Literature DB >> 14612633

Ewing's sarcoma and the development of secondary malignancies.

Bruno Fuchs1, Richard G Valenzuela, Ivy A Petersen, Carola A Arndt, Franklin H Sim.   

Abstract

The multimodality treatment approach for patients with Ewing's sarcoma during the last decades has dramatically improved patient long-term survival. With improved survival, late consequences and morbidity associated with treatment have become apparent. Among the morbidity associated with treatment is the increased risk of development of secondary malignancies. Therefore, the purpose of the current study was to define the outcome of patients who had secondary malignancy develop subsequent to the diagnosis and treatment of Ewing's sarcoma. Of the 397 patients treated for Ewing's sarcoma at our institution during the past 25 years, 26 patients (6.5%) had 29 secondary malignancies develop. The mean age of the 13 males and 13 females averaged 16 years (range, 6-51 years), and the interval from the diagnosis of the Ewing's sarcoma to the development of the secondary malignancy averaged 9.5 years (range, 1-32.5 years). The secondary malignancies included eight hematopoietic cancers, 12 sarcomas, and nine carcinomas. Although carcinomas most likely represent the general risk of developing cancer in the healthy population, the sarcomas were caused by radiation therapy and the hematopoietic tumors caused by chemotherapy. The latter occurred at a mean latent period of 4.8 years (range, 1.7-12.9 years), and the sarcomas occurred after a mean of 10.9 years (range, 1.5-32.5 years). At the mean followup of 15 years (range, 2-33 years) from diagnosis of Ewing's sarcoma and at a mean followup of 5 years (range, 0.5-28 years) from diagnosis of the second malignancy, 14 patients are alive (43%); however, patients with either sarcomas or hematopoietic secondary malignancies had not only a significantly shorter interval from secondary malignancy to followup (3.3 and 1.2 years, respectively, versus 7.3 years), but also a more dismal prognosis (eight of 12 or six of eight patients died, respectively, versus one of nine). Although the risk of having secondary malignancy develop after the treatment of a Ewing's sarcoma may be only slightly greater than the risk compared with other childhood cancers, patients with hematopoietic and radiation-induced secondary malignancies have a detrimental prognosis. Patients with Ewing's sarcoma need to be followed up carefully and frequently.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14612633     DOI: 10.1097/01.blo.0000093900.12372.e4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Orthop Relat Res        ISSN: 0009-921X            Impact factor:   4.176


  8 in total

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2.  Pregnancy-Associated Plasma Protein-A (PAPP-A) in Ewing Sarcoma: Role in Tumor Growth and Immune Evasion.

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3.  Second solid malignancies among children, adolescents, and young adults diagnosed with malignant bone tumors after 1976: follow-up of a Children's Oncology Group cohort.

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4.  Ewing's Sarcoma and Second Malignancies.

Authors:  Joshua D Schiffman; Jennifer Wright
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6.  Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia as Secondary Malignancy in a Case of Ewing's Sarcoma on Treatment.

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7.  Subsequent Malignant Neoplasm of Bone in Children and Adolescent-Possibility of Multimodal Treatment.

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8.  What Do We Know about Survival in Skeletally Premature Children Aged 0 to 10 Years with Ewing Sarcoma? A Multicenter 10-Year Follow-Up Study in 60 Patients.

Authors:  Sarah E Bosma; Lizz van der Heijden; Luis Sierrasesúmaga; Hans J H M Merks; Lianne M Haveman; Michiel A J van de Sande; Mikel San-Julián
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  8 in total

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