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2.
Sci Rep ; 14(1): 14591, 2024 06 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38918503

ABSTRACT

Hypodense volumes (HDV) in mediastinal masses can be visualized in a computed tomography scan in Hodgkin lymphoma. We analyzed staging CT scans of 1178 patients with mediastinal involvement from the EuroNet-PHL-C1 trial and explored correlations of HDV with patient characteristics, mediastinal tumor volume and progression-free survival. HDV occurred in 350 of 1178 patients (29.7%), typically in larger mediastinal volumes. There were different patterns in appearance with single lesions found in 243 patients (69.4%), multiple lesions in 107 patients (30.6%). Well delineated lesions were found in 248 cases (70.1%), diffuse lesions were seen in 102 cases (29.1%). Clinically, B symptoms occurred more often in patients with HDV (47.7% compared to 35.0% without HDV (p = 0.039)) and patients with HDV tended to be in higher risk groups. Inadequate overall early-18F-FDG-PET-response was strongly correlated with the occurrence of hypodense lesions (p < 0.001). Patients with total HDV > 40 ml (n = 80) had a 5 year PFS of 79.6% compared to 89.7% (p = 0.01) in patients with HDV < 40 ml or no HDV. This difference in PFS is not caused by treatment group alone. HDV is a common phenomenon in HL with mediastinal involvement.


Subject(s)
Hodgkin Disease , Mediastinal Neoplasms , Humans , Male , Female , Hodgkin Disease/pathology , Hodgkin Disease/diagnostic imaging , Adult , Mediastinal Neoplasms/pathology , Mediastinal Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Middle Aged , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Young Adult , Aged , Adolescent , Mediastinum/pathology , Mediastinum/diagnostic imaging , Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 , Positron-Emission Tomography , Progression-Free Survival
3.
Eur J Cancer ; 201: 113923, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38377775

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Despite poor survival for patients with relapsed or refractory neuroblastoma, only 10-16% of patients are reported to be included in early phase trials. This study aimed to explore the impact of molecular profiling within the prospective precision cancer medicine trial MAPPYACTS (NCT02613962) on subsequent early phase trial recruitment and treatment by matched targeted therapies in this population. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Clinical data from all French patients with relapsed/refractory neuroblastoma enrolled in MAPPYACTS were analyzed for subsequent matched/non-matched targeted treatment based on clinical tumor board (CMTB) recommendations. RESULTS: From 93 patients with neuroblastoma included in French centers, 78 (84%) underwent whole exome and RNA sequencing and were discussed in the CMTB. Higher rate of successful sequencing analysis was observed in patients with relapsed disease compared to those with refractory disease (p = 0.0002). Among the 50 patients that presented with a new disease relapse/progression after the CMTB recommendations, 35 patients (70%) had at least one actionable alteration identified on the tumor at the time of relapse. Eighteen patients (36%) were included in an early phase clinical trial, 11 