Pleuropulmonary blastoma diagnosed after initial rhabdomyosarcoma interpretation in a 2-year-old boy
This is a case report of a 2-year-old boy with a pediatric thoracic malignancy. The initial CT-guided biopsy was interpreted as embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma, and he received systemic therapy with VAC then VDC, followed by definitive resection and IVADo chemotherapy. The final pathological diagnosis was pleuropulmonary blastoma, type III, and genetic testing detected a pathogenic DICER1 variant. Severe cytopenias were reported as an adverse event during treatment.
The authors note that pleuropulmonary blastoma should be prioritized in the differential diagnosis of aggressive pediatric intrathoracic masses with pneumothorax and mass effect. They emphasize the value of adequate tissue sampling, expert pathology review, and early integration of molecular testing. No pooled effect sizes or comparative outcomes are reported, as this is a single-patient case.
Limitations include the single-patient design, which precludes generalization, and the absence of a comparator group or follow-up duration. The practice relevance is that clinicians should consider pleuropulmonary blastoma in similar presentations and ensure comprehensive diagnostic evaluation.