| Literature DB >> 32606731 |
Deepam Pushpam1, Vikas Garg1, Sandip Ganguly2, Bivas Biswas2.
Abstract
Paediatric sarcomas are a heterogeneous group of disorders constituting bone sarcoma and various soft tissue sarcomas. Almost one-third of these presents with metastasis at baseline and another one-third recur after initial curative treatment. There is a huge unmet need in this cohort in terms of curative options and/or prolongation of survival. In this review, we have discussed the current treatment options, challenges and future strategies of managing relapsed/refractory paediatric sarcomas. Upfront risk-adapted treatment with multidisciplinary management remains the main strategy to prevent future recurrence or relapse of the disease. In the case of limited local and/or systemic relapse or late relapse, initial multimodality management can be administered. In treatment-refractory cases or where cure is not feasible, the treatment options are limited to novel therapeutics, immunotherapeutic approach, targeted therapies, and metronomic therapies. A better understanding of disease biology, mechanism of treatment refractoriness, identifications of driver mutation, the discovery of novel targeted therapies, cellular vaccine and adapted therapies should be explored in relapsed/refractory cases. Close national and international collaboration for translation research is needed to fulfil the unmet need.Entities:
Keywords: disease biology; immunotherapy; osteosarcoma; paediatric sarcoma; relapsed sarcoma; targeted therapy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32606731 PMCID: PMC7293381 DOI: 10.2147/OTT.S193363
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Onco Targets Ther ISSN: 1178-6930 Impact factor: 4.147
Summary of Treatment of Relapsed Paediatric Sarcomas
| Disease Site and Extent | Resectability | Management |
|---|---|---|
| Localized or | Resectable | Surgery → chemotherapy ± radiotherapy |
| Unresectable | Chemotherapy → surgery or/+ radiotherapy | |
| Multiple metastasis | Unresectable | Previously received 2 drug (VCR + Act D) → VAC regimen |
| Previously received 3 drug VAC regimen → | ||
| Localized or | Resectable | Surgery → chemotherapy ± radiotherapy |
| Unresectable | Palliative chemotherapy (high dose Ifosfamide based) or regorafenib | |
| Lung metastasis | Resectable | Surgery → chemotherapy ± radiotherapy |
| Unresectable | Palliative chemotherapy (high dose Ifosfamide based) or regorafenib | |
| Painful bony metastasis | Unresectable | Sm 153 EDTMP or Ra 223 |
| Multiple metastasis | Unresectable | Palliative chemotherapy (high dose Ifosfamide based) or regorafenib |
| Localized or | Resectable | Surgery → chemotherapy ± radiotherapy |
| Unresectable | Chemotherapy → surgery or radiotherapy | |
| Multiple metastasis | Unresectable | Palliative chemotherapy (ICE or Irinotecan + Temozolomide ± VCR) |
| Localized | Resectable | Surgery → chemotherapy ± radiotherapy |
| Multiple metastasis | Unresectable | Palliative NTRK inhibitors viz. Larotrectinib |
Abbreviations: Act D, actinomycin D; ICE, ifosfamide/carboplatin/etoposide; NTRK, neurotrophic tropomyosin receptor kinase; VAC, vincristine/actinomycin D/cyclophosphamide; VCR, vincristine.
Various Chemotherapy Options in Relapsed RMS
| Author | Year | Study Nature | Number (n) | Chemotherapy | ORR (%) | CR/PR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kung et al | 1995 | I/II | 14 | ICE | 43 | 3/3 |
| Klingebiel et al | 1998 | II | 30 | ICE | 33 | 7/3 |
| Van Winkle et al | 2005 | I/II | 27 | ICE | 66 | 9/9 |
| Saylors et al | 2001 | II | 15 | Cyclophosphamide/Topotecan | 66 | 0/10 |
| Compostella et al | 2019 | II | 38 | Cyclophosphamide/Topotecan/Carboplatin/Etoposide | 28 | 2/7 |
| Mascarenhas et al | 2010 | II (window) | 45 | Vincristine/Irinotecan | 26 | NA |
| 47 | Vincristine/Irinotecan | 37 | ||||
| Defachelles et al | 2019 | II | 60 | Vincristine/Irinotecan/Temozolomide | 44 | NA |
| 60 | Vincristine/Irinotecan | 31 | ||||
| Setty et al | 2018 | R | 15 | Vincristine/Irinotecan/Temozolomide | 0 | 0/0 |
| Kuttesch et al | 2009 | II | 11 | Vinorelbine | 35 | 1/3 |
| Casanova et al | 2002 | R | 12 | Vinorelbine | 50 | 0/6 |
| Casanova et al | 2004 | I/II | 17 | Vinorelbine/Cyclophosphamide | 36 | 1/6 |
| Minard-Colin et al | 2012 | II | 50 | Vinorelbine/Cyclophosphamide | 36 | 4/14 |
| Mascarenhas et al | 2014 | II | 87 | Vinorelbine/Cyclophosphamide/Temsirolimus | 26 | 5/6 |
| Vinorelbine/Cyclophosphamide/Bevacizumab | 37 | 0/17 | ||||
| Rapkin et al | 2012 | R | 5 | Gemcitabine/Docetaxel | 40 | 1/1 |
Abbreviations: ORR, overall response rate; CR, complete remission; PR, partial remission; ICE, ifosfamide/carboplatin/etoposide; R, retrospective.
