Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://ninho.inca.gov.br/jspui/handle/123456789/6927
Title: Fusion status in patients with lymph node-positive (N1) alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma is a powerful predictor of prognosis: Experience of the European Paediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG)
Authors: Gallego, Soledad
Zanetti, Ilaria
Orbach, Daniel
Ranchère, Dominique
Shipley, Janet
Zin, Angelica
Bergeron, Christophe
Salvo, Gian Luca de
Chisholm, Julia
Ferrari, Andrea
Jenney, Meriel
Mandeville, Henry
Rogers, Timothy
Merks, Johannes Hans
Mudry, Peter
Glosli, Heidi
Milano, Giuseppe Maria
Ferman, Sima Esther
Bisogno, Gianni
Keywords: Rabdomiossarcoma Alveolar
Rhabdomyosarcoma Alveolar
Linfonodos
Lymph Nodes
Fatores de Transcrição Box Pareados
Paired Box Transcription Factors
Prognóstico
Prognosis
Rabdomiossarcoma Alveolar
Rhabdomyosarcoma Alveolar
Pediatria
Pediatrics
Sarcoma
Issue Date: 2018
Publisher: Cancer
Citation: GALLEGO, Soledad et al. Fusion status in patients with lymph node-positive (N1) alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma is a powerful predictor of prognosis: Experience of the European Paediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG). Cancer, v. 124, n. 15, p. 3201-3209, aug. 2018.
Abstract: Alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma (aRMS) with lymph node involvement (N1 classification) accounts for up to 10% of all cases of RMS. The prognosis is poor, and is comparable to that of distant metastatic disease. In the European Paediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) RMS2005 protocol, patients with a histologic diagnosis of aRMS/N1 received intensified chemother apy with systematic locoregional treatment. METHODS: Patients with aRMS/N1 were enrolled prospectively after primary surgery/ biopsy and fusion status was assessed in tumor samples. All patients received 9 cycles of induction chemotherapy and 6 months of maintenance therapy. Local treatment included radiotherapy to the primary site and lymph nodes with or without secondary surgical resection. RESULTS: A total of 103 patients were enrolled. The clinical characteristics of the patients were predominantly unfavorable: 90% had macroscopic residual disease after initial surgery/biopsy, 63% had locally invasive tumors, 77% had a tumor measuring >5 cm, and 81% had disease at unfavorable sites. Fusion genes involving forkhead box protein O1 (FOXO1) were detected in 56 of 84 patients. Events occurred in 52 patients: 43 developed disease recurrence, 7 had disease that was refractory to treatment, and 2 patients developed second neoplasms. On univariate analysis, unfavorable disease site, tumor invasiveness, Intergroup Rhabdomyo sarcoma Study group III, and fusion-positive status correlated with worse prognosis. The 5-year event-free survival rate of patients with fusion-positive tumors was 43% compared with 74% in patients with fusion-negative tumors (P 5.01). On multivariate analysis, fusion positivity and tumor invasiveness proved to be unfavorable prognostic markers. CONCLUSIONS: Fusion status and tumor inva siveness appear to have a strong impact on prognosis in patients with aRMS/N1. Fusion status will be used to stratify these patients in the next EpSSG RMS study, and treatment will be intensified in patients with fusion-positive tumors.
Description: p. 3201-3209.: tab. p&b.
URI: http://sr-vmlxaph03:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/6927
ISSN: 1097-0142
Appears in Collections:Artigos de Periódicos da área de Pediatria



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