Presurgical Window of Carboplatin and Surgery and Multidrug Chemotherapy for the Treatment of Newly Diagnosed Metastatic or Unresectable Osteosarcoma: Pediatric Oncology Group Trial
- 1 August 2001
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology
- Vol. 23 (6) , 340-348
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00043426-200108000-00004
Abstract
Relapse remains a significant problem in patients with metastatic osteosarcoma. The response to carboplatin of patients with newly diagnosed metastatic or unresectable osteosarcoma was assessed in an upfront phase II window, which was followed-up by surgery and intensive multiagent chemotherapy. Thirty-seven patients, ages 3 to 23 years with histologically confirmed diagnoses of osteosarcoma, were treated between January 1992 and November 1994 with carboplatin 1,000 mg/m2 per dose administered as a 48-hour continuous infusion. Two courses were administered in 3-week intervals, depending on marrow recovery. After radiographic reevaluation, patients underwent surgical removal of tumor (if feasible) and then 40 weeks of chemotherapy with high-dose methotrexate, ifosfamide, doxorubicin, and cisplatin. One of the 37 evaluable patients demonstrated a partial response to carboplatin; there were no complete responses. Patients were additionally analyzed by the response of pulmonary metastases to therapy and the extent of tumor necrosis of the primary lesion. By these criteria, 8 of 37 (22%) of patients showed a response at one or more sites, whereas 20 of 37 (54%) had unequivocal disease progression. Severe myelosuppression was the major toxicity. The projected 3-year event-free and overall survival rates were 23.9% and 31.9%, respectively. Only 1 of 17 patients with unresectable disease or distant bone metastases remains alive, in contrast to 6 of 17 patients with the lung as their only metastatic site and two of three patients with resected regional bone metastases. Continuous-infusion carboplatin demonstrated limited activity as an upfront agent in patients with metastatic osteosarcoma at diagnosis, even at doses that result in severe and prolonged myelosuppression. Patients with isolated pulmonary metastases or resectable bone metastases have a longer median survival time and greater chance of long-term survival than do patients with unresectable bone disease, for whom the prognosis remains dismal.Keywords
This publication has 45 references indexed in Scilit:
- Amputation and Carboplatin for Treatment of Dogs With Osteosarcoma: 48 Cases (1991 to 1993)Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine, 1996
- Treatment of osteosarcoma with ifosfamide: Comparison of response in pediatric patients with recurrent disease versus patients previously untreated: A pediatric oncology group studyMedical and Pediatric Oncology, 1995
- Limb-Sparing Surgery for Extremity SarcomaCancer Investigation, 1994
- Cyclophosphamide-Cisplatin Versus Cyclophosphamide-Carboplatin in Stage III-IV Ovarian Carcinoma: A Comparison of Equally Myelosuppressive RegimensJNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1989
- Comparative toxicity of cisplatin, carboplatin (CBDCA) and iproplatin (CHIP) in combination with cyclophosphamide in patients with advanced epithelial ovarian cancerEuropean Journal of Cancer and Clinical Oncology, 1988
- Plasma free platinum pharmacokinetics in patients treated with high dose carboplatinEuropean Journal of Cancer and Clinical Oncology, 1987
- High dose carboplatin in the treatment of lung cancer and mesotherlioma: a phase I dose escalation studyEuropean Journal of Cancer and Clinical Oncology, 1987
- The Effect of Adjuvant Chemotherapy on Relapse-Free Survival in Patients with Osteosarcoma of the ExtremityNew England Journal of Medicine, 1986
- Asymptotically Efficient Rank Invariant Test ProceduresJournal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series A (General), 1972
- Nonparametric Estimation from Incomplete ObservationsJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1958