubicin (if metastatic). The SIOP-9 trial showed no advantage on downstaging to more stage I tumours nor on reducing intraoperative tumour rupture by further prolonging the prenephrectomy regimen to 8 weeks160. The SIOP approach accounts for the risk of misdiagnosis of WT by recommending upfront nephrectomy in infants <6 months of age, and percutaneous core needle biopsy in older children (7 years of age and older) or children with uncertain clinical pictures115.
Radical nephrectomy is regarded as standard in most patients with unilateral WT; however, the systematic use of preoperative chemotherapy may extend NSS opportunities in selected patients with unilateral non-syndromic tumours134 to maximize preservation of renal function in patients. Following surgery, patients are stratified into three risk groups according to the histopathological features of the tumour122 (Table 3); the histological risk group together with tumour stage is used to direct the intensity of adjuvant chemotherapy and the need for radiotherapy (Supplementary Tables 2 and 4).
The regimen used in the experimental arm of the SIOP-2001 trial has been adopted as the new standard regimen for most patients with stage II−III intermediate-risk histology WT7,10. This regimen consists of 27 weeks of postoperative treatment with vincristine and actinomycin D without doxorubicin. This schedule resulted in a non-significant decrease in event-free survival and had no effect on overall survival when randomly compared with the historical standard arm of 27 weeks of these two drugs (vincristine and actinomycin D) plus five doses of doxorubicin at 50 mg/m2 (ref.7). The use of doxorubicin in patients with intermediate-risk stage II–III tumours is currently recommended only in those with non-stromal or non-epithelial large-volume tumours (that is, ≥500 ml after prenephrectomy chemotherapy), based on a post hoc analysis of patients in the SIOP 2001 trial10.
Radiotherapy to the flank is administered to patients with stage II WT with diffuse anaplasia or stage III WT (intermediate-risk and all high-risk), and doses range from 14.4 to 25.2 Gy (±10.8 Gy boost only for macroscopic residual disease)10,161. To decrease organ toxicity whilst preserving oncological outcome, the conventional approach of flank irradiation is currently being adapted into a guideline for highly conformal image-guided flank target volume delineation162.
For metastatic disease, CT-only nodules are treated as metastases in the current SIOP protocol if they have a transverse diameter of ≥3 mm and imaging appearance suspicious for metastatic nodules after centralized radiological review10. Following a standard 6-week three-drug preoperative regimen, 61–67% of patients have complete metastatic response before nephrectomy123. Afterward, current SIOP guideline advise stratifying patients to adjuvant regimens consisting of either vincristine plus increasing cumulative doses of doxorubicin (in the range 150–250 mg/m2) or a four-drug regimen including etoposide, carboplatin, cyclophosphamide and doxorubicin (cumulative dose 300 mg/m2). In patients with remaining lung nodules, metastasectomy and histological confirmation of metastasis is advised. Stratification is based on the local stage of the primary tumour, histology of the primary tumour and the metastatic tumour (if resected), the size of metastases, and their response to preoperative chemotherapy and surgery (Supplementary Tables 2 and 4).
Pulmonary radiotherapy is administered for lung metastases lacking complete response by postoperative week 10. Evidence suggests that the majority of patients achieving a complete response after induction chemotherapy with or without surgery have a satisfactory survival probability even without radiotherapy to the lungs (5-year event-free survival 84%, 5-year overall survival 92%)123. Patients with viable metastases at surgery or high-risk histology of the primary tumour receive radiotherapy to the lungs.
Patients with metastatic and high-risk disease are a rare subgroup with a dismal prognosis, justifying testing of novel and more intensive regimens in first-line therapy126. Combinations of vincristine, irinotecan, cyclophosphamide, carboplatin, etoposide and doxorubicin, followed by high-dose melphalan and autologous stem cell rescue, are currently being explored by the SIOP-RTSG10,126,130.
For bilateral tumours, SIOP guidelines aim to limit preoperative chemotherapy to a maximum of 12 weeks, with time intervals for evaluation to 6 weeks, also comparable with the COG approach. In order to maximize the possibility of bilateral NSS, an approach using carboplatin–etoposide in patients with an unsatisfactory response to vincristine–actinomycin D is under evaluation10. Adjuvant postoperative treatment guidelines generally follow the same principles as for unilateral WT.
