Types of cancer in children

Understanding more about the cancer your child has and the treatments that may be used can often help parents to cope.

Leukaemia in children

Leukaemia is a type of blood cancer. Leukaemias are the most common group of childhood cancers, accounting for approximately 1 in 3 cases every year.

Lymphoma in children

Lymphoma is a type of blood cancer. Lymphomas are the third most common group of children's cancers, accounting for around 1 in 10 new cases each year in the UK.

Brain tumours in children

Brain tumours are the most common tumours that develop in children. Children of any age can be affected. About 400 children in the UK develop brain tumours each year. Boys are affected slightly more often than girls.

Neuroblastoma in children

Neuroblastoma is the second most common solid tumour in children after brain tumours and makes up 6% of the total number of childhood cancer diagnoses.

Ewing sarcoma in children

Ewing sarcoma is a type of bone cancer in children and young people. It is the second most common primary bone sarcoma in children and young people. Approximately 30 children in the UK develop Ewing sarcoma each year. It usually occurs in the teenage…

Osteosarcoma in children

Osteosarcoma is a type of bone cancer. About 35 children in the UK develop osteosarcomas each year. These tumours occur more commonly in older children and teenagers and are very rarely seen in children under five.

Wilms tumour in children

Wilms tumours are the most common type of kidney (renal) cancer in children. About 90 children in the UK are diagnosed with a Wilms tumour each year. It most often affects children under the age of seven.

Germ cell tumours in children

Approximately 50 children in the UK develop malignant germ cell tumours each year. Most children who develop germ cell tumours will be cured.

Retinoblastoma

Retinoblastoma is cancer of the retina, the light sensitive lining of the eye. It usually affects children under five and about 40 to 50 cases are diagnosed in the UK each year. Treatment is very effective and nearly all (98 out of 100) children with…

Liver tumours in children

Approximately 20 children in the UK develop primary liver tumours each year. Boys are affected more commonly than girls. Liver tumours can be non-cancerous (benign) or cancerous (malignant). This information is about malignant liver tumours.

Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis (LCH) in children

This information is about a condition called Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis (LCH) in children. About 50 children in the UK develop LCH each year. It can affect children of any age, and is more common in boys than in girls.

Rare cancers in children

Childhood cancers are not common, but there are a number of very rare types. Rare cancers in children make up fewer than 1 in 30 of all childhood cancers