Staging laparotomy and splenectomy: Treatment and complications of hodgkin's disease in children

Abstract
Twenty-five cases of Hodgkin's Disease (15 males and 10 females) aged 5 to 17 years were studied from April 1970 to July 1976 (75 month period). Histology revealed that 2 had lymphocytic predominance, 12 had nodular sclerosis, and 11 had mixed cellularity. Pathologic staging revealed that 3 were IA, 1 IB, 5 IIA, 4 IIB, 6 IIIA, and 6 IIIB. Laparotomy altered the staging in 12 patients (9 were staged up and 3 down). All but 2 patients received extended field radiation, and 5 had recurrence of disease and were treated with combination chemotherapy. Twenty-three are alive without evidence of disease (21–75 months), and the 2 deaths were not due to Hodgkin's Disease but to hemobilia (postliver biopsy) and penumococcal septicemia, purpura fulminans, and disseminated intravascular coagulation (14 months postsplenectomy). Other complications included 2 patients with intestinal obstruction, 1 with postoperative subphrenic abscess, and 1 with streptococcal septicemia and polyarthritis. Nineteen patients received continuous penicillin prophylaxis postoperatively and the 2 with serious infections were amongst the 6 who had not received penicillin or whose penicillin had been discontinued at the time of infection. It is concluded that laparotomy and splenectomy in children is essential for accurate staging but carries significant risk, and continuous penicillin prophylaxis is recommended.