Rodriguez-Galindo Carlos, Billups Catherine A, Kun Larry E, Rao Bhaskar N, Pratt Charles B, Merchant Thomas E, Santana Victor M, Pappo Alberto S
Department of Hematology-Oncology, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee 38105, USA.
Cancer. 2002 Jan 15;94(2):561-9. doi: 10.1002/cncr.10192.
Despite improved therapies, 30-40% of patients with Ewing tumors (ET) experience recurrence and have a poor prognosis. The authors analyzed factors prognostic of survival in patients with recurrent ET.
The authors assessed the relation between postrecurrence survival (PRS) and demographic, disease, and treatment factors in 71 patients who experienced recurrent ET after treatment on one of three consecutive institutional protocols.
Thirty-four patients (47.9%) had distant recurrence, 25 patients (35.2%) had local recurrence, and 12 patients (16.9%) had both distant and local recurrence at a median of 1.7 years after diagnosis. The probability of 5-year PRS (+/- 1 standard error) was 17.7%+/-4.5%. Recurrence > or = 2 years after diagnosis predicted a significantly better outcome (5-year PRS, 34.9%+/-8.5%) compared with earlier recurrence (5.0%+/-2.8%; P < 0.001). Patients who had both local and distant recurrence fared worse (5-year PRS, 12.5%+/-8.3%) compared with patients who had local recurrence alone (21.7%+/-7.8%) or distant recurrence alone (17.6+/-6.1%). Among patients with local recurrence alone, those who underwent salvage with radical surgery had significantly higher 5-year PRS estimates (31.4%+/-11.6%) compared with the other patients (9.1%+/-6.1%; P = 0.023). Pulmonary irradiation significantly improved the outcomes of patients with isolated pulmonary recurrence (5-year PRS estimate, 30.3%+/-12.5% vs. 16.7%+/-10.8%, respectively; P = 0.018).
Although outcomes are generally poor after patients experience recurrence of ET, certain patient groups differ appreciably in their likelihood of survival. Patients who experience recurrence > or = 2 years after diagnosis and patients who have local recurrence that can be treated with radical surgery and intensive chemotherapy have the most favorable outcomes.
尽管治疗方法有所改进,但30%-40%的尤因肉瘤(ET)患者会复发,且预后较差。作者分析了复发性ET患者的生存预后因素。
作者评估了71例在连续三个机构方案之一治疗后出现复发性ET患者的复发后生存(PRS)与人口统计学、疾病和治疗因素之间的关系。
34例患者(47.9%)出现远处复发,25例患者(35.2%)出现局部复发,12例患者(16.9%)在诊断后中位1.7年时同时出现远处和局部复发。5年PRS(±1标准误)的概率为17.7%±4.5%。与早期复发(5.0%±2.8%;P<0.001)相比,诊断后2年或更长时间复发的患者预后明显更好(5年PRS,34.9%±8.5%)。与仅出现局部复发(21.7%±7.8%)或仅出现远处复发(17.6±6.1%)的患者相比,同时出现局部和远处复发的患者预后更差(5年PRS,12.5%±8.3%)。在仅出现局部复发的患者中,接受根治性手术挽救治疗的患者5年PRS估计值显著高于其他患者(31.4%±11.6% vs. 9.1%±6.1%;P = 0.023)。肺部放疗显著改善了孤立性肺复发患者的预后(5年PRS估计值分别为30.3%±12.5%和16.7%±10.8%;P = 0.018)。
尽管ET患者复发后的总体预后较差,但某些患者群体的生存可能性有明显差异。诊断后2年或更长时间复发的患者以及局部复发可通过根治性手术和强化化疗治疗的患者预后最为良好。