Literature DB >> 30231890

Assessment of denosumab treatment effects and imaging response in patients with giant cell tumor of bone.

Jacob Engellau1, Leanne Seeger2, Robert Grimer3, Robert Henshaw4, Hans Gelderblom5, Edwin Choy6, Sant Chawla7, Peter Reichardt8, Michael O'Neal9, Amy Feng10,11, Ira Jacobs10,12, Zachary J Roberts10,13, Ada Braun10,14, Bruce A Bach10,15.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Denosumab has been shown to reduce tumor size and progression, reform mineralized bone, and increase intralesional bone density in patients with giant cell tumor of bone (GCTB); however, radiologic assessment of tumors in bone is challenging. The study objective was to assess tumor response to denosumab using three different imaging parameters in a prespecified analysis in patients with GCTB from two phase 2 studies.
METHODS: The studies enrolled adults and adolescents (skeletally mature and at least 12 years of age) with radiographically measurable GCTB that were given denosumab 120 mg every 4 weeks, with additional doses on days 8 and 15 of cycle 1. The proportion of patients with an objective tumor response was assessed using either Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors version 1.1 (RECIST), European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer response criteria (positron emission tomography [PET] scan criteria), or inverse Choi density/size (ICDS) criteria. Target lesions were measured by computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging (both studies), PET (study 2 only), or plain film radiograph (study 2 only).
RESULTS: Most patients (71.6%) had an objective tumor response by at least one response criteria. Per RECIST, 25.1% of patients had a response; per PET scan criteria, 96.2% had a response; per ICDS, 76.1% had a response. 68.5% had an objective tumor response ≥ 24 weeks. Using any criteria, crude incidence of response ranged from 56% (vertebrae/skull) to 91% (lung/soft tissue), and 98.2% had tumor control ≥ 24 weeks. Reduced PET avidity appeared to be an early sign of response to denosumab treatment.
CONCLUSION: Modified PET scan criteria and ICDS criteria indicate that most patients show responses and higher benefit rates than modified RECIST, and therefore may be useful for early assessment of response to denosumab. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov Clinical Trials Registry NCT00396279 (retrospectively registered November 6, 2006) and NCT00680992 (retrospectively registered May 20, 2008).

Entities:  

Keywords:  Denosumab; Giant cell tumor of bone; Objective tumor response; RANKL

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30231890      PMCID: PMC6146657          DOI: 10.1186/s12957-018-1478-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  World J Surg Oncol        ISSN: 1477-7819            Impact factor:   2.754


Background

Giant cell tumor of bone (GCTB) is a histologically benign bone tumor composed of mononuclear stromal and multinucleated giant cells that exhibit osteoclastic activity, typically arising in the metaphyseal/epiphyseal portions of long bones [1, 2]. GCTB causes significant bone destruction, leading to pain, pathologic fracture, and impaired joint structure and functionality [3, 4]. Surgical resection is the primary curative method for GCTB; however, aggressive interventions, such as adjuvant therapy with liquid nitrogen or phenol, are often required to decrease morbidity, avoid amputation, and ensure adequate local control [4, 5]. Effective treatment options are limited for patients with lesions in locations not amenable to surgical resection [4], and local recurrence develops after several years in approximately 10–50% and 5% of patients after intralesional treatment or wide resection, respectively [5-8]. Constitutive activation of receptor activator of nuclear factor-kappa B (RANK) ligand maintains the osteolytic phenotype in GCTB [9, 10]. Denosumab (XGEVA®, Amgen Inc., Thousand Oaks, CA, USA), a RANK ligand inhibitor, is a fully human monoclonal antibody approved for the treatment of unresectable GCTB or when resection may result in severe morbidity. Denosumab treatment of GCTB prevents further tumor progression, reduces tumor size, reforms mineralized bone, and increases intralesional bone density [10, 11]. Radiologic assessment of tumor response in bone tumors presents unique challenges, and no uniform radiographic assessment criteria to date have been advanced to specifically assess response in GCTB. To address this challenge, our analysis combined imaging assessment techniques and captured response elements from three response evaluation measures widely employed in the assessment of change in tumor burden across a variety of tumor types, with modifications to tailor the response measures specifically to the unique properties of GCTB. Imaging records from two phase 2 clinical trials that supported denosumab registration [10, 11] were analyzed with three imaging parameters to measure the changes in lesion size and density, compare available radiographic parameters, and assess treatment response to denosumab in patients with GCTB.

