| Literature DB >> 32549040 |
Pedro M Rubio1,2, Victor Galán1, Sonia Rodado3, Diego Plaza1, Leopoldo Martínez4,5.
Abstract
Neuroblastoma causes 15% of cancer mortality in children. High risk neuroblastoma has poor prognosis, with high relapse rate and mortality despite multimodal treatment. 123-I-meta-iodo-benzyl-guanidine (mIBG) scintigraphy is one of the current standard diagnostic procedures in neuroblastoma. mIBG can also be used therapeutically, labeled with 131-I, as a radiopharmaceutical agent, delivering targeted radiotherapy to tumoral sites. But published data of this strategy show heterogeneous results. One concern is that in most reports the infused activity is only based in body-weight, which could lead to infra or over-treatment, depending on inter-patient variability in radiation absorption. Activity adjustment by whole-body dosimetry can be used to homogeneize the treatment. Also, mIBG avid tumors may lose avidness along the treatment. As mIBG is used both for treatment and response evaluation, this could result in undetected progressions in patients with apparent complete response. We present a retrospective single-center review of neuroblastoma patients who received therapeutic 131-I-mIBG, focusing on cases with dosimetry-adjusted activity. Dosimetry allowed for a more precise delivery of radiation, reducing 81.1% of deviation from absorption target of 4 Gray (Gy), from 23.4% (±0.936 Gy) to 4.4% (± 0.176 Gy). Patients who showed partial or complete response had better and longer survival. Relapse/progression in non-responders was an early event (within 3 months from treatment). We also present one case of progression with apparent complete response due to loss of mIBG avidness, detected in our series.Entities:
Keywords: dosimetry; false responder; mIBG; mIBG therapy; neuroblastoma
Year: 2020 PMID: 32549040 PMCID: PMC7270400 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2020.00173
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Patients characteristics.
| 0.186 | ||||
| Male | 15 (51.7%) | 4 (80%) | 11 (45.8%) | |
| Female | 14 (48.3%) | 1 (20%) | 13 (54.2%) | |
| At neuroblastoma diagnosis | 42 (29.5–55) | 45 (36–78.5) | 41.5 (26–50) | 0.434 |
| At MIBG treatment | 73.5 (44.5–95.5) | 107 (63.5–124) | 71 (42–89) | 0.219 |
| 0.170 | ||||
| Cervical | 3 (10.3%) | 2 (40%) | 1 (4.2%) | |
| Thoracic | 1 (3.4%) | - | 1 (4.2%) | |
| Abdominal-Pelvic | 24 (82.8%) | 3 (60%) | 21 (87.5%) | |
| | ||||
| No primary | 1 (3.4%) | - | 1 (4.2%) | |
| 0.511 | ||||
| Left | 8 (27.6%) | 1 (20%) | 7 (29.2%) | |
| Right | 15 (51.7%) | 4 (80%) | 11 (45.8%) | |
| Bilateral | 3 (10.3%) | - | 3 (12.5%) | |
| Missing | - | 3 (12.5%) | ||
| 0.865 | ||||
| 2a | 1 (3.4%) | - | 1 (4.2%) | |
| 3 | 6 (20.6%) | 1 (20%) | 5 (20.8%) | |
| 4s | 2 (6.9%) | - | 2 (8,3%) | |
| 4 | 20 (69%) | 4 (80%) | 16 (66.7%) | |
| 0.515 | ||||
| Amplified | 2 (6.9%) | 1 (20%) | 1 (4.2%) | |
| Non amplified | 15 (51.7%) | 4 (80%) | 11 (45.8%) | |
| Unknown | - | |||
| Bone | 20 (69%) | 4 (80%) | 16 (66. 7%) | 0.498 |
| Bone marrow | 17 (58.6%) | 3 (60%) | 14 (58.3%) | 0.671 |
| Lymph nodes | 10 (34.5%) | 2 (40%) | 8 (33.3%) | 0.576 |
| Liver | 4 (13.8%) | - | 4 (16.7%) | |
| CNS | 1 (3.4%) | - | 1 (4.2%) | |
| Skin | 1 (3.4%) | - | 1 (4.2%) | |
| 0.068 | ||||
| SOP90s | 14 (48.3%) | - | 14 (58.3%) | |
| SIOPEN HRNBL | 8 (27.6%) | 3 (60%) | 5 (20.8%) | |
| GPOH NB2004 | 1 (3.4%) | 1 (20%) | - | |
| EUNS | 3 (10.3%) | 1 (20%) | 2 (8.3%) | |
| INES99 | 2 (6.9%) | - | 2 (8.3%) | |
| SURGERY | 1 (3.4%) | - | 1 (4.2%) |
DG, dosimetry group; FG, “fixed-activity” group; IQR, InterQuartile Range (25–75%); INSS, International Neuroblastoma Staging System (see note below); CNS, Central Nervous System; SOP90s, Spanish Sociedad de Oncología Pediátrica protocols (from 1990 to 1998); GPOH NB2004, Gesellschaft für pädiatrische Onkologie und Hämatologie high-risk neuroblastoma protocol; SIOPEN, European SIOP Neuroblastoma group; HRNBL, High risk neuroblastoma protocol; INES99, Infant Neuroblastoma Study; EUNS, European Unresectable Neuroblastoma Study.