Low-income and middle-income regions
Survival in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs) is much lower than in high-income regions, with overall survival rates ranging from 11% in Sudan to 46% in Malawi163,164,165,166. In LMICs factors that reduce the likelihood of a good outcome include delay in diagnosis leading to advanced disease at diagnosis94,167, lack of diagnostic services, insufficient trained personnel, chemotherapy and radiation14,95,168,169, misdiagnosis167 and abandonment of therapy14,169 (Box 2). Mortality is higher than in high-income regions owing to toxicity from surgery and/or chemotherapy, coupled with malnutrition167,170,171,172. Addressing these psychosocial issues and malnutrition (chronic and acute) may significantly improve outcomes with time95,170,173. As experience is gained in these countries, there is a need for support for the development of local priorities and for improvement in the availability of curative therapies and palliative care.
Trained physicians, nurses and ancillary personnel are central in providing quality care. The WHO Global Initiative for Childhood Cancer developed the framework of care CureAll to provide early diagnosis networks for referral to centres of excellence, to introduce childhood cancer to the Universal Health Coverage schemas and Cancer Control Plans, to introduce cancer and supportive care regimens of care, and to evaluate and monitor schemas to measure progress. These strategic plans are coupled with enabling actions — advocacy, leveraged financing and linked governance174.
The SIOP approach with prenephrectomy chemotherapy provides the optimum and safest strategy in resource-limited settings. For large abdominal tumours (>500 ml), upfront surgery is associated with a high risk of surgical complications, tumour rupture and infection175. Patients with severe malnutrition may have decreased clearance of chemotherapy and dose adjustment may be necessary with parallel monitoring of liver function and recovery of myelosuppression172,176. In a preoperative chemotherapy scenario, close attention to the interpretation of pathology according to the SIOP risk classification is key to correct selection of postoperative treatment intensity, but requires specifically trained pathologists9,10.
In LMICs, almost no clinical trials are available, with limited data and information on outcomes177. Encouraging prospective registration studies and participation in clinical trials has the benefit of building expert clinical capacity, improving facilities and funding treatment and associated costs with the effect of improved survival177, all according to the local sustainability and capacity building178.
As an example, the Collaborative WT Africa Project is a multinational prospective clinical study open in seven sub-Saharan countries, which have registered prospective outcomes by implementing the SIOP adapted treatment regimen for WT164,179,180. A minimum requirement of ultrasonography of the abdomen was used for diagnosis. The guidelines recommended preoperative chemotherapy followed by surgery and further chemotherapy, coupled with nutritional rescue. The preoperative treatment included either a 4-week two-drug (vincristine and actinomycin D) or a 6-week three-drug (vincristine, actinomycin D and doxorubicin) regimen depending on the presence of local or metastatic disease, respectively104. Prolongation of preoperative chemotherapy was an option in patients with a large tumour volume. Patients weighing <12 kg or with severe acute malnutrition were given two-thirds of the calculated dose of the chemotherapy164. The goal was then to achieve safe nephrectomy with lymph node sampling in patients with improved clinical and nutritional conditions, and tumour shrinking, which are all related to a reduced incidence of intraoperative morbidity. The postoperative chemotherapy aimed to follow the standard SIOP guidelines, but with spacing the administration of vincristine every 3 weeks at a dose of 2 mg/m2 as also used for children >1 year of age in specific phases of some COG regimens (capped at 2 mg absolute dose), with the purpose of reducing the burden of frequent travel to hospital181. Acknowledging deficits in radiotherapy provision (lacking across most of the African network), radiation therapy was used only in Kumasi and Accra, Ghana, for metastatic disease and for stage III abdominal tumour179.
The lessons learnt from this structured guideline was the need for team members to work according to a shared vision, mission and principles178. The importance of using local site leaders to set the priorities for a successful clinical trial and keeping processes as simple as possible for data completeness was also appreciated. Good communication, transparency and trust was found to be the cornerstone for successful local implementation of a multinational clinical trial in LMICs.
Just as clinical investigation is the cornerstone for best therapies and practices in high-income regions, research is needed to address the best therapy in different settings (better if tuned to prognostic indicators that have been studied and validated in the local context), best practices, and quality data to further improve outcomes164,165. Multidisciplinary care meetings with mentors improve management and experience of the local and regional groups.
Long-term complications
Despite the greatly improved therapy for WT over time, survivors still report a high frequency (25%) of severe chronic health conditions in adult life15,16,182,183. Patients with WT have a higher risk of death than the general population. In an analysis of children enrolled in the NWTS group between 1969 and 1995, the standardized mortality ratio was 24.3 during the first 5 years after diagnosis, but remained increased for >20 years after diagnosis (standardized mortality ratio 4.3)184. Although the primary tumour remained the most frequent cause of death >5 years after diagnosis, secondary malignant tumours, cardiac disease and end-stage renal disease were also major causes of mortality.