Methods

Study design

This analysis used data pooled from two phase 2, open-label, single-arm, international, multicenter studies of denosumab [10, 11] in skeletally mature patients (≥ 12 years of age) with histologically confirmed GCTB and radiographically measurable disease. Key exclusion criteria included current use of alternative GCTB treatments (e.g., radiation, chemotherapy, embolization, or bisphosphonates). Study 1 [10] is complete; study 2 is ongoing [11]. In both studies, patients received 120 mg denosumab subcutaneously every 4 weeks, with additional loading doses on days 8 and 15 of the first treatment cycle (i.e., month 1). Patients received denosumab until disease progression and no clinical benefit, patient decision to withdraw from the study, or until complete tumor resection. In study 2 [11], patients with complete tumor resection received an additional six doses of denosumab after resection.

Imaging assessments

Patients with ≥ 1 evaluable time point assessment were included in this analysis (Fig. 1). In study 1, computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was required every 3 months [10], and in study 2, the imaging modality and frequency followed the local standard practice, which included plain film radiograph, CT, MRI, and 2-deoxy-2-[18F]fluoro-d-glucose positron emission tomography (18FDG-PET) [11]. Lesion images were retrospectively reviewed centrally by experienced bone radiologists blinded to investigator assessment. The central review was performed using a charter-specified, two-reader paradigm, with adjudication in case of interpretation discordance [11]. Key parameters and processes of the integrated, independent analysis of objective tumor response were agreed upon following consultation with regulatory authorities.
Fig. 1

CONSORT diagram

CONSORT diagram All available CT, MRI, and whole-body 18FDG-PET images were provided for the assessment of tumor response and disease progression using prespecified criteria (Table 1). Up to three response evaluation parameters were used to capture the unique anatomic and radiologic features of each lesion and response to treatment. These included criteria for modified Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors version 1.1 (RECIST), European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC; referred to as PET scan criteria), and inverse Choi density/size (ICDS) as outlined in Table 1 [12-14]. Postbaseline time points for assessment of tumor response, including the length of therapy by the patient, are summarized in Additional file 1: Figure S1.
Table 1

Response criteria

Modified RECIST 1.1[13]Modified EORTC [12]ICDS [14]
CRDisappearance of all target lesions; all target lymph nodes are < 10 mm in the short axisComplete resolution of abnormal 18FDG uptake within the tumor volume of all target lesions to a level that is indistinguishable from surrounding normal tissueDisappearance of all disease
PRAt least a 30% decrease in SLD using baseline SLD as a referenceReduction of the sum of the SUVmax by ≥ 15–25% after 1 cycle and a decrease of ≥ 25% compared with baseline after > 1 treatment cycleA decrease in size (%Δ Choi SLD) ≥ 10% or an increase in CT density > 15% compared with baseline, no new lesions, and no obvious progression of nonmeasurable disease
SDNeither sufficient shrinkage of target lesions to qualify for PR nor sufficient increase to qualify for PD, taking as reference the nadir SLD%ΔΣ SUVmax increased by < 25% or decreased by < 15% compared with baseline and no visible extent of 18FDG tumor uptake (> 20% in the longest dimension)Does not meet the criteria for CR, PR, or PD; no symptomatic deterioration attributed to tumor progression
PDAt least a 20% increase in the SLD of target lesions, taking as reference the nadir SLD; in addition to the relative increase of 20% in SLD, the SLD must also demonstrate an absolute increase of ≥ 5 mm%ΔΣ SUVmax increased by ≥ 25% compared with baseline scan, visible increase in the extent of 18FDG uptake (> 20% in the longest dimension) or the appearance of new 18FDG uptake in metastatic lesionsAn increase in unidimensional tumor size (Choi SLD) ≥ 10% and does not meet the criteria for PR using CT density; any new lesions identified by CT/MRI; new intratumoral nodules or increase in the size of existing intratumoral nodules
UEA target lesion present at baseline that subsequently became UE18FDG-PET exam was unavailable or deemed UE;a response will be UE unless unequivocal PD is determined on the basis of the evaluable target lesionThe CT/MRI exam is unavailable or deemed UE; if a target lesion is deemed UE by density and size measurement and the rules for PD do not apply, a response of CR, PR, or SD cannot be assigned for the time point and the response will be UE

