| Literature DB >> 32818304 |
Timothy B Lautz1, Zishaan Farooqui2, Todd Jenkins3, Todd E Heaton4, John J Doski5, Jo Cooke-Barber2, Andrew J Murphy6, Andrew M Davidoff6, Sara A Mansfield6, Eugene S Kim7, Samuel Zuber7, Catherine Goodhue7, Sanjeev A Vasudevan8, Michael P LaQuaglia4, Nelson Piche9, Annie Le-Nguyen9, Jennifer H Aldrink10, Marcus M Malek11, Vei Shaun Siow11, Richard D Glick12, Barrie S Rich12, Rebecka L Meyers13, Scott S Short13, Andreana Butter14, Reto M Baertschiger15,16, Elizabeth A Fialkowski17, Roshni Dasgupta2.
Abstract
Complete surgical resection of pulmonary metastatic disease in patients with osteosarcoma is crucial to long-term survival. Open thoracotomy allows palpation of nodules not identified on imaging but the impact on survival is unknown. The objective of this study was to compare overall survival (OS) and pulmonary disease-free survival (DFS) in children who underwent thoracotomy vs thoracoscopic surgery for pulmonary metastasectomy. A multi-institutional collaborative group retrospectively reviewed 202 pediatric patients with osteosarcoma who underwent pulmonary metastasectomy by thoracotomy (n = 154) or thoracoscopy (n = 48). Results were analyzed by Kaplan-Meier survival estimates and multivariate Cox proportional hazard regression models. With median follow-up of 45 months, 135 (67.5%) patients had a pulmonary relapse and 95 (47%) patients were deceased. Kaplan-Meier analysis showed no significant difference in 5-year pulmonary DFS (25% vs 38%; P = .18) or OS (49% vs 42%, P = .37) between the surgical approaches of thoracotomy and thoracoscopy. In Cox regression analysis controlling for other factors impacting outcome, there was a significantly increased risk of mortality (HR 2.11; P = .027; 95% CI 1.09-4.09) but not pulmonary recurrence (HR 0.96; P = .90; 95% CI 0.52-1.79) with a thoracoscopic approach. However, in the subset analysis limited to patients with oligometastatic disease, thoracoscopy had no increased risk of mortality (HR 1.16; P = .62; 0.64-2.11). In conclusion, patients with metastatic osteosarcoma and limited pulmonary disease burden demonstrate comparable outcomes after thoracotomy and thoracoscopy for metastasectomy. While significant selection bias in these surgical cohorts limits the generalizability of the conclusions, clinical equipoise for a randomized clinical trial in patients with oligometastatic disease is supported.Entities:
Keywords: child; disease-free survival; metastasectomy; osteosarcoma; thoracotomy
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32818304 DOI: 10.1002/ijc.33264
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cancer ISSN: 0020-7136 Impact factor: 7.316