ABSTRACT
PURPOSE: Data on prognostic factors in patients with metastatic osteosarcoma treated with uniform chemotherapy protocol are lacking. The objective of this study was to analyze demographic data, treatment outcome and prognostic factors for patients with metastatic osteosarcoma at our center treated with a uniform chemotherapy protocol without high dose methotrexate. METHODS: This is a single-institutional data review of patients treated between June 2003 and December 2012 with neoadjuvant chemotherapy, local site surgery followed by adjuvant chemotherapy and metastasectomy at completion of adjuvant chemotherapy. RESULTS: 102 patients of metastatic osteosarcoma were treated with a median age of 18 years (range 8-48 years), male to female ratio of 3.3:1 and median symptom duration of 4 months. EFS and OS at 5 years were 12.7 ± 0.1 and 28.1 ± 0.1 %, respectively. On multivariate analysis, elevated serum alkaline phosphatase (p < 0.001) and number of metastasis >3 (p = 0.04) were predictive of lower EFS, whereas elevated serum alkaline phosphatase (p = 0.01), number of metastasis >3 (p = 0.05), and margin positivity (p < 0.001) were predictive of lower OS. CONCLUSIONS: This is the largest data on metastatic osteosarcoma treated with a uniform chemotherapy protocol without high dose methotrexate. The data showed prognostic factors similar to what have been observed previously such as elevated serum alkaline phosphatase and >3 metastatic lesions in lung predicting inferior outcome. Notably our survival was comparable to data from other studies despite our practice of delaying metastasectomy to completion of chemotherapy rather than performing the same along with local site surgery.
Subject(s)
Antineoplastic Agents/therapeutic use , Bone Neoplasms/pathology , Osteosarcoma/pathology , Adolescent , Adult , Bone Neoplasms/drug therapy , Bone Neoplasms/mortality , Chemotherapy, Adjuvant/methods , Child , Disease-Free Survival , Female , Humans , Kaplan-Meier Estimate , Male , Metastasectomy , Middle Aged , Neoadjuvant Therapy/methods , Neoplasm Metastasis/therapy , Osteosarcoma/drug therapy , Osteosarcoma/mortality , Prognosis , Proportional Hazards Models , Treatment Outcome , Young AdultABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Data on treatment outcome and prognostic factors in patients with metastatic soft tissue sarcoma (STS) are limited in the literature. METHODS: A total of 119 patients with metastatic STS treated between June 2003 and December 2012 were analyzed for treatment outcome and prognostic factors. RESULTS: Median age was 37 years (range 2-72 years) with a male to female ratio of 1.5:1. Most common histologic subtypes were synovial sarcoma (36 %) and leiomyosarcoma (16 %). Median tumor size was 12 cm (range 1.6-30 cm). Twenty-four (20 %) patients were treated with multimodality therapy and 80 % patients received systemic chemotherapy alone. At a median follow-up of 10 months (range 1-66 months), the 2-year EFS and OS were 10 and 19 %, respectively, with a median EFS and OS of 6 and 10 months, respectively. Univariate analysis identified albumin ≤4 g/dl (p = 0.001), histologic subtypes other than synovial sarcoma (p = 0.02), non-extremity tumors (p = 0.03) and single modality treatment (p = 0.03) as factors predicting poor EFS; however, for OS, hemoglobin ≤10 g/dl (p = 0.02), tumor size >10 cm (p = 0.01) and single modality treatment (p = 0.04) were identified as poor prognostic factors. Multivariate analysis identified only serum albumin ≤4 g/dl (p = 0.002, HR 0.47, 95 % CI 0.29-0.75) associated with poor EFS; however, for OS, hemoglobin ≤10 g/dl (p = 0.009, HR 0.49, 95 % CI 0.29-0.83), tumor size >10 cm (p = 0.003, HR 2.11, 95 % CI 1.28-3.47) and single modality treatment (p = 0.01, HR 0.47, 95 % CI 0.25-0.86) emerged as poor prognostic factors. CONCLUSIONS: Serum albumin, tumor size, hemoglobin and treatment modality affect survival in metastatic STS.