RECIST Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors, EORTC European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer, ICDS inverse Choi density/size, CR complete response, FDG-PET 2-deoxy-2- [18F]-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography, PR partial response, SLD sum of longest diameter, SUV maximum standardized uptake value, SD stable disease, PD progressive disease CT computed tomography, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, UE unevaluable

aThe UE rate for this study was essentially 0

Response criteria RECIST Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors, EORTC European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer, ICDS inverse Choi density/size, CR complete response, FDG-PET 2-deoxy-2- [18F]-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography, PR partial response, SLD sum of longest diameter, SUV maximum standardized uptake value, SD stable disease, PD progressive disease CT computed tomography, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, UE unevaluable aThe UE rate for this study was essentially 0

Statistics

Statistical analyses were descriptive in nature, and only summary statistics were presented. The analyses included the proportion of patients with an objective tumor response, time to first objective tumor response, duration of objective tumor response, and the proportions of patients with sustained (≥ 4, 12, and 24 weeks) objective tumor response and tumor control (complete response [CR], partial response [PR], or stable disease [SD]). Objective tumor response was defined as either CR or PR using any of the three tumor response evaluation criteria. The proportion of patients with an objective tumor response by baseline target lesion location and the percentage changes from baseline for lesion diameter and density were also summarized.

Results

Patients

Of the 303 patients, 190 (study 1 [n = 27] and study 2 [n = 163]) were included in this analysis. Of these, 187 had measurable anatomic lesion size evaluable by CT, 26 had functional imaging by 18FDG-PET, and 176 had CT-evaluable lesions, assessed for Hounsfield unit (HU) density and size, and were included in the RECIST, PET scan criteria, and ICDS evaluations, respectively. Study 1 patients primarily had axial skeleton lesions not amenable to surgery with curative intent. Study 2 patients were divided into resectable lesions for which surgery could lead to significant morbidity (cohort 1) and unresectable tumors (cohort 2). All patients had radiographic evidence of active primary or recurrent GCTB within the previous year, with target lesions distributed across the disease spectrum; pelvis/sacrum (n = 61; 32%), lower extremities (n = 39; 21%), and lung (n = 38; 20%) were common target lesion sites. Most patients (70%) had prior GCTB resection/surgery, 20% had received prior bisphosphonates, and 20% had received prior radiotherapy (Table 2). Median (range) of time of patient participation was 13.4 months (1.7–48.9); patients received a median (range) of 16 doses (4–54) of denosumab. Baseline demographics and disease characteristics for patients without evaluable imaging analysis were similar to the population included in this analysis (Amgen Inc., data on file).
Table 2

Baseline demographics and disease characteristics

Overall (N = 190)
Sex, n (%)
 Female105 (55)
 Male85 (45)
Age, median (Q1, Q3), years33 (26, 43)
ECOG performance statusa, n (%)
 0106 (56)
 176 (40)
 26 (3)
Previous treatment
 Resection/surgery132 (70)
 Bisphosphonates38 (20)
 Radiotherapy37 (20)
 Chemotherapy21 (11)
GCTB disease type, n (%)
 Recurrent unresectable92 (48)
 Primary unresectable43 (23)
 Recurrent resectable29 (15)
 Primary resectable26 (14)
Location of target lesionb, n (%)
 Pelvis/sacrum61 (32)
 Lower extremities39 (21)
 Lung38 (20)
 Spine18 (10)
 Upper extremities17 (9)
 Otherc11 (6)
 Skull/neck5 (3)
 Missing1 (1)

Q quartile, ECOG Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group, GCTB giant cell tumor of bone

