| Literature DB >> 29552543 |
Yasuhiro Fujisawa1, Koji Yoshino2, Taku Fujimura3, Yoshiyuki Nakamura1, Naoko Okiyama1, Yosuke Ishitsuka1, Rei Watanabe1, Manabu Fujimoto1.
Abstract
The most widely accepted treatment for cutaneous angiosarcoma (CAS) is wide local excision and postoperative radiation to decrease the risk of recurrence. Positive surgical margins and large tumors (T2, >5 cm) are known to be associated with poor prognosis. Moreover, T2 tumors are known to be associated with positive surgical margins. According to previous reports, the majority of CAS patients in Japan had T2 tumors, whereas less than half of the patients in the studies from western countries did so. Consequently, the reported 5-year overall survival of Japanese CAS patients without distant metastasis was only 9%, lower than that for stage-IV melanoma. For patients with T2 tumors, management of subclinical metastasis should be considered when planning the initial treatment. Several attempts to control subclinical metastasis have been reported, such as using adjuvant/neoadjuvant chemotherapy in addition to conventional surgery plus radiation. Unfortunately, those attempts did not show any clinical benefit. Besides surgery, new chemotherapeutic approaches for advanced CAS have been introduced in the past couple of decades, such as paclitaxel and docetaxel. We proposed the use of chemoradiotherapy (CRT) using taxanes instead of surgery plus radiation for patients with T2 tumors without distant metastasis and showed a high response ratio with prolonged survival. However, this prolonged survival was seen only in patients who received maintenance chemotherapy after CRT, indicating that continuous chemotherapy is mandatory to control subclinical residual tumors. With the recent development of targeted drugs for cancer, many potential drugs for CAS are now available. Given that CAS expresses a high level of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptor, drugs that target VEGF signaling pathways such as anti-VEGF monoclonal antibody and tyrosine kinase inhibitors are also promising, and several successful treatments have been reported. Besides targeted drugs, several new cytotoxic anticancer drugs such as eribulin or trabectedin have also been shown to be effective for advanced sarcoma. However, most of the clinical trials did not include a sufficient number of CAS patients. Therefore, clinical trials focusing only on CAS should be performed to evaluate the effectiveness of these new drugs.Entities:
Keywords: adjuvant chemotherapy; angiosarcoma of the scalp; concurrent chemoradiotherapy; cutaneous angiosarcoma; eribulin; maintenance chemotherapy; pazopanib; taxanes
Year: 2018 PMID: 29552543 PMCID: PMC5840142 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2018.00046
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
AJCC TNM staging system for soft tissue sarcoma.
Histologic grading is defined as follows: (1) Differentiation: score from 1 to 3, (2) Mitotic count: score from 1 to 3, and (3) Tumor necrosis: score from 0 to 2.
Sum (1) to (3) and determine grade as follows.
Gx: not assessed.
G1: total score of 2 or 3.
G2: total score of 4 or 5.
G3: total score of >5.
Reported factors associated with poor survival determined by studies with >50 patients in CAS.
| Age | Tumor size | Pathological feature | Margin | Location | Others | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Albores-Saavedra et al. ( | 434 | >50 | N.S. | Head and neckDeeper location | Lymph node metastasisDistant metastasis | ||
| Perez et al. ( | 88 | N.S. | >5 cm | N.S. | |||
| Holden et al. ( | 72 | N.S. | >5 cm | N.S. | N.S. | ||
| Guadagnolo et al. ( | 70 | >5 cm | N.S. | Surgery alone | |||
| Patel et al. ( | 55 | >70 | N.S. | N.S. | N.S. | Without multimodality or radiation therapy | |
N.S., not significant; PS, performance status.
Chemotherapy options and their effect for angiosarcoma.
| Agent | Patients | Response/median survival (months) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anthracyclines | Pooled analysis of 11 clinical trials for angiosarcoma from all sites | 108 | Response ratio: 25% for all sites |
| Paclitaxel | Retrospective review of angiosarcoma from all sites | 34 | Response ratio: 29.5% for all sites |
| 68 | Response ratio: 53% for all sites Response ratio: 78% for CAS | ||
| ANGIOTAX study: phase-2 study including angiosarcoma from all sites | 30 | Response ratio: 18% for all sites Response ratio: 89% for CAS | |
| ANGIOTAX plus study: phase-2 study comparing paclitaxel with/without bevacizumab from all sites (showing paclitaxel arm only) | 24 | Response ratio: 45.8% for all sites | |
| Retrospective study for head/neck CAS | 9 | Response ratio: 89% for CAS | |
| Docetaxel | Retrospective study for CAS | 9 | Response ratio: 67% for CAS |
| Gemcitabine | Retrospective study with angiosarcoma from all sites | 25 | Response ratio: 64% for all sites |
PFS, progression-free survival; OS, overall survival; CAS, cutaneous angiosarcoma.
Study using chemotherapy and radiation therapy for CAS.
| Study | Patients tumor location/size | Treatment | RT dose | Response/pattern of failure | Median OS (months) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mark et al. ( | 5 | Scalp: 4 and Face: 1 | Anthracyclines | 30–76.2 Gy | Response ratio: N.D. | 27.0 |
| 4 | Scalp: 1 and Face: 3 | 50–65 Gy | Local: 1/4 | Not reached | ||
| Rhomberg et al. ( | 1 | Scalp/face: 1 | Razoxane | 35–66 Gy | CR | 41 |
| Miki et al. ( | 11 | Scalp: 16 and Face: 1 | Docetaxel | 70 Gy | Response ratio: 82% | |
| 5 | ||||||
| Our study ( | 16 | Scalp: 14, and Extremity: 2 | Docetaxel | <65Gy:12 | ||
| 12 | Scalp: 10, extremity: 2 | |||||
*P < 0.05.
**P < 0.01.
OS, overall survival; CAS, cutaneous angiosarcoma; N.D., not described; IL-2: interleukin-2.
Figure 1Representative cases of CAS treated by concurrent CRT.
Maintenance chemotherapy after primary therapy.
| Study | Tumor location | Primary chemotherapy | RT dose | Maintenance chemotherapy and duration (months) | Pattern of failure | Median OS (months) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nagano et al., 2007 (101) | 9 | Scalp: 6, Face: 1 | Docetaxel | – | Docetaxel | 3–22 | Local: 4 | Not described |
| Rhomberg et al. 2009 (99) | 5 | Thyroid: 4, Scalp/face: 1 | Razoxane | 35–66 Gy | Razoxane | 6 weeks-36 | Local or distant: 2 | 27.0 |
| Our study2014 | 9 | Scalp: 7, Limb: 2 | Docetaxel | |||||
| 7 | Scalp: 7 | |||||||
** P < 0.01.
RT, radiotherapy; MD, median; OS, overall survival.