Odile Oberlin1, Annie Rey1, Kenneth L B Brown2, Gianni Bisogno3, Ewa Koscielniak4, Michael C G Stevens5, Douglas S Hawkins6, William H Meyer7, Trang H La8, Modesto Carli3, James R Anderson9. 1. Departments of Pediatrics and Biostatistics, Institut Gustave Roussy, Villejuif, France. 2. Departments of Pediatric Orthopedic Surgery, British Columbia Children's Hospital, Vancouver, British Columbia. 3. Department of Pediatrics, Division of Hematology/Oncology, University Hospital of Padova, Padova, Italy. 4. Pediatric 5 (Oncology, Hematology, Immunolgy), Olga Hospital, Klinikum Stuttgart, Germany. 5. Department of Paediatric Oncology, Bristol Royal Hospital for Children, Bristol, UK. 6. Division of Hematology/Oncology, Seattle Children's Hospital, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington. 7. Department of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology, University of Oklahoma Health Science Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. 8. Radiation Oncology, Kaiser Permanente-Oakland, Oakland, California. 9. Department of Preventive and Societal Medicine, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, Nebraska.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Extremity rhabdomyosarcomas do not always show satisfactory outcomes. We analyzed data from 643 patients treated in 14 studies conducted by European and North American groups between 1983 and 2004 to identify factors predictive of outcome. PROCEDURE: Clinical factors, including age; histology; site of primary (hand and foot vs. other); size; invasiveness (T stage); nodal involvement (N stage); and treatment factors, including post-surgical group; chemotherapy type and duration; radiotherapy; and treatment (before or after 1995); were evaluated for impact on overall survival (OS). RESULTS: 5-year OS were 67% (se 1.8). Multivariate analysis showed that lower OS correlated with age >3 years, T2 and N1 stage, incomplete initial surgery, treatment before 1995, and European cooperative group treatment. Patients with gross residual disease after initial incomplete resection/biopsy had similar outcomes in both continental groups. The better global survival of patients treated in American studies was accounted for by differences in outcome in the subset of those with grossly resected tumors (OS 86% [se 3] for COG patients vs. 68% [se 4] for European patients (P = 0.004)). When excluding chemotherapy duration from the model, analysis in this subset of patients showed that cooperative group (P = 0.001), site (P = 0.001), and T stage (P = 0.05) were all significant. However, after adding duration of chemotherapy (≥27 weeks) to the model, only primary site remained significant (P = 0.006). CONCLUSION: This meta-analysis confirms the role of many established prognostic factors but identifies for the first time that chemotherapy duration may have an impact on outcome in patients with grossly resected tumors.
BACKGROUND:Extremity rhabdomyosarcomas do not always show satisfactory outcomes. We analyzed data from 643 patients treated in 14 studies conducted by European and North American groups between 1983 and 2004 to identify factors predictive of outcome. PROCEDURE: Clinical factors, including age; histology; site of primary (hand and foot vs. other); size; invasiveness (T stage); nodal involvement (N stage); and treatment factors, including post-surgical group; chemotherapy type and duration; radiotherapy; and treatment (before or after 1995); were evaluated for impact on overall survival (OS). RESULTS: 5-year OS were 67% (se 1.8). Multivariate analysis showed that lower OS correlated with age >3 years, T2 and N1 stage, incomplete initial surgery, treatment before 1995, and European cooperative group treatment. Patients with gross residual disease after initial incomplete resection/biopsy had similar outcomes in both continental groups. The better global survival of patients treated in American studies was accounted for by differences in outcome in the subset of those with grossly resected tumors (OS 86% [se 3] for COGpatients vs. 68% [se 4] for European patients (P = 0.004)). When excluding chemotherapy duration from the model, analysis in this subset of patients showed that cooperative group (P = 0.001), site (P = 0.001), and T stage (P = 0.05) were all significant. However, after adding duration of chemotherapy (≥27 weeks) to the model, only primary site remained significant (P = 0.006). CONCLUSION: This meta-analysis confirms the role of many established prognostic factors but identifies for the first time that chemotherapy duration may have an impact on outcome in patients with grossly resected tumors.
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