| Literature DB >> 27843394 |
J Herzog1, F von Klot-Heydenfeldt1, S Jabar2, A Ranft2, C Rossig2, U Dirksen2, J Van den Brande3, M D'Incalci4, I von Luettichau1, P J Grohar5, W E Berdel6, St Burdach1.
Abstract
Background. Preclinical data indicate that trabectedin followed by irinotecan has strong synergistic effects on Ewing sarcoma. This is presumably due to hypersensitization of the tumor cells to the camptothecin as an effect of trabectedin in addition to synergistic suppression of EWS-FLI1 downstream targets. A strong effect was also reported in a human rhabdomyosarcoma xenograft. Procedure. Twelve patients with end-stage refractory translocation-positive sarcomas were treated with trabectedin followed by irinotecan within a compassionate use program. Eight patients had Ewing sarcoma and four patients had other translocation-positive sarcomas. Results. Three-month survival rate was 0.75 after the start of this therapy. One patient achieved a partial response according to RECIST criteria, five had stable disease, and the remaining six progressed through therapy. The majority of patients experienced significant hematological toxicity (grades 3 and 4). Reversible liver toxicity and diarrhea also occurred. Conclusions. Our experience with the combination of trabectedin followed with irinotecan in patients with advanced sarcomas showed promising results in controlling refractory solid tumors. While the hematological toxicity was significant, it was reversible. Quality of life during therapy was maintained. These observations encourage a larger clinical trial.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27843394 PMCID: PMC5098094 DOI: 10.1155/2016/7461783
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sarcoma ISSN: 1357-714X
Patient characteristics.
| Patient | Diagnosis | Age | Age at FD(a) | Sex | Number of prior chemoregimens | Prior radiation therapy | Total number of cycles received | Maximum toxicities | Best response |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) | Ewing sarcoma (second malignancy, initially fibrosarcoma)(b) | 21 | 4 | m | 7 | Yes | 1 | Leukopenia G3 | SD(c), DOD(d) |
| (2) | Alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma | 17 | 13 | m | 3 | Yes | 2 | Leukopenia G4, thrombocytopenia G4, hepatic G4, pancreatitis G3, infection G3 | PD(e), DOD(d) |
| (3) | Synovial sarcoma | 18 | 8 | m | 2 | No | 7 | Pancytopenia G4, hepatic G4, infection G3 | PR(g), DOD(d) |
| (4) | Ewing sarcoma | 18 | 13 | f | 2 | Yes | 2 | Hepatic G3 | PD(e), DOD(d) |
| (5) | Ewing sarcoma | 43 | 11 | m | 3 | Yes | 11 | Hepatic G3 | SD(c), DOOC(g) |
| (6) | Ewing sarcoma | 28 | 22 | m | 2(h) | Yes | 3+ | Diarrhea G4, pancytopenia G4, infection G4 | SD(c) |
| (7) | Ewing sarcoma | 35 | 16 | m | 6(h) | Yes | 2 | Leukopenia G4, mucositis G3, hepatic G3 | PD(e), DOD(d) |
| (8) | Ewing sarcoma | 60 | 57 | f | 5 | Yes | 3 | Pancytopenia G4, FUO in Neutropenia G4 | SD(c), DOD(d) |
| (9) | Ewing sarcoma | 24 | 20 | f | 6(h) | Yes | 3 | FUO in neutropenia G4, mucositis G3, diarrhea G3 | SD(c), DOD(d) |
| (10) | Ewing sarcoma | 24 | 14 | m | 6(h) | Yes | 2 | No toxicity | PD(e), DOD(d) |
| (11) | Desmoplastic small round cell tumor | 12 | 6 | m | 3(h) | Yes | 6 | Pancytopenia G4, hepatic G4 | PD(e), DOD(d) |
| (12) | Alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma | 17 | 15 | f | 2(h) | Yes | 5 | Pancytopenia G4, hepatic G3 | PD(e), DOD(d) |
(a) FD: first diagnosis; (b) while histological diagnosis of the patient's second malignancy was Ewing sarcoma, the EWSR1-FLI1 translocation could neither be confirmed nor ruled out conclusively; (c) SD: stable disease; (d) DOD: death of disease; (e) PD: progressive disease; (f) PR: partial remission (continued therapy until PD and DOD); (g) DOOC: death of other causes; (h) prior exposure to irinotecan. (+) indicates that the patient is still on therapy; Pt. no. 6 continued with trabectedin as a single agent.
Figure 1Treatment plan. Duration of cycle: 21 days. Response evaluation: after 2 cycles.
Figure 2Cumulative survival (2/12, Kaplan-Meier estimate).
Figure 4Tumor response after 5 cycles of trabectedin/irinotecan, patient with synovial sarcoma.
Figure 3Matched pair analysis Ewing sarcoma patients.