aECOG missing for two patients

bBased on case report form

cIncludes other soft tissue and bone sites

Baseline demographics and disease characteristics Q quartile, ECOG Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group, GCTB giant cell tumor of bone aECOG missing for two patients bBased on case report form cIncludes other soft tissue and bone sites Overall, 136/190 patients (71.6% [95% CI, 64.6–77.9%]) had an objective tumor response (CR or PR) by at least one response criteria. Per RECIST, 47/187 patients (25.1% [95% CI, 19.1–32.0%]) had a response; per PET scan criteria, 25/26 patients (96.2% [95% CI, 80.4–99.9%]) had a response; per ICDS, 134/176 patients (76.1% [95% CI, 69.1–82.2%]) had a response (Table 3). Using any response criteria, the median time to first objective tumor response (Kaplan-Meier estimate) was about 3 months per PET scan and ICDS criteria and was not estimable per RECIST. Overall, tumor responses were sustained; most patients (68.5%) had an objective tumor response for ≥ 24 weeks (Table 3). When analyzed by study and cohort, response rates were similar for PET scan criteria and ICDS (Table 3). Variations were observed when using RECIST, which showed a lower rate of response for study 1 (11%) than study 2 (28%). Within study 2, the response rates per RECIST were 32% and 17% for cohort 1 and cohort 2, respectively (Table 3). Similar results were observed for sustained objective tumor responses at weeks 4, 12, and 24 (Table 3).
Table 3

Objective tumor response resultsa

Overall best responseRECIST 1.1EORTCICDS
Proportion of responders, n/N (%)
 Overall136/190 (71.6)47/187 (25.1)25/26 (96.2)134/176 (76.1)
  Study 120/27 (74.1)3/27 (11.1)15/16 (93.8)18/23 (78.3)
  Study 2116/163 (71.2)44/160 (27.5)10/10 (100.0)116/153 (75.8)
   Cohort 176/114 (66.7)36/113 (31.9)4/4 (100.0)76/105 (72.4)
   Cohort 240/49 (81.6)8/47 (17.0)6/6 (100.0)40/48 (83.3)
Median time to first OTR, months (95% CI)b3.1 (2.89–3.65)NE (20.9–NE)2.7 (1.64–2.79)3.0 (2.79–3.48)
Patients with sustained OTR, n/N (%)
 Overall
  ≥ 4 weeks102/153 (66.7)32/150 (21.3)18/20 (90.0)101/143 (70.6)
  ≥ 12 weeks98/144 (68.1)32/141 (22.7)16/17 (94.1)97/135 (71.9)
  ≥ 24 weeks76/111 (68.5)26/109 (23.9)11/12 (91.7)76/102 (74.5)
 Study 1
  ≥ 4 weeks15/24 (62.5)2/24 (8.3)11/13 (84.6)13/20 (65.0)
  ≥ 12 weeks14/20 (70.0)2/20 (10.0)10/11 (90.9)13/17 (76.5)
  ≥ 24 weeks12/17 (70.6)2/17 (11.8)8/9 (88.9)12/14 (85.7)
 Study 2
  ≥ 4 weeks87/129 (67.4)30/126 (23.8)7/7 (100.0)88/123 (71.5)
  ≥ 12 weeks84/124 (67.7)30/121 (24.8)6/6 (100.0)84/118 (71.2)
  ≥ 24 weeks64/94 (68.1)24/92 (26.1)3/3 (100.0)64/88 (72.7)
  Cohort 1
   ≥ 4 weeks59/91 (64.8)25/90 (27.8)3/3 (100.0)60/85 (70.6)
   ≥ 12 weeks56/87 (64.4)25/86 (29.1)3/3 (100.0)57/81 (70.4)
   ≥ 24 weeks49/73 (67.1)22/73 (30.1)2/2 (100.0)50/67 (74.6)
  Cohort 2
   ≥ 4 weeks28/38 (73.7)5/36 (13.9)4/4 (100.0)28/38 (73.7)
   ≥ 12 weeks28/37 (75.7)5/35 (14.3)3/3 (100.0)27/37 (73.0)
   ≥ 24 weeks15/21 (71.4)2/19 (10.5)1/1 (100.0)14/21 (66.7)
 Patients with tumor controlc, %
  ≥ 4 weeks148/153 (96.7)145/150 (96.7)19/20 (95.0)139/143 (97.2)
  ≥ 12 weeks139/144 (96.5)137/141 (97.2)17/17 (100.0)131/135 (97.0)
  ≥ 24 weeks109/111 (98.2)108/109 (99.1)12/12 (100.0)101/102 (99.0)