Ongoing Studies in Relapsed/Refractory Paediatric Sarcoma
| Clinical Trial Identifier | Name of Agent | Disease | Phase | Population | Primary Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT02304458 | Nivolumab ± Ipilimumab | Multiple solid tumours | I/II | 1–18 years | Objective response rate |
| NCT02332668 | Pembrolizumab | Relapsed or refractory solid tumours | II | 6 months to 18 years | Objective response rate |
| NCT03041701 | Ganitumab (anti- IGF1R) + Dasatinib (SRC inhibitor) | Relapsed or refractory rhabdomyosarcoma | I/II | No age limit | Objective response rate |
| NCT03709680 | Palbociclib + Temozolomide + Irinotecan | Relapsed or refractory pediatric sarcomas | I/II | 2–21 years | Objective response rate |
| NCT02095132 | Adavosertib (WEE1 Inhibitor) + Irinotecan | Relapsed or refractory pediatric tumours | I/II | 1–16 years | Maximal tolerable dose/toxicity |
| NCT02484443 | Dinutuximab (Anti GD2) + Sargramostim | Recurrent osteosarcoma | II | Up to 16 years | Disease control rate |
| NCT02470091 | Denosumab (RANKL inhibitor) | Osteosarcoma | II | 11–50 years | Disease control rate |
| NCT03155620 | Targeted Therapy Directed by Genetic Testing | Relapsed or refractory solid tumours | II | 1–16 years | Objective response rate |
| NCT02867592 | Cabozantinib | Relapsed or refractory solid tumours | II | <18 years | Objective response rate |
| NCT03514407 | iNCB059872 | Relapsed or refractory Ewing Sarcoma | Ib | 12 years and older | Safety and preliminary antitumor activity |
| NCT02419417 | BMS-986158 | Advanced solid tumours | I/IIa | 12 years and older | Safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics |
| NCT03220347 | INCB059872 | Relapsed or refractory Ewing sarcoma | I | 12 years and older | Safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics |
Studies Using Chemotherapeutic Agents in Relapsed Osteosarcoma
| Author | Year of Publication | Phase | Number | Regimen | ORR % | CR/PR (Number) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Harris et al | 1995 | II | 30 | Ifosfamide | 30 | 1/2 |
| Kung et al | 1993 | II | 32 | Ifosfamide + Etoposide | 15 | 2/3 |
| Miser et al | 1987 | II | 8 | Ifosfamide + Etoposide | 37 | 0/3 |
| Cairo et al | 2001 | II | 23 | Ifosfamide + Etoposide + Carboplatin | 30 | NA |
| Berrak et al | 2005 | R | 16 | High dose Ifosfamide | 62 | 6/4 |
| Gentet et al | 1997 | II | 27 | High dose Ifosfamide + Etoposide | 48 | 6/7 |
| Lee et al | 2016 | R | 28 | Gemcitabine + Docetaxel | 14 | 1/1 |
| Navid et al | 2008 | R | 17 | Gemcitabine + Docetaxel | 17 | 0/3 |
| Qi et al | 2012 | R | 18 | Gemcitabine + Docetaxel | 5 | 0/1 |
| Palmerini et al | 2016 | R | 40 | Gemcitabine + Docetaxel | 17 | 0/6 |
| Fox et al | 2012 | II | 14 | Gemcitabine + Docetaxel | 5 | 0/1 |
| Berger et al | 2009 | II | 26 | Cyclophosphamide + Etoposide | 19 | 0/5 |
| Rodriguez-Galindo et al | 2002 | II | 14 | Cyclophosphamide + Etoposide | 28 | 1/3 |
| Grignani et al105 | 2012 | II | 35 | Sorafenib | 8 | 0/3 |
| Grignani et al | 2015 | II | 38 | Sorafenib + Everolimus | 5 | 0/2 |
| Duffaud et al | 2019 | II | 43 | Regorafenib | 8 | 0/2 |
| Davis et al | 2019 | II | 42 | Regorafenib | 13 | 0/3 |
Abbreviations: CR, complete remission; ORR, overall response rate; PR, partial remission; R, retrospective.