The hazard ratios for hypertension (8.2), congestive heart failure (23.6) and renal failure (50.7) are all increased among 5-year survivors of WT compared with sibling groups15,185,186. The risk of congestive heart failure increases with the cumulative dose of doxorubicin administered, with a critical threshold of 240 mg/m2. Cardiotoxicity is potentiated by the concurrent use of radiotherapy, with girls and infants more susceptible than boys15,186. Similarly, doxorubicin seems to potentiate the adverse effects related to radiotherapy, probably owing to its radiosensitization of cells. These adverse effects include abnormal tissue growth within the target area and secondary malignancies.
The 20-year cumulative incidence of end-stage renal disease is reported to be <1% in patients with unilateral WT and ~10% in patients with bilateral disease187,188,189,190. The risk factors associated with end-stage renal disease owing to chronic renal failure are stromal-predominant histology (HR 6.4), intralobar nephrogenic rests (HR 5.9), and age at diagnosis of <24 months or <48 months (HR 1.7 and 2.8, respectively)191. Given the increased risk of cardiovascular morbidity with chronic kidney disease, identifying patients with a high risk of progressive renal impairment early is imperative to preserve the quality of life of long-term survivors. The wider availability and accuracy of patient genotyping may identify more molecular fingerprints with implications for renal function into adulthood, in order to select a subset of patients with WT without clinical renal impairment at presentation, yet who might benefit from nephron-sparing surgical procedures.
Gonadal dysfunction
Gonadal dysfunction is observed in female WT survivors192,193, and is strongly associated with exposure of the ovaries to radiotherapy (at any dose) and treatment with alkylating drugs192,194. The first-line chemotherapy with two drugs used (that is, vincristine and actinomycin D), in general, does not affect either ovarian reserve or male fertility. Whole-abdomen radiation usually results in primary ovarian failure or premature menopause. Additionally, exposure of patients with WT to treatment including anthracyclines and lung radiation is associated with cardiovascular risks that can affect pregnancy outcomes192. WT survivors should receive personalized counselling about the type and magnitude of reproductive health risks on the basis of their specific treatment exposure, with older girls with unfavourable histology or high-risk WT being at increased risk. Patients at the highest risk should be offered fertility preservation whenever possible, and after accurate counselling195. In this view, prior abdominopelvic surgery (done to perform nephrectomy as part of initial cancer treatment) should not be regarded as a barrier to laparoscopic oophorectomy with tissue cryopreservation for fertility preservation.
Quality of life
Parents, charities and survivors of WT have worked closely with researchers and scientists to ensure that research is focused on what is important to families, and to highlight areas of need (Box 3). The Wilms Tumour Link Group is an example of a parent-led research group in the UK focused on identifying priorities for future research, and uses a social media group of >600 members from around the world to communicate research updates. Parents of children with WT have participated and presented at international scientific meetings and are considered to be partners in the research process, amplifying the patient voice within childhood cancer research90.
This level of parent and patient involvement in research provides an important opportunity for physicians to work collaboratively. This collaboration facilitates the chance to have a greater impact on what is researched and highlights that not only is cure important but also the child‘s quality of life and happiness and health after cancer. The active involvement of parents and survivors in research helps translate findings in an equitable and accessible way. Findings are all too often kept within scientific journals that do not allow access to non-academics, so those that are affected by the disease are less informed. Working collaboratively and honestly with families is the key to patient-driven research with real-life translatable outcomes.
As a result of their better quality of life and physical functioning, children surviving renal tumours can hopefully also enjoy an increased involvement in sports. Patient counselling should include explaining any potential contraindication for practising sports carrying a risk of abdominal injuries196. Practice guidelines, where available, addressing the participation of children and adolescents with a solitary kidney (like most survivors of WT) in high-impact sports do not share a common vision worldwide197. In Italy, unlike the rest of Europe and the USA198, having only one kidney automatically disqualifies an individual wishing to participate in any organized competitive contact sport, including basketball and soccer, and sometimes, volleyball (Box 4).
To instigate positive changes in cancer care through exercise, and to endorse change in patients sensitively, patients, families and health-care teams must be made more aware of current evidence-based information to provide a framework for the harmonization of guidelines for sport participation of renal tumour survivors, to ensure that they can exercise freely yet safely.
