| Literature DB >> 23519678 |
Scott C Borinstein1, Natalie Beeler, John J Block, Richard Gorlick, Patrick Grohar, Paul Jedlicka, Mark Krailo, Carol Morris, Sharon Phillips, Gene P Siegal, Elizabeth R Lawlor, Stephen L Lessnick.
Abstract
Outcomes for patients with metastatic and recurrent Ewing sarcoma remain poor and a better understanding of the biology of this malignancy is critical to the development of prognostic biomarkers and novel therapies. Therefore, the Children's Oncology Group (COG) has created tissue banking protocols designed to collect high quality, clinically annotated, tumor specimens that can be distributed to researchers to perform basic science and correlative investigation. Data from the COG Ewing sarcoma tissue banking protocols AEWS02B1 and its successor study AEWS07B1 were reviewed in this study. Six-hundred and thirty five patients were enrolled on AEWS02B1 and 396 patients have had tissue submitted to AEWS07B1. The average age of participation was 13.2 years. About 86% were less than 19 years old and only 6% were greater than 21 years of age at diagnosis. When compared to SEER data, approximately 18% of all cases and only 8% of all patients >20 years old diagnosed with Ewing sarcoma annually in the United States have had tumor banked. The majority of participants submitted formalin fixed, paraffin embedded, primary tumor and blood samples. In total, fresh frozen tissue was submitted for only 29% of cases. Only seven metastatic tumor samples have been collected. Although the COG has been successful in collecting tumor samples from patients newly diagnosed with Ewing sarcoma, fresh frozen tumor specimens from primary and metastatic disease are critically needed, especially from young adult patients, in order to conduct high quality basic science and translational research investigation with a goal of developing better treatments.Entities:
Keywords: Ewing sarcoma; adolescent and young adult; biopsy; bone tumor; interventional radiology; tumor banking
Year: 2013 PMID: 23519678 PMCID: PMC3602933 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2013.00057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Study accrual. Data as of March 21, 2012.
Patient Demographics.
| AEWS02B1 | AEWS07B1 | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | |||
| Male | 357 (56%) | 237 (60%) | 594 |
| Female | 278 (44%) | 159 (40%) | 437 |
| Age (years) | |||
| 0–4 | 54 | 34 | 88 |
| 5–9 | 108 | 69 | 177 |
| 10–14 | 204 | 123 | 327 |
| 15–19 | 197 | 131 | 328 |
| 20–24 | 52 | 32 | 84 |
| 25+ | 20 | 7 | 27 |
.
Figure 2(A) Age of patient at time of sample submission. (B) Predicted enrollment per SEER estimates on 02B1 and 07B1 enrollment. Data as of March 21, 2012.
Inventory of banked tumor specimens.
| Specimen | AEWS02B1 | AEWS07B1 | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Formalin fixed paraffin embedded primary tissue | 524 | 345 | 869 |
| Fresh tissue | 182 | 122 | 304 |
| FFPE metastatic tissue | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| Fresh metastatic tissue | 4 | 1 | 5 |
| Serum/plasma | 551 | 336 | 887 |
| Blood | 310 | 343 | 653 |
| Bone marrow, fresh | 88 | 312 | 400 |
| Bone marrow, FFPE | 4 | 2 | 6 |
| Urine | 7 | 2 | 9 |
| FFPE + blood | 261 | 29 | 290 |
| FFPE + blood + BM | 54 | 181 | 235 |
| FFPE + fresh + blood | 125 | 18 | 143 |
| FFPE + fresh + blood + BM | 24 | 91 | 115 |
| BLOOD only | 62 | 6 | 68 |
| FFPE only | 44 | 15 | 59 |
| None | 24 | 9 | 33 |
| Blood + BM | 5 | 26 | 31 |
| FFPE + fresh | 14 | 5 | 19 |
| Fresh + blood | 13 | 1 | 14 |
| FFPE + BM | 2 | 4 | 6 |
| Fresh + blood + BM | 2 | 4 | 6 |
| FRESH only | 4 | 1 | 5 |
| BM only | 1 | 4 | 5 |
| FFPE + fresh + BM | 0 | 2 | 2 |
| Fresh + BM | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 635 | 396 | 1031 | |
.
Formalin Fixed Paraffin Embedded (FFPE) primary tissue – includes unstained slides, paraffin blocks, scroll.
Fresh tissue – includes OCT, snap frozen in liquid nitrogen, RNA later (Qiagen, CA, USA).
Blood – includes Ficolled WBC, serum, and plasma, exclude unstained peripheral blood slides.
Bone marrow, Fresh – includes Ficolled WBC or fresh frozen.
Bone marrow, FFPE – includes unstained slides.
Urine – includes frozen.
Not included – Normal tissue, Miscellaneous samples not otherwise specified.
Figure 3Distribution of tumor specimens.
Published manuscripts that have used tumor samples collected from AEWS02B1 and AEWS07B1.
| Author (year) | Title | Journal |
|---|---|---|
| Douglas et al. ( | BMI-1 promotes Ewing sarcoma tumorigenicity independent of CDKN2A repression | Cancer Research |
| Joo et al. ( | Gli1 is a central mediator of EWS/Fli1 signaling in Ewing tumors | PLoS ONE |
| Bennani-Baiti et al. ( | Intercohort gene expression co-analysis reveals chemokine receptors as prognostic indicators in Ewing’s sarcoma | Clinical Cancer Research |
| Dubois et al. ( | Flow cytometric detection of Ewing sarcoma cells in peripheral blood and bone marrow | Pediatric Blood and Cancer |
| Jiang et al. ( | CD133 expression in chemo-resistant Ewing sarcoma cells | BMC Cancer |
| van Doorninck et al. ( | Current treatment protocols have eliminated the prognostic advantage of type 1 fusions in Ewing sarcoma: a report from the Children’s Oncology Group | Journal of Clinical Oncology |
| Borinstein et al. ( | Investigation of the insulin-like growth factor-1 signaling pathway in localized Ewing sarcoma: a report from the Children’s Oncology Group | Cancer |
| Cooper et al. ( | Ewing tumors that do not overexpress BMI-1 are a distinct molecular subclass with variant biology: a report from the Children’s Oncology Group | Clinical Cancer Research |
| Solomon et al. ( | Mutational inactivation of STAG2 causes aneuploidy in human cancer | Science |
| von Levetzow et al. ( | Modeling initiation of Ewing sarcoma in human neural crest cells | PLoS ONE |
| Jahromi et al. ( | Molecular inversion probe analysis detects novel copy number alterations in Ewing sarcoma | Cancer Genetics |
Figure 4Optimal procurement of Ewing sarcoma tumor samples.
Figure 5Interventional biopsy of a bone lesion: this figure depicts a CT image of a vertebral bone biopsy using an 11-gage biopsy needle. Optimum tumor acquisition is feasible with a smaller number of passes.