Ifosfamide chemotherapy should probably be restricted in patients after unilateral nephrectomy.
The GPO Cooperative Ewing's Sarcoma Study (CESS 81 with 10 months four-drug combination chemotherapy (vincristine, actinomycin D, cyclophosphamide, and adriamycin = VACA) and local control with surgery and/or radiation, following week 18, resulted in a Kaplan-Meier estimated disease-free survival of 51% after 6 1/2 years (51/93 patients disease-free). Tumor volume and histological response to primary chemotherapy were identified as most significant prognostic factors. As a consequence, the CESS 86 regimen was stratified according to risk of relapse. Standard risk patients (extremity tumors less than 100 ml tumor volume) were continued on VACA chemotherapy. In high risk patients (extremity tumors greater than 100 ml tumor volume, central tumors), cyclophosphamide in conventional dose (1200 mg/m2/course) was replaced by high doses of ifosfamide (6 g/m2/course) with mesna uroprotection (VAIA). Local control was obtained following week 9. Patients with radiation were randomised for conventional fractionation or accelerated split-course hyperfractionation. The study was piloted from February to December 1985: 27/37 patients were disease-free on October 1, 1987. The ongoing trial was started on January 1, 1986. On October 1, 1987. 63/66 patients were disease-free. In patients with large primaries, according to Kaplan-Meier life-table analysis, the disease-free survival was significantly better in patients receiving VAIA chemotherapy, compared to the previous VACA regimen. The toxicity of both combination chemotherapy regimens was comparable.
Low-risk ALL patients can be efficiently prevented from CNS relapse by intensive systemic and intrathecal chemotherapy without CRT. Patients with intermediate or medium risk ALL, including T-cell ALL, did not suffer from more CNS or systemic relapses when CRT was reduced to only 12 Gy. Patients with inadequate response to therapy are at particularly high risk for relapse with CNS involvement. Therefore, more CNS-directed systemic and intrathecal chemotherapy was applied in trial ALL-BFM 90, combined with only 12 Gy cranial irradiation, and improved the control of CNS recurrence. It seems likely that larger subsets of B-precursor ALL can be protected from CNS-related relapse by intensive chemotherapy without extended IT treatment and without CRT. This is being investigated in the ongoing trial ALL-BFM 95.
340 consecutive patients with neuroblastoma stage IV were analyzed for the possible impact of chemotherapy on general condition, remission status, event free survival and survival. The children entered the trials NB 79, NB 82 and NB 85 of the German Pediatric Oncology Society (GPO). The patients did benefit from chemotherapy by considerable improvement of the general condition, by achievement of 30-40% complete and 60-70% partial remissions. The event free survival (EFS) rate 5-8 years after diagnosis was 13% for all 299 protocol patients, the survival (S) rate 10%. The median/mean EFS time were 11.6/23.8 months, the median/mean S time 17.0/29.4 months. The use of response rates as early predictors for long term survival is challenged. Addition of PCVm (cisplatinum, cyclophosphamide, Vm 26) to ACVD (adriamycine, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, dacarbazine) in trial NB 82 resulted in an improvement of the long term EFS rate from 5% to 18% (S rates 7----21%). The introduction of IVp (ifosfamide, VP16) and increase of doses (cisplatinum, Vm 26) did not further improve the results. Maintenance therapy (NB 82) revealed a positive influence on the outcome. Shorter intervals for realization of chemotherapy were associated with a trend for better EFS (NB 85). Although the group of children with bone marrow transplantation showed better EFS and S data compared to the unselected chemotherapy group, the advantage was less clear if matched pairs (remission status at the time of BMT) were compared.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Expression of CD34 by leukemic blasts was analyzed in 230 pediatric and 251 adult patients with de novo AML enrolled in two large multicenter trials (AML-BFM-87 and AMLCG respectively). The association between CD34 positivity and morphological classification according to FAB criteria, cytogenetic aberrations, immunophenotypic features and clinical characteristics was investigated. CD34 was expressed (> or = 20%) by leukemic cells from 45% of childhood and 43% of adult AML patients. CD34+ AML was often associated with M1/M2 morphology as well as the coexpression of CD7 and TdT. Translocation t(8;21), inv(16) and chromosome 5 and 7 aberrations were more frequently observed in CD34+ AML. There was a low frequency of CD34 expression in infant AML but no age dependency was evident in adult patients. CD34 expression exerted no influence on the rate of complete remissions (CR) after intensive multidrug induction therapy. In adults, 56% of the CD34-positive and 64% of CD34-negative cases achieved CR (P = 0.29), and the childhood trial even revealed a slight advantage for CD34+ AML with a CR rate of 80% vs. 71% for CD34-negative cases (P = 0.068). Long-term follow-up disclosed no significant differences in remission duration or event-free survival between the CD34-positive and CD34-negative groups. In conclusion, CD34+ AML patients comprise a heterogeneous group with good as well as poor risk factors. Though characterized by some distinct features, CD34 lacks prognostic significance in de novo AML patients submitted to intensive polychemotherapy.
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