| Literature DB >> 32547189 |
Lu Xie1, Jie Xu1, Xin Sun1, Kuisheng Liu1, Xiaowei Li1, Fangzhou He1, Xinyu Liu1, Jin Gu2, Zhe Lv3, Rongli Yang1, Xiaodong Tang1, Taiqiang Yan1, Dasen Li1, Yi Yang1, Sen Dong1, Kunkun Sun4, Danhua Shen4, Wei Guo1.
Abstract
PURPOSE: For patients who have chondrosarcoma in the unresectable setting, antiangiogenic agents are reportedly effective. This multicenter, retrospective study investigated the antitumor activity of apatinib in patients with unresectable chondrosarcoma to gain insight into the biological behavior of this disease.Entities:
Keywords: apatinib; chondrosarcoma; inoperable; locally advanced; metastasis
Year: 2020 PMID: 32547189 PMCID: PMC7237692 DOI: 10.2147/CMAR.S253201
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Manag Res ISSN: 1179-1322 Impact factor: 3.989
Patients’ Demographics (N=33)
| Demographic Characteristics | |
|---|---|
| Age | |
| Age (years; mean ± sd) (95% CI) | 40.91±13.61 (36.08, 45.74) |
| Gender, N (%) | |
| Male | 24 (72.73) |
| Female | 9 (27.27) |
| Surgeries, median (range) | 2 (1, 5) |
| ECOG performance status at enrollment, N (%) | |
| 0 | 14 (42.42) |
| 1 | 19 (57.58) |
| Subtypes of chondrosarcoma, N (%) | |
| Common type, grades 2–3 | 20 (60.61) |
| Dedifferentiated type | 5 (15.15) |
| Mesenchymal type | 4 (12.12) |
| Extraskeletal myxoid chondrosarcoma | 3 (9.09) |
| Clear-cell type | 1 (3.03) |
| Median target lesion size at baseline (95% CI), mm | 64.30 (57.59, 91.48) |
| <60mm, N (%) | 16 (48.48) |
| ≥60mm, N (%) | 17 (51.51) |
| Locations of lesions before using apatinib, N (%) | |
| Pulmonary lesions only | 9 (27.27) |
| Musculoskeletal lesions only | 4 (12.12) |
| Both at pulmonary lesions and musculoskeletal lesions as well as visceral infiltration | 20 (60.61) |
| Primary tumor location, N (%) | |
| Extremities | 10 (30.30) |
| Axial skeleton | 19 (57.58) |
| Multiple lesions (malignancy transformation from endochondromatosis) | 1 (3.03) |
| Maxillofacial region | 2 (6.06) |
| Ribs | 1 (3.03) |
| Time interval from diagnosis to apatinib treatment, N (%) | |
| (months; mean ± sd) (95% CI) | 19.92±19.87 (12.87, 26.96) |
| ≤24 months | 16 (48.48) |
| >24 months | 17 (51.52) |
| Previous antineoplastic treatments, N (%) | |
| Treatment naïve | 18 (54.55) |
| ≥1 chemotherapy | 13 (39.39) |
| Target therapy | 2 (6.06) |
| Prior radiation | |
| Yes | 1 (3.03) |
| No | 32 (97.00) |
| Patients’ reason for stopping apatinib, N (%) | 28 (100.00) |
| Disease progression | 17 (60.71) |
| Pulmonary lesions’ progression | 4 (14.29) |
| Musculoskeletal lesions’ progression | 12 (42.86) |
| New lesions | 1 (3.57) |
| Deterioration of general condition | 11 (39.29) |
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; ECOG, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group; N, number; sd, standard deviation.
Efficacy of Apatinib in Patients with Advanced Chondrosarcoma
| Overall (N=33) | |
|---|---|
| Median follow-up time (month) | 22.10 (14.57, 22.97) |
| Confirmed objective responsea | 6 (18.18%) |
| Complete response | 0 (0.00%) |
| Partial response | 6 (18.18%) |
| Stable disease ≥ 3 months | 18 (54.54%) |
| Stable disease < 3 months (more than 2 months) | 5 (15.15%) |
| Progressive disease | 4 (12.12%) |
| Disease control rate at 3 months | 78.79% (26/33) |
| Clinical benefit rate at 6 months | 54.55% (18/33) |
| Median time to best response (SD included) (Q1, Q3) (month) | 2.03 (1.12, 2.23) |
| Duration of response | |
| Median (Q1, Q3) (month) | 5.40 (1.83, 11.42) |
| Ongoing, n/N (%) | 2/6 (33.33%) |
| ITT progression-free survival | |
| KM median (months) | 12.43 (7.00, 21.20) |
| 6 months | 72.90% (55.90%, 87.75%) |
| 12 months | 54.82% (33.93%, 71.59%) |
| 24 months | 12.46% (2.22%, 32.15%) |
| ITT overall survival | |
| KM median | NR |
| Objective response for conventional chondrosarcoma (N=20) | 4/20 (20.00%) |
| KM median (months) for conventional chondrosarcoma (N=20) | 7.0 (95% CI 4.5, 9.6) |
| Patients’ status at last follow-up | |
| AWD | 23 (69.70%) |
| DOD | 8 (24.24%) |
| DOTb | 2 (6.06%) |
Notes: Data are n (%); % (95% CI) or months (95% CI); aResponse was assessed in all enrolled patients; bFor those who died because of deterioration of general condition without disease progression.
