| Literature DB >> 33789614 |
Lu Xie1, Jie Xu1, Xiaowei Li1, Zuli Zhou2, Hongqing Zhuang3, Xin Sun1, Kuisheng Liu1, Xingyu Liu1, Kunkun Sun4, Yiming Wu5, Jin Gu6, Wei Guo7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Complete surgical remission (CSR) is the best predictor of overall survival (OS) for patients with metastatic osteosarcoma. However, metastasectomy has not been widely implemented in China in the last decade due to various factors, and instead, most physicians choose hypofractionated radiotherapy to treat pulmonary lesions. This study aimed to retrospectively evaluate the outcomes of different local treatments for pulmonary lesions and identify the best local therapy strategies for these patients.Entities:
Keywords: Event-free survival; Hypofractionated radiotherapy; Osteosarcoma; Pulmonary metastasis; Radiation pneumonitis
Year: 2021 PMID: 33789614 PMCID: PMC8010982 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-021-08071-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Patient characteristics (N = 127)
| Items | Number of patients | Percentage (%) | p for 2-y EFS |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | 0.759 | ||
| Male | 83 | 65.4 | |
| Female | 44 | 34.7 | |
| Age (median: 15.0 years) | Range: 5–56 (Q1, Q3, 15.1, 18.0) years | 0.025 | |
| < 40 years | 124 | 97.6 | |
| ≥ 40 years | 3 | 2.4 | |
| Pathological Subtypes | 0.526 | ||
| Conventional:chondroblastic | 12 | 9.4 | |
| Conventional: osteoblastic | 78 | 61.4 | |
| Conventional: not defined | 24 | 18.9 | |
| Telangiectatic | 5 | 3.9 | |
| Small cell | 3 | 2.4 | |
| High-grade surface | 1 | 0.8 | |
| Missing | 4 | 3.1 | |
| Primary site | 0.328 | ||
| Distal femur | 62 | 48.8 | |
| Proximal tibia and/or fibula | 38 | 29.9 | |
| Proximal femur | 4 | 3.2 | |
| Proximal humerus | 9 | 7.1 | |
| Axial skeleton | 7 | 5.5 | |
| Maxillofacial site | 1 | 0.8 | |
| Others | 6 | 4.7 | |
| Total number of pulmonary nodules for observation | 605 | 100 | 0.963 |
| Lung metastasis | 0.464 | ||
| ≤ 5 nodules | 88 | 69.3 | |
| > 5 nodules | 39 | 30.7 | |
| Lung metastasis | 0.063 | ||
| Monolateral | 48 | 37.8 | |
| Bilateral | 79 | 62.2 | |
| Local therapy for pulmonary nodules | 0.476 | ||
| Resectionb | 42 (85 nodules) | 33.1 | |
| Radiotherapyc | 79 (520 nodules) | 62.2 | |
| Combined with resection and radiotherapy | 6 | 4.7 | |
| Missing nodules during follow-upd | 52 | 7.9 (52/657) | N/Ai |
| For resection | 15 | 15.0 (15/100) | |
| For radiotherapy | 37 | 6.6 (37/557) | |
| Failed local resectione | 8 | 9.4 (8/85) | |
| Failed local radiotherapyf | 14 | 2.7 (14/520) | |
| Dmaxg for pulmonary nodule/nodules | 0.286 | ||
| 3–5 mm | 18 | 14.1 | |
| 5–10 mm | 29 | 22.8 | |
| 10–20 mm | 50 | 39.4 | |
| > 20 mm | 30 | 23.6 | |
| Systematic treatment during local therapy of pulmonary noduesh | 0.426 | ||
| MAPI first-line chemotherapy | 56 | 44.1 | |
| IE second-line chemotherapy | 53 | 41.7 | |
| Targeted therapy | 13 | 10.2 | |
| Combination of TKIS and IE chemo | 4 | 3.2 | |
| None | 1 | 0.8 | |
| Median time for follow-up (months) | 32.4 | (95% CI: 30.8, 36.1) | (Range: 10.4, 106.5) |
a2-y EFS: 2-year event-free survival, which was calculated from start of the local therapy (resection or radiotherapy) to any kind of progression as defined by RECIST 1.1
bPulmonary metastasectomies were video-assisted thoracoscopic Surgery (VATS)
cRadiotherapy usually involves GammaKnife or Cyber Knife with radio-dose > 60 Gy
dBy comparing initial chest thin-layer computed tomography (CT) before local therapy and during follow-up, we observed that nodules had resolved or were undetectable with local treatment, most of which were observed as tiny or blurry nodules or even hardly been detected between infection and malignancy and would relapse after stopping systemic treatment
eFailed local resection: local tumor relapse where previous tumor resection had been done
fFailed local radiotherapy: local tumor relapse where previous radiation had been performed for curative tumor eradication
gPatients were classified into four groups based on maximal nodule diameter: 1) 3 mm–5 mm; 2) 5 mm–10 mm; 3) 10 mm–20 mm; 4) > 20 mm
hAt the Musculoskeletal Tumor Center of Peking University People’s Hospital and Peking University Shougang Hospital, a chemo-protocol that includes high-dose methotrexate, cisplatin, doxorubicin, and ifosfamide (MAPI) is used as first-line chemotherapy (seen in appendix Fig. 1); ifosfamide and etoposide (IE) as second-line systematic therapy; anti-angiogenesis tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) such as apatinib, anlotinib, cabozantinib, and regorafenib as third-line therapy; the combination of TKIs and IE chemotherapy as fourth-line therapy
iData not available