Chemotherapy Regimens in Relapsed Ewing’s Sarcoma
| Author | Year of Publication | Study Nature | Number | Chemotherapy | ORR (%) | CR/PR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Temozolomide + Irinotecan | ||||||
| Wagner et al | 2007 | Retrospective | 14 | Temozolomide + Irinotecan | 29 | 1/3 |
| Anderson et al | 2008 | Retrospective | 25 | Temozolomide + Irinotecan | 64 | 7/9 |
| Casey et al | 2009 | Retrospective | 19 | Temozolomide + Irinotecan | 63 | 5/7 |
| Hernández et al | 2013 | Retrospective | 8 | Temozolomide + Irinotecan | 37 | 0/3 |
| Raciborska et al | 2013 | Retrospective | 22 | Temozolomide + Irinotecan + VCR | 54 | 5/7 |
| Kurucu et al | 2015 | Retrospective | 20 | Temozolomide + Irinotecan | 55 | NA |
| Palmerini et al | 2018 | Retrospective | 51 | Temozolomide + Irinotecan | 34 | 5/12 |
| Buyukkapu et al | 2018 | Retrospective | 15 | Temozolomide + Irinotecan + VCR | 40 | 4/2 |
| Topotecan + Cyclophosphamide | ||||||
| Saylors et al | 2001 | II | 17 | Topotecan + Cyclophosphamide | 35 | 2/4 |
| Hunold et al | 2006 | Retrospective | 54 | Topotecan + Cyclophosphamide | 32 | 0/16 |
| Farhat et al | 2013 | Retrospective | 14 | Topotecan + Cyclophosphamide | 21 | 0/3 |
| Kebudi et al | 2013 | Retrospective | 14 | Topotecan + Cyclophosphamide | 50 | 2/5 |
| Gemcitabine + Docetaxel | ||||||
| Fox et al | 2012 | II | 14 | Gemcitabine + Docetaxel | 6 | 0/2 |
| Mora et al | 2009 | Retrospective | 6 | Gemcitabine + Docetaxel | 67 | 3/1 |
| Tanaka et al | 2016 | Retrospective | 4 | Gemcitabine + Docetaxel | 25 | 0/1 |
| Others | ||||||
| Ferrari et al | 2009 | Retrospective | 37 | High dose Ifosfamide | 34 | 02/10 |
| van Maldegem et al199 | 2015 | Retrospective | 107 | Etoposide + platinum | 27 | 15/14 |
| Van Winkle et al | 2005 | I/II | 22 | Ifosfamide + carboplatin +Etoposide | 48 | 7/14 |
| Devadas et al | 2019 | Retrospective | 49 | Tamoxifen + Etoposide + Cyclophosphamide | 59 | 21/8 |
Abbreviations: CR, complete remission; ORR, overall response rate; PR, partial remission; VCR, vincristine.
Figure 1Newer targets in refractory pediatric sarcomas.
Abbreviations: BET, bromodomain extra terminal motif; CD Cyclin D, CDK 4/6 cyclin-dependent kinase 4/6; CTLA4, cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4; GD2, disialoganglioside 2; IGF1R, insulin-like growth factor receptor 1; LSD1, lysine-specific histone demethylase 1; MET, mesenchymal–epithelial transition; NTRK, neurotropic tropomyosin receptor kinase; PARP, poly ADP ribose polymerase; PD1, programmed death receptor 1; PDL1, programmed death receptor Ligand 1; RTK, receptor tyrosine kinase; VEGFR, vascular endothelial growth factor receptor.