RECIST Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors, EORTC European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer, ICDS inverse Choi density/size; NE not estimable, OTR objective tumor response

aPatients with at least one evaluable time point assessment

bKaplan-Meier estimate

cDefined as CR + PR + SD

Objective tumor response resultsa RECIST Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors, EORTC European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer, ICDS inverse Choi density/size; NE not estimable, OTR objective tumor response aPatients with at least one evaluable time point assessment bKaplan-Meier estimate cDefined as CR + PR + SD Objective tumor response by target lesion location showed that the crude incidences of response (95% CI) using any criteria were 14/24 (58.3% [36.6–77.9%]) for pelvis, 22/37 (59.5% [42.1–75.2%]) for sacrum, 32/40 (80.0% [64.4–90.9%]) for lower extremity, 39/43 (90.7% [77.9–97.4%]) for lung/soft tissue, 15/20 (75.0% [50.9–91.3%]) for upper extremity, and 14/25 (56.0% [34.9–75.6%]) for vertebrae/skull. Figure 2 shows CT images before and after denosumab treatment in a patient with sacral GCTB. Tumor control ≥ 24 weeks was observed in 98.2% of patients using any criteria; similar rates were observed for the other response criteria (Table 3).
Fig. 2

Sacral GCTB before and after treatment with denosumab. a Bone window and b soft tissue window pretreatment CT scan from August 14, 2009, through the level of the upper hip joints. There is extensive bone destruction and a large soft tissue mass that displaces the rectum. c Bone window and d soft tissue window CT repeat scan on December 12, 2013 (about 4 years and 4 months later) following treatment with denosumab (about 3 years and 10 months; first dose on January 21, 2010, and last dose on November 21, 2013). The soft tissue mass is now negligible, and the bone is reconstituting. CT computed tomography; GCTB giant cell tumor of bone

Sacral GCTB before and after treatment with denosumab. a Bone window and b soft tissue window pretreatment CT scan from August 14, 2009, through the level of the upper hip joints. There is extensive bone destruction and a large soft tissue mass that displaces the rectum. c Bone window and d soft tissue window CT repeat scan on December 12, 2013 (about 4 years and 4 months later) following treatment with denosumab (about 3 years and 10 months; first dose on January 21, 2010, and last dose on November 21, 2013). The soft tissue mass is now negligible, and the bone is reconstituting. CT computed tomography; GCTB giant cell tumor of bone Median (range) lesion size was 62.5 mm (10–283), consistent with the advanced disease in the study population (Table 4). Anatomic extent, measured by longest diameter (LD), demonstrated that the greatest percentage decreases in size occurred ≤ 3 months on-study and were consistent and sustained. Considering the best percentage change in LD, arrangement in increasing order of degree of response per the ICDS evaluation (Additional file 1: Figure S2a) revealed a group of patients that did not respond to therapy, with an LD increase ≥ 10% (n = 4, 2%); a second group of patients with SD and LD changes ± 10% (n = 76, 43%); and a third group of patients with an LD decreases ≥ 10% (n = 95, 54%). For responders (defined by ≥ 10% reduction in tumor size; Table 1) with a measurable decrease in LD, there was an evenly graded distribution of best LD reduction ranging from 11 to > 70%.
Table 4

Baseline LD and SUVmax summary in patients with ≥ 1 evaluable time point assessment of FDG-PET avidity

n MeanSDMinQ1MedianQ3Max
LD, mm17468.440.810.038.062.591.0283.0
SUVmax2611.14.73.87.910.613.621.6

FDG-PET 2-deoxy-2-[18F]-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography, LD longest diameter, max maximum, min minimum, Q quartile, SUV maximum standardized uptake value

Baseline LD and SUVmax summary in patients with ≥ 1 evaluable time point assessment of FDG-PET avidity FDG-PET 2-deoxy-2-[18F]-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography, LD longest diameter, max maximum, min minimum, Q quartile, SUV maximum standardized uptake value Using HU density as a response parameter, the best percentage change in density for target lesions showed that 99 of 124 patients (80%) had ≥ 15% increase and 25 patients (20%) had < 15% increase (Additional file 1: Figure S2b); 15% is the density cutoff for the response per Choi gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) criteria [14]. HU evaluation showed that percentage increases in tumor density ≤ 6 months on-study were consistent and sustained; mean HU values rarely decreased once increases were observed, with medians of 93 and 108 at postbaseline time point assessments 1 and 2, respectively. Time point assessments were ≥ 24 weeks apart [11]. At baseline, the mean (SD) maximum standardized uptake value (SUVmax) of 18FDG-PET in 26 patients using PET scan criteria was 11.1 (4.7), indicative of high metabolic activity in GCTB lesions before denosumab treatment (Table 4). Almost 100% of lesions showed a rapid reduction in 18FDG-PET avidity at the earliest time point assessment (Table 3). PET responsiveness did not appear to vary with lesion location. Reduction in 18FDG-PET avidity therefore appeared to be an early and universal sign of response to denosumab treatment.