Abbreviations: AWD, alive with disease; CI, confidence interval; DOD, died of disease; DOT, died of toxicity; ITT, intention-to-treat population; KM, Kaplan Meier; N, number; NR, not reached; SD, stable disease.
Figure 1Waterfall plots for target lesions for the 33 patients (according to RECIST v1.1).
Figure 2Kaplan-Meier plots for PFS in 33 patients with advanced CS. Crosses indicate censoring.
Figure 3Kaplan-Meier plots for overall survival in 33 patients with advanced CS. Crosses indicate censoring.
Figure 4Forest plots of hazard ratios for disease progression in different clinical or pathological subgroups.
Antiangiogenic Therapy for Advanced Chondrosarcoma
| ClinicalTrials.Gov Identifier | Time | N | Organization | Objects | Agents | ORR | mPFS (m) | PFS rate at 6 m | mOS (m) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NA | 1980–2011 | 171 | Rizzoli Institute and Leiden University Medical Center | Advanced, unresectable, conventional central chondrosarcoma | Observation; doxorubicin-based chemotherapy; or imatinib and sirolimus | NA | NA | NA | 11 (20 m for those who received systemic treatment versus 15 m for those who received no treatment.) |
| NA | 2007–2012 | 10 | Tel-Aviv Sourasky Medical Center | Unresectable symptomatic chondrosarcoma (no subtypes specific) | Sirolimus and cyclophosphamide | 10% | 13.4 | 60% | 15.5 |
| NCT00928525 | 2007–2009 | 26 | Italian Sarcoma Group | Nonresectable or metastatic PDGFR expression chondrosarcoma (conventional and myxoid) | Imatinib | 0% | 3.0 | 20% | 11.0 |
| SARC009 (NCT00464620) | 2007–2016 | 11 | SARC | Conventional chondrosarcoma, grade 1 or 2 | Dasatinib | 0% | 5.5a | 47%a | 21.6 (other sarcomas included) |
| NA | 2010–2016 | 10 | Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Royal Marsden Hospital and the Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Center | Advanced chondrosarcoma (all subtypes included) | Pazopanib or Ramucirumab | 0% | 22.6 | 70% | NR |
| NA | 1988–2011 | 180 | 15 European and American institutionsb | Unresectable and/or metastatic chondrosarcoma (all subtypes included) | Various chemotherapy regimen | 31% for mesenchymal subtypes, 20.5% for dedifferentiated subtypes, 11.5% for conventional subtypes and 0% for clear-cell subtypes | 4.7 | 44.5% | 18 |
| NCT02066285 | 2014–2017 | 26 | Spanish Group for Research on Sarcomas, Italian Sarcoma Group, French Sarcoma Group | Advanced extraskeletal myxoid chondrosarcoma | Pazopanib | 18% | 19 | 74% for 12-m PFS | NR |
| NCT01330966 | 2011–2015 | 47 | City of Hope Medical Center | Unresectable or metastasis conventional chondrosarcoma | Pazopanib | 2% | 7.9 | DCR at 16 w 43% | 17.6 |
| NCT02389244 | NA | 24 | French Sarcoma Group and UNICANCERc | Metastatic or locally advanced chondrosarcoma | Regorafenib | 8.3% | 19.4 w | 24 w PFS rate 47% | NA |
| Present study (NCT04260113) | 2009–2019 | 33 | PKUPH | Inoperable chondrosarcoma (multiple subtypes included) | Apatinib | 24.24% | 12.43 | 76.40% | 42.10 |
Notes: aThis study was evaluated by Choi criterion, while the other was evaluated by RECIST 1.1; bIncluding Department of Medical Oncology, Institut Bergonié, Bordeaux; Department of Medical Oncology, Hôpital Cochin, Paris, France; Sarcoma Service, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, USA; Department of Medicine, Istituto Rizzoli, Bologna, Italy; Department of Medical Oncology, Institut Curie, Paris; Department of Medical Oncology, Centre Eugène Marquis, Rennes; Department of Medical Oncology, University Hospital Centre of Besançon, Besançon; Department of Medicine, Centre Oscar Lambret, Lille; Department of Medical Oncology, Hôpital La Timone, Marseille; Department of Medical Oncology, University Hospital Centre of Strasbourg, Strasbourg; Department of Medical Oncology, Institut de Cancérologie de la Loire, Saint Priest en Jarez; Department of Medical Oncology, Institut Paoli Calmettes, Marseille; Department of Medical Oncology, Centre René Gauducheau, Nantes; Department of Medicine, Institut Gustave Roussy, Villejuif; Department of Medicine, Centre Léon Bérard, Lyon, France; cUNICANCER Group is a hospital group entirely devoted to fighting cancer, which groups together the 20 French Comprehensive Cancer Centers.
Abbreviations: DCR, disease control rate; m, months; mOS, median overall survival; mPFS, median progression-free survival; N, number; NA, not available; NR, not reached; ORR, objective response rate; PFS, progression-free survival; PKUPH, Peking University People’s Hospital; SARC, Sarcoma Alliance for Research through Collaboration; RECIST, Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors; w, weeks.
Figure 5Chest Computed Tomography (CT) of a 17-year-old conventional CS patient before apatinib therapy on March 15, 2018.
Figure 8Chest CT of the patient after using apatinib for almost 22 months with pleurodesis.