| Literature DB >> 20104228 |
T Hamaoka1, C M Costelloe, J E Madewell, P Liu, D A Berry, R Islam, R L Theriault, G N Hortobagyi, N T Ueno.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We compared the utility of a new response classification (MDA; based on computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), plain radiography (XR), and skeletal scintigraphy (SS)) and the World Health Organisation response classification (WHO; based on XR and SS) in stratifying breast cancer patients with bone-only metastases with respect to progression-free survival (PFS), overall survival (OS), and clinical response.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20104228 PMCID: PMC2837571 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6605546
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
The UICC, WHO, and MDA criteria for detection of bone response
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Target diagnostic imaging | XR | XR, SS | XR, SS, CT, MRI |
| Complete response | Disappearance of all known disease Lytic lesions should have radiologic evidence of calcification | Complete disappearance of all lesions on X-ray or scan for at least 4 weeks | Complete fill-in or sclerosis of lytic lesion on XR and CT Disappearance of hot spots or tumour signal on SS, CT, or MRI Normalisation of osteoblastic lesion on XR and CT |
| Partial response | At least 50% decrease in size of measurable lesions Objective improvement in evaluable or unmeasurable lesions No new lesions or progressive lesions | Partial decrease in size of lytic lesions, recalcification of lytic lesions, or decreased density of blastic lesions for at least 4 weeks | Sclerotic rim about initially lytic lesion or sclerosis of lesions previously undetected on XR or CT
Partial fill-in or sclerosis of lytic lesion on XR or CT
Regression of measurable lesion on XR, CT, or MRI
Regression of lesion on SS (exclude rapid regression |
| No change or stable disease | Unchanged, or between 25% increase and 50% decrease in size of measurable lesions | As a result of the slow response of bone lesions, the classification of ‘no change’ should not be applied until at least 8 weeks have passed from start of therapy | No change in measurable lesion on XR, CT, or MRI No change in blastic lesion on XR, CT, or MRI No new lesion on XR, SS, CT, or MRI |
| Progressive disease | Mixed; some lesions persist while others progress, or new lesions appear Failure; some or all lesions progress and/or new lesions appear. No lesions regress | Increase in size of existing lesions or appearance of new lesions | Increase in size of any existing measurable lesions on XR, CT, or MRI New lesion on XR, SS (excluding flare phenomena), CT, or MRI Increase in activity on SS (excluding flare phenomena) or blastic/lytic lesion on XR or CT |
Abbreviations: SS= skeletal scintigraphy; XR= plain radiography; CT= computed tomography; MRI= magnetic resonance imaging.
Criteria are based on plain radiography; the duration of response is to be measured from the start of therapy until either new lesions appear or any one existing lesion increases by 25% or more above its smallest recorded size.
Occurrence of bone compression or fracture and its healing should not be used as the sole indicator for evaluation of therapy.
Rapid osteolytic progression may show decreased osteoblastic activity, resulting in regression of ‘hot spots’ on SS. XR or CT may be helpful in detecting progressive osteolysis and thus helping to identify progressive disease in this situation.
If lesions that cannot be measured but are otherwise evaluable represent the bulk of disease and these lesions clearly do not respond even though measurable lesions have improved, then the response is considered no change rather than an objective regression.
Patients’ characteristics
|
|
|
|---|---|
| No. of patients | 41 |
| Age, median (range) | 42 years (31–61 years) |
|
| |
| I | 7 (17) |
| II | 21 (51) |
| III | 4 (10) |
| IV | 8 (20) |
| Unknown | 1 (2) |
|
| |
| 1 | 11 (27) |
| 2 | 24 (59) |
| 3 | 2 (5) |
| 4 | 3 (7) |
| Unknown | 1 (2) |
|
| |
| Positive | 27 (66) |
| Negative | 13 (32) |
| Unknown | 1 (2) |
|
| |
| Positive | 27 (66) |
| Negative | 13 (32) |
| Unknown | 1 (2) |
|
| |
| Positive | 24 (59) |
| Negative | 16 (39) |
| Unknown | 1 (2) |
| Positive | 5 (12) |
| Negative | 13 (32) |
| Unknown | 23 (56) |
|
| |
| Spine | 36 (88) |
| Pelvis | 18 (44) |
| Rib | 14 (34) |
|
| |
| Chemotherapy | 34 |
| Endocrine therapy | 7 |
|
| |
| At baseline and at 2–6 months after treatment initiation | 40 |
| XR images | 13 |
| SS images | 37 |
| CT images | 34 |
| MRI images | 13 |
| At baseline and at 11–13 months after treatment initiation | 25 |
| XR images | 11 |
| SS images | 22 |
| CT images | 24 |
| MRI images | 12 |
Abbreviations: XR= plain radiography; SS= skeletal scintigraphy; CT= computed tomography; MRI= magnetic resonance imaging.
Figure 1Progression-free survival (PFS) curves for patients who responded to treatment (complete or partial response) and those who did not (stable or progressive disease) according to computed tomography (CT) (A) or skeletal scintigraphy (SS) (B). CT seemed to distinguish responders from nonresponders during the first 6 months after treatment according to PFS, but SS did not.
Agreement between imaging responses and clinical response
|
| ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| ||||
| Nonresponder | 16 | 2 | 0.09 | 0.53 (0.27, 0.79) |
| Responder | 7 | 13 | ||
|
| ||||
| Nonresponder | 14 | 8 | 0.81 | 0.07 (–0.24, 0.39) |
| Responder | 9 | 7 | ||
|
| ||||
| Nonresponder | 15 | 4 | 0.74 | 0.44 (0.13, 0.75) |
| Responder | 5 | 9 | ||
|
| ||||
| Nonresponder | 16 | 9 | 0.62 | 0.05 (–0.27, 0.38) |
| Responder | 7 | 5 | ||
Abbreviations: CT= computed tomography; SS= skeletal scintigraphy.
Figure 2Progression-free survival (PFS) curves for patients who responded to treatment (complete or partial response) and those who did not (stable or progressive disease) according to the MDA criteria (A) and the World Health Organisation (WHO) criteria (B). The MDA criteria (which incorporate findings from CT scans) distinguished responders from nonresponders during the first 6 months after treatment according to PFS; in other words, patients classified as responders according to the MDA criteria (which included CT findings) had a better prognosis than did those classified as nonresponders. In contrast, the WHO classification (based on SS findings) did not differentiate between responders and nonresponders in terms of PFS.
Figure 3Computed tomography scans assessed with the MDA criteria. (A) Sclerotic change (right) in the rim of an originally lytic lesion (left) indicates a partial response. (B) Lytic progression (right) of an originally lytic lesion (left) indicates progressive disease.