Discussion

We observed impressive tumor control rates, with nearly all patients with GCTB showing sustained tumor control for ≥ 24 weeks, using any of the response criteria. Increases in lesion density by HU likely reflected the pharmacodynamic response to denosumab treatment (i.e., suppression of osteolysis and increased formation of dense fibro-osseous tissue and/or woven bone [9]). This clinical benefit allows patients to defer or downstage their planned surgical procedure when surgical resection is likely to result in severe morbidity [15]. In contrast, a purely size-based evaluation using RECIST is potentially insensitive in assessing response in bone lesions with a mixed osteolytic and expanding soft tissue component; the size of GCTB tumors changes little with targeted therapies. Therefore, an inverse modification of the ICDS was used to evaluate both GCTB density and size; either a decrease in size or an increase in density was considered a response to treatment. In GCTB, decreases in tumor size per LD are believed to reflect cytoreduction, in alignment with RECIST principles for solid tumor assessment. The kinetics of GCTB responses to denosumab therapy showed rapid cytoreduction that peaked by 3 months and was maintained thereafter, with responses of ≥ 24 weeks in nearly all patients. The Choi criteria were developed to monitor response in a soft tissue sarcoma undergoing targeted therapy where tumor cell viability and radiological size reduction may be uncoupled during the response to treatment [14]. Analogous to GIST, in the setting of GCTB, we believe that the ICDS criteria used in the present study perform as pharmacodynamic markers of effect and may offer an advantage to conventional RECIST. In our study, patients had unresectable tumors or tumors requiring highly invasive or disabling surgery in an attempt to achieve surgical cure; therefore, there was a large number of pelvic, spine, and pulmonary lesions that complicated radiographic evaluation of response. Using ICDS, four patients had a ≥ 10% increase in LD, two of whom sustained increases in tumor size after study enrollment but before administration of denosumab. These two patients experienced sustained disease control lasting several months while receiving denosumab continuously, and for one patient, 12 additional months of disease control following discontinuation of denosumab. The remaining two patients had atypical GCTB. One had multiostotic and metastatic GCTB with lesions in the pelvis, rib, and lung at study entry and received denosumab for 8 months before being lost to follow-up. Multiostotic GCTB accounts for < 1% of all GCTB and has a different clinical presentation than solitary lesions; typically, patients are younger, suggesting a germ-line component that confers susceptibility to the disease [16-21]. The other patient with atypical GCTB with an increased tumor size had a clinically aggressive disease with ten previous attempts at surgical resection before enrollment. While these patients met all histological entry criteria and had pathologically confirmed GCTB, it remains unclear whether their atypical courses before and during denosumab treatment suggest an aggressive clinical variant of classical GCTB or an alternative diagnosis. Because true nonresponse to denosumab in GCTB is rare, patients with nonresponse may deserve more comprehensive sampling for histological disease assessment. The best percentage change in density for target lesions in the ICDS evaluation showed that 80% of the 124 patients evaluable for density had a ≥ 15% increase in density, reflecting the desired outcome of denosumab therapy. Our results confirm and extend findings reported in a smaller study [22] where 88% patients (n = 17) had an objective tumor response using any response criteria after denosumab treatment (median duration of 13.1 months). In the present study, the proportions of patients with an objective tumor response were 35% per RECIST, 82% per PET scan criteria, and 71% per ICDS criteria (size/density). The median time to objective tumor response using any of the response criteria was 3.0 months (95% CI, 2.9–3.1). The benefit of denosumab in GCTB has already been established [10, 11]; our results provide clinicians with additional information on imaging and monitoring patients with GCTB treated with denosumab. The single-arm study design limits our analysis; however, the central independent review of images was conducted to minimize this limitation. Furthermore, this study had a large number of unevaluable patients, there was no protocol-defined imaging schedule or methodology (which is standard for this type of study), and only a few PET scans were done, as PET was optional. We also limited our definition of sustained tumor control to a time frame of 24 weeks, which may be considered short by some clinicians; however, there are no well-established tumor response criteria for patients with GCTB [22]. We also did not examine any association between response and extent of prior treatment or other factors. The retrospective nature of this analysis made obtaining historical images difficult. There are inherent limitations associated with using RECIST alone for assessment of denosumab response in GCTB because of the sometimes modest reduction in tumor size despite clinical benefit. Reduction in 18FDG-PET avidity predicted a favorable tumor response and sustained tumor control with denosumab treatment. Given the rarity of denosumab refractoriness in typical GCTB, new or continued high SUVmax levels while on denosumab should alert clinicians to the possibility of an aggressive clinical variant or an alternate diagnosis such as sarcoma. Our data do not suggest an increase in the risk of osteosarcoma following denosumab treatment. There are recent case studies of patients with GCTB treated with denosumab who have developed osteosarcoma [23, 24]; three patients were diagnosed with osteosarcoma during denosumab treatment in primary reports of the studies used for our analysis [10, 11]. Patients with GCTB are at higher risk for developing osteosarcoma than the general population, with approximately 2–5% of patients developing secondary sarcoma following radiotherapy or surgical resection [25-27]. There also remains the previously reported, equally difficult task of identifying patients with small foci of sarcomatous change within the large field of otherwise benign-appearing GCTB [28]. The incidence of pathologic fracture is up to 30% in patients with GCTB; data to date do not indicate an increased rate with denosumab [8, 29, 30].