Outlook
Basic research
Increased understanding of the aberrant molecular pathways active in Wilms tumorigenesis has identified many potential targeted therapeutic approaches that could be applied in a clinical setting36. These include miRNA therapeutic modulation43,44, Wnt signalling90 and p53-specific biological targeting agents in anaplastic WTs69,70. In addition, retinoic acid, although ineffective as a WT therapy in the all-trans form199, may impart a differentiation effect on precancerous nephrotic rests in the 13-cis form, potentially mitigating the development of WT in a selected group of patients at risk, particularly those with hyperplastic nephroblastomatosis200,201. Although the options seem intriguing, the main challenges are the relatively few patients in each molecular subgroup, WT intratumoural heterogeneity78, few actionable known targets, selection and conduct of targeted trials and coordination of timely enrolment in the background of competitive trials90,202.
Translational and clinical research
Some novel targets for WT have emerged, mostly based on PDX-dependent drug screens, leading to a few phase I and II trials in WT. Examples include phase II study of IGF1-based inhibition (cixutumumab), anti-VEGF-based therapy (sorafenib, cabozantinib), aurora-A-kinase inhibition (alisertib), and anti-mitotic based therapies either through direct microtubule inhibitory activity (ixabepilone) or via an antibody–drug conjugate linking an antimitotic agent (DM1) to an anti-CD56 antibody (lorvotuzumab) (lorvotuzumab mertansine, IMGN901)202. With the advance of β-catenin targeting, the COG will soon launch the study of tegavivint, a specific β-catenin inhibitor, to include a WT cohort203.
Advances in refined personalized multilayered biologically derived WT treatment will emerge, in the shorter term, via expanded creation and use of tumour models, ideally sufficient in number to represent the majority of WT biological subtypes86,87. Development of organoids, spheroids and PDX models has progressed from basic investigation to real-time patient-specific drug screening, and application of these approaches is now feasible, with plans evolving to launch an international patient-individualized relapse WT protocol harnessing this opportunity90,204.
Novel imaging investigations also hold promise for advancing WT treatment. For example, diffusion-weighted imaging MRI has been implemented as standard for diagnostic and post-chemotherapy assessment105. Such techniques may non-invasively quantify tumours and risk-stratify patients with WT prior to surgery, with radiological surrogates (apparent diffusion coefficient mapping) for both necrosis (particularly relevant when tumour size remains stable) and blastemal-type histology205. Radiogenomics holds promise to further expand the utility of imaging in the care of patients with WT, as do artificial learning algorithms, for example, for the detection and quantification of lung nodules (and disease elsewhere), which dictates intensity of treatment. The import of such technology is magnified by the shift from chest plain radiography to adequate CT scans, which provide detailed information on lung lesions, but also reveal that there is considerable inter-rater and intra-rater variation in interpreting such lesions even by experienced radiologists206.
WT may be amenable to advances in liquid biopsy techniques for diagnostics, monitoring of therapy, and detection of minimal residual disease80,118,207. As an example, COG study AREN1921 (NCT04322318) is collecting serial blood and urine samples in newly diagnosed anaplastic WT and patients with relapsed favourable histology WT to test the potential benefits of liquid biopsy208.
Cooperative group efforts
Both the COG and the SIOP groups have advanced well-organized prospective clinical trials and studies that tightly integrate biological aims and clinical insights, both linked to specific clinical protocols (AREN1921; NCT04322318) or via overarching biobanking and risk-stratification studies (AREN03B2;NCT00898365, SIOP UMBRELLA)10. Cross-validation (meta-analysis) of data between these groups, especially data from small cohorts of rare patients (such as those with anaplastic tumours, bilateral tumours or relapsing disease) and strategic efforts to synergize intervention trials or observational studies hold promise in continuing to advance diagnostics, risk stratification and therapeutic options. Such ‘harmonization’ between cooperative groups has been formally advanced in the form of the Harmonica Initiative that integrates multidisciplinary dialogue, meetings, consensus building, specific research focus and overall strategies on a trans-continental, inter-cooperative group level6,90,127,202. Likewise, dialogue continues regarding potential trans-Atlantic collaborative trials among the Innovative Therapies for Children with Cancer (ITCC), the Pediatric Early Phase Clinical Trials Network (PEP-CTN), the Pediatric Preclinical Testing Consortium, and parent representatives90.