INSS staging (summarized): (1) Localized tumor with complete gross excision. (2a) Localized tumor with incomplete gross excision, lymph nodes negative. (2b) Localized tumor with ipsilateral lymph nodes positive. (3) Unresectable unilateral tumor infiltrating across the midline, or contralateral regional lymph node involvement; or midline tumor with bilateral extension (4) Dissemination to distant lymph nodes, bone, bone marrow, liver, skin, and/or other organs, except as defined for stage 4S. (4s) Localized primary tumor with dissemination limited to skin, liver, and/or bone marrow, limited to infants younger than 12 months.
Outcomes of MIBG therapy.
| 15/32 (46.9%) | 2/5 (40%) | 13/27 (48.1%) | 0.737 | |
| CR | 5 (15.6%) | 1 (20%) | 5 (18.5%) | |
| PR | 10 (31.3%) | 1 (20%) | 8 (29.6%) | |
| SD | 5 (15.6%) | - | 5 (18.5%) | |
| PD | 12 (37.5%) | 3 (60%) | 9 (33.3%) | |
| 37.9% (11/29) | 40% (2/5) | 37.5% (9/24) | 0.917 | |
| Responders (CR+PR) | 46.7% (7/15) | 100% (2/2) | 38.5% (5/13) | 0.200 |
| NR (SD+PD) | 28.6% (4/14) | 0% (3/3) | 36.4% (4/11) | 0.33 |
| Responders Vs NR (p) | 0.268 | 0.100 | 0.625 | |
| 20.7% (6/29) | 40% (2/5) | 16.7% (4/24) | 0.241 | |
| Responders (CR+PR) | 40% (6/15) | 100% (2/2) | 30.8% (4/13) | 0.143 |
| NR (SD+PD) | 0% (0/14) | 0% (3/3) | 0% (0/11) | NA |
| Responders Vs NR (p) | 0.100 | 0.067 | ||
| Median (IQR) | Median (IQR) | Median (IQR) | ||
| 7 (1–15) | 2 (1–32) | 7.5 (1–15) | 0.369 | |
| Responders (CR+PR) | 15 (8–102) | 32 (13–NA) | 15 (8–113) | 0.742 |
| NR (SD+PD) | 1 (1–3) | 1 (1–NA) | 1 (1–3) | 0.169 |
| Responders Vs NR (p) | 0.119 |
32 treatments were considered for response analysis and 29 patients for survival.
Comparisons have been made between responders and non-responders (NR), shown in the rows below the groups, and between DG and FG, shown in the last column. Statistically significant differences are highlighted in bold text.
No statistically significant differences could be found between DG and FG in response, OS, EFS nor PFI. Responders had better EFS (p = 0.011) and longer PFI (p = 0.005 for the whole cohort, p = 0.015 in the FG).
DG: dosimetry group; FG: “fixed-activity” group; CR: complete response; PR: partial response; SD: stable disease; PD: progressive disease; NR: non-responders (SD + PD); OS: overall survival; EFS: event-free survival; PFI: progression-free interval; IQR: interquartile range.
Dosimetry group—activity adjustment and dispersion control.
| First infusion, activity (MBq/kg) | 444 | 444 | 444 | 444 | 444 | |
| First infusion, absorbed radiation (Gy) | 2.03 | 1.32 | 2.16 | 3.09 | 2.38 | |
| % of target absorption | 101.5% | 66% | 108% | 154.5% | 119% | |
| Second infusion, activity (MBq/kg) | 450 | 713 | 334 | 191 | 360 | |
| Absorbed radiation (Gy) | 1.99 | 2.42 | 1.96 | 0.95 | 1.18 | |
| % of target absorption | 100.5% | 93.5% | 103% | 101% | 89% | |
Target absorbed radiation was 2 Gy per infusion, 4 Gy total. After the first infusion, calculated absorbed dose showed an average deviation of 23.4%. Correction of the second activity reduced 81.1% of this deviation, which was 4.4% for the whole treatment. MBq/kg, megaBecquerel per kilogram; Gy, gray. Second activity is shown per weight to illustrate better the difference from the first infusion.
Figure 1False complete response after 131-I-mIBG therapy: (A,B) 123-I-mIBG scans. (C) 18-F-FDG-PET-CT scan. (A) positive scan previous to 131-I-mIBG therapy, with multiple spots. (B) negative post-mIBG therapy scan (Complete Response). (C) as response was much better than expected, a post-therapy PET-CT scan was requested, showing non-mIBG-avid Progressive Disease.