Conclusions

Modified PET scan criteria and ICDS criteria showed responses in most patients in our analysis, indicating a substantially higher benefit rate compared to that assessed by modified RECIST. PET or CT with ICDS provided an early indication of treatment response. Moreover, all response criteria indicated tumor control ≥ 24 weeks to denosumab. Loss of 18FDG-PET avidity may have a dual role in both predicting long-term disease control and offering clinicians some reassurance that there is not a focus of sarcoma with the GCTB lesion, which would likely remain 18FDG-PET avid despite denosumab treatment. Further research is required to determine the appropriate imaging technique to be used longitudinally in a given patient, although many practitioners favor a combination of plain radiographs and CT. Regardless of the modality used, careful evaluation of nonresponders is necessary. Figure S1. Postbaseline time point assessments for tumor response by study for patients with ≥ 1 evaluable time point assessment. Per protocol, the sites were instructed to perform CT or MRI scans of the lesion at baseline and quarterly during the treatment period. 18FDG-PET scans were performed at the discretion of the investigator. Because this was a retrospective, independent image review, no specific acquisition parameters were provided. Sites were instructed to use their standard acquisition parameters for CT, MRI, and 18FDG-PET. Consistent use of the imaging modalities, parameters, and contrast was recommended for reproducibility. CT computed tomography, FDG‑PET 2-deoxy-2-[18F] fluoro-D-glucose positron emission tomography; MRI magnetic resonance imaging. Figure S2. (a) Best percentage change in SLD for target lesions in the ICDS evaluation and (b) best percentage change in density for target lesions in the ICDS evaluation. ICDS inverse Choi density/size; LD longest diameter; SLD sum of longest diameter. (DOCX 233 kb)
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Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2012-06-18       Impact factor: 12.531

4.  Measurement of clinical and subclinical tumour response using [18F]-fluorodeoxyglucose and positron emission tomography: review and 1999 EORTC recommendations. European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) PET Study Group.

Authors:  H Young; R Baum; U Cremerius; K Herholz; O Hoekstra; A A Lammertsma; J Pruim; P Price
Journal:  Eur J Cancer       Date:  1999-12       Impact factor: 9.162

5.  Giant cell tumor of long bone: a Canadian Sarcoma Group study.

Authors:  Robert E Turcotte; Jay S Wunder; Marc H Isler; Robert S Bell; Norman Schachar; Bassam A Masri; Guy Moreau; Aileen M Davis
Journal:  Clin Orthop Relat Res       Date:  2002-04       Impact factor: 4.176

6.  Recurrent giant cell tumor of long bones: analysis of surgical management.

Authors:  Frank M Klenke; Doris E Wenger; Carrie Y Inwards; Peter S Rose; Franklin H Sim
Journal:  Clin Orthop Relat Res       Date:  2010-09-16       Impact factor: 4.176

7.  Multicentric giant-cell tumor of bone.

Authors:  F H Sim; D C Dahlin; J W Beabout
Journal:  J Bone Joint Surg Am       Date:  1977-12       Impact factor: 5.284