Global efforts
Childhood cancer therapy in LMIC lags behind in diagnosis, therapy and survival, with minimal clinical or biological research. In 2018, WHO launched the Global Initiative for Childhood Cancer. In 2020, WHO published the CureAll Framework technical package WHO Global Initiative for Childhood Cancer, designed to provide guidance to member states for the implementation of childhood cancer services in resource-constrained settings174. Six tracer cancers, including WT, are targeted to provide guidance for diagnosis, therapy and supportive and survivorship care. With the help of international paediatric cancer partners (academic, regional and global societies and non-governmental organizations), the aim is to establish the necessary training and design of basic, and translational and clinical research174. Hence, progress in WT survival rates is expected to become more visible in the current decade.
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Acknowledgements
The authors thank both the SIOP Renal Tumour Study Group and the Children’s Oncology Group Renal Tumour Committee for their collective expertise. Their work laid the foundations for this Review article. The authors also thank parents and survivors of childhood Wilms tumour for their contribution to setting research priorities.
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Introduction (F.S. and K.P.-J.); Epidemiology (F.S., K.P.-J. and K.N.); Mechanisms/pathophysiology (F.S., K.P.-J., M.G., M.M. and S.B.); Diagnosis, screening and prevention (F.S., K.P-J., C.V.F., J.B., S.L.-F. and G.V.); Management (F.S., C.V.F., K.P.-J., S.L.-F. and V.P.); Quality of life (F.S., K.P.-J. and A.P.); Outlook (F.S., K.P.-J., C.V.F., J.B., M.G., S.L.-F. and J.I.G.); Overview of the Primer (F.S. and K.P.-J.).
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Nature Reviews Disease Primers thanks R. Furtwängler, N. Cost, J. Kalapurakal and the other anonymous reviewer(s) for their contribution to the peer review of this work.
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Glossary
- Nephron-sparing surgery
-
An operation to remove a kidney tumour by removing only part of the surrounding normal renal parenchyma.
- Nephrogenic rests
-
Abnormally persistent foci of embryonal cells regarded as precursor lesions of Wilms tumour. Rests are subdivided into two main types: perilobar, confined to the periphery of the renal lobe, and intralobar, found anywhere within the renal lobe.
- Overgrowth syndromes
-
A heterogeneous group of disorders in which the main characteristic is that weight, height or head circumference is two to three standard deviations above the mean for sex and age. The different presentations are dependent on the developmental pathways and organ systems affected.
- Aniridia
-
A rare condition characterized by a partial or complete absence of the iris of the eye.
- Nephrotic syndrome
-
A rare clinical disorder defined by massive proteinuria (>40 mg/m2 per hour) responsible for hypoalbuminaemia (<25 g/l), with resulting hyperlipidaemia, oedema, and various complications.
- WAGR syndrome
-
A rare contiguous gene deletion syndrome (Wilms tumour (WT), aniridia, genitourinary anomalies, and range of developmental delays) associated with a 45–60% risk of developing WT.
- Hypospadias
-
An anatomical congenital malformation of the male external genitalia, characterized by abnormal development of the urethral fold and the ventral foreskin of the penis that causes abnormal positioning of the urethral opening.
- Cryptorchidism
-
The absence of at least one testicle from the scrotum.
- Denys–Drash syndrome
-
A rare condition caused by mutations in the tumour-suppressor gene WT1, characterized by a triad of disorders: ambiguous genitalia, nephrotic syndrome leading to end-stage renal disease, and Wilms tumour.
- Frasier syndrome
-
A rare autosomal recessive disorder that presents with male pseudohermaphroditism with gonadal dysgenesis, renal failure in early adulthood and increased risk of developing gonadoblastoma.
- Chromothripsis
-
A catastrophic chromosomal shattering event associated with random rejoining.
- Li–Fraumeni syndrome
-
An inherited autosomal dominant cancer predisposition disorder that is usually associated with abnormalities in TP53 located on chromosome 17p13.
- Anaplasia
-
Cells with hyperchromatic, pleomorphic nuclei that are three times larger than adjacent cells and have abnormal mitotic figures. Anaplasia is associated with a poor response to chemotherapy.
- Oophorectomy
-
A surgical procedure to remove one or both ovaries.
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Spreafico, F., Fernandez, C.V., Brok, J. et al. Wilms tumour. Nat Rev Dis Primers 7, 75 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41572-021-00308-8
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41572-021-00308-8
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