Comparison of clinical manifestations of patients who underwent VATSa or radiation
| Items | VATS ( | Radiotherapy ( | Combination ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of pulmonary nodules /person | |||
| ≤ 5 nodules | 41 (97.6%) | 55 (69.6%) | 4 (66.7%) |
| > 5 nodules | 1 (2.4%) | 24 (30.4%) | 2 (33.3%) |
| Lung metastasis | |||
| Monolateral | 33 (78.6%) | 11 (13.9%) | 4 (66.7%) |
| Bilateral | 9 (21.4%) | 68 (86.1%) | 2 (33.3%) |
| Dmaxb for pulmonary nodule/nodules | |||
| 3–5 mm | 3 (7.1%) | 15 (19.0%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| 5–10 mm | 6 (14.3%) | 22 (27.8%) | 1 (16.7%) |
| 10–20 mm | 24 (57.1%) | 25 (31.6%) | 1 (16.7%) |
| > 20 mm | 9 (21.4%) | 17 (21.5%) | 4 (66.7%) |
| Systematic treatment during local therapy of pulmonary noduesc | |||
| MAPI first-line chemotherapy | 14 (33.3%) | 40 (50.6%) | 2 (33.3%) |
| IE second-line chemotherapy | 24 (57.1%) | 25 (31.6%) | 4 (66.7%) |
| Targeted therapy | 2 (4.8%) | 11 (13.9%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| Combination of TKIS and IE chemo | 2 (4.8%) | 4 (5.1%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| None | 0 (0.0%) | 1 (1.3%) | 0 (0.0%) |
aVATS Video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery
bPatients were classified into four groups based on nodule maximal diameter: 1) 3 mm–5 mm; 2) 5 mm–10 mm; 3) 10 mm–20 mm; 4) > 20 mm
cAt the Musculoskeletal Tumor Center of Peking University People’s Hospital and Peking University Shougang Hospital, a chemo-protocol that includes high-dose methotrexate, cisplatin, doxorubicin, and ifosfamide (MAPI) is used as first-line chemotherapy (seen in appendix Fig. 1); ifosfamide and etoposide (IE) as second-line systematic therapy; anti-angiogenesis tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) such as apatinib, anlotinib, cabozantinib, and regorafenib as third-line therapy; and the combination of TKIs and IE chemotherapy as fourth-line therapy
Comparison of survival in different groups of patients
| Items | Patients with Resections | Patients with Radiotherapy | Patients with combination of resections and radiotherapy | p for survival |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2-year no local recurrence survival rate [±SD] | 81.0% [±7.1%] | 92.8% [±3.1%] | 66.7%[±36.7%] | 0.652 |
| Local relapse of nodules without new lesions | 2/42 (4.8%) | 1/79 (1.3%) | 1/6 (16.7%) | N/Aa |
| Local relapse of nodules with new lesions | 6/42 (14.3%) | 10/79 (12.7%) | 1/6 (16.7%) | N/Aa |
| Progression without local relapse | 19/42 (45.2%) | 49/79 (62.0%) | 3/6 (50.0%) | |
| Events for progression in total | 27/42 (64.3%) | 60/79 (75.9%) | 5/6 (83.3%) | |
| From resections/radiotherapy to any event (median, Q1, Q3) months | 10.0 (4.1, 17.1) | 10.1 (5.8, 14.5) | N/A | 0.755 |
| From resections/radiotherapy to death (mean, 95%CI)b months | 37.6 (32.5, 42.7) | 67.0 (58.7, 75.3) | 21.5 (17.3, 25.7) | 0.712 |
aN/A data not available
bmedian overall survival has not reached yet, thus we use mean overall survival to replace the data
Fig. 1Kaplan-Meier plot for event-free survival in all 127 patients
Fig. 2Kaplan-Meier plot for event-free survival based on different local treatment methods. (1 indicates patients who received radiotherapy; 2 indicates patients who underwent surgery; and 3 indicates patients who received a combination of radiotherapy and surgery). Log-rank test P = 0.755. Crosses indicate censoring
Fig. 3A missing nodule shown on chest CT (red arrow) before metastasectomy. (It was not resected later. CT = computed tomography)
Fig. 4A missing nodule shown on chest CT (red arrow) two weeks after metastasectomy. (A surgical scar can be observed on the right lobe of the lung. CT = computed tomography)
Fig. 5A nodule less than 5 mm missing on chest CT (red circle) for radiation (This image was taken before hypofractionated radiotherapy. CT = computed tomography)
Fig. 6A missing nodule progressed on chest CT (red circle) after radiation. (Eleven months later, this nodule, which had been missed for local therapy, became larger and obvious, and 3 new lesions also appeared on this patient’s chest CT, all of which were later subjected to a second cycle of radiotherapy. At the last follow-up, the patient was still disease free. CT = computed tomography)
The incidence and duration of radiation-related pneumonitis (N = 86)
| Items | Number of patients | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| Pneumonitis Gradea | 62 | 72.1% |
| Grade 1 | 53 | 61.6% |
| Grade 2 | 8 | 9.3% |
| Grade 4 | 1 | 1.16% |
Onset of pneumonitis (Median, 95% CI) | 3.5 (1.1, 5.5) months | |
Duration of pneumonitis (Median, 95% CI) | 7.2 (6.9, 12.3) months | |
| Pneumonitis still not resolved until last follow up | 20 | 23.3% |
aAccording to CTCAE 5.0