8.  Giant-cell tumor of bone.

Authors:  M Campanacci; N Baldini; S Boriani; A Sudanese
Journal:  J Bone Joint Surg Am       Date:  1987-01       Impact factor: 5.284

9.  Surgical downstaging in an open-label phase II trial of denosumab in patients with giant cell tumor of bone.

Authors:  Piotr Rutkowski; Stefano Ferrari; Robert J Grimer; Paul D Stalley; Sander P D Dijkstra; Andrzej Pienkowski; Gualter Vaz; Jay S Wunder; Leanne L Seeger; Amy Feng; Zachary J Roberts; Bruce A Bach
Journal:  Ann Surg Oncol       Date:  2015-06-02       Impact factor: 5.344

10.  Two Cases of Sarcoma Arising in Giant Cell Tumor of Bone Treated with Denosumab.

Authors:  Cory Julian Broehm; Erika L Garbrecht; Jeff Wood; Therese Bocklage
Journal:  Case Rep Med       Date:  2015-12-22
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  11 in total

1.  Malignant Transformation of Giant Cell Tumor of Bone and the Association with Denosumab Treatment: A Radiology and Pathology Perspective.

Authors:  K van Langevelde; A H G Cleven; A Navas Cañete; L van der Heijden; M A J van de Sande; H Gelderblom; J V M G Bovée
Journal:  Sarcoma       Date:  2022-06-17

2.  Denosumab versus zoledronic acid in cases of surgically unsalvageable giant cell tumor of bone: A randomized clinical trial.

Authors:  Shenglong Li; Peng Chen; Qiankun Yang
Journal:  J Bone Oncol       Date:  2019-01-23       Impact factor: 4.072

3.  A new computerized tomography classification to evaluate response to Denosumab in giant cell tumors in the extremities.

Authors:  Laura Campanacci; Andrea Sambri; Manuel Ricardo Medellin; Pietro Cimatti; Costantino Errani; Davide Maria Donati
Journal:  Acta Orthop Traumatol Turc       Date:  2019-06-26       Impact factor: 1.511

4.  Short-term Preoperative Denosumab With Surgery in Unresectable or Recurrent Giant Cell Tumor of Bone.

Authors:  Run-Zi Zhang; Tian-Xiao Ma; Dian-Wen Qi; Ming Zhao; Tongyu Hu; Guo-Chuan Zhang
Journal:  Orthop Surg       Date:  2019-11-25       Impact factor: 2.071

5.  Outcome of lung metastases due to bone giant cell tumor initially managed with observation.

Authors:  Shinji Tsukamoto; Giovanni Ciani; Andreas F Mavrogenis; Cristina Ferrari; Manabu Akahane; Yasuhito Tanaka; Michele Rocca; Alessandra Longhi; Costantino Errani
Journal:  J Orthop Surg Res       Date:  2020-11-07       Impact factor: 2.359

6.  Malignancy in giant cell tumor of bone: analysis of an open-label phase 2 study of denosumab.

Authors:  Emanuela Palmerini; Leanne L Seeger; Marco Gambarotti; Alberto Righi; Peter Reichardt; Susan Bukata; Jean-Yves Blay; Tian Dai; Danielle Jandial; Piero Picci
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2021-01-22       Impact factor: 4.430

7.  Should Denosumab or Radical Surgery Be Recommended for a Spinal Giant Cell Tumour in a Fertile Female?

Authors:  Harshadkumar Dhirajlal Rajgor; Steven James; Rajesh Botchu; Melvin Grainger; Marcin Czyz
Journal:  Cureus       Date:  2020-11-17

8.  Denosumab Therapy for Giant-cell Tumor of the Lumbar Spine: A Case Report and Immunohistochemical Examination.

Authors:  Takafumi Yayama; Kanji Mori; Akira Nakamura; Tomohiro Mimura; Shinji Imai
Journal:  J Orthop Case Rep       Date:  2020

Review 9.  Radiological findings of denosumab treatment for giant cell tumours of bone.

Authors:  Kirsten van Langevelde; Catherine L McCarthy
Journal:  Skeletal Radiol       Date:  2020-04-26       Impact factor: 2.199

Review 10.  State of the Art and New Concepts in Giant Cell Tumor of Bone: Imaging Features and Tumor Characteristics.

Authors:  Anna Parmeggiani; Marco Miceli; Costantino Errani; Giancarlo Facchini
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2021-12-15       Impact factor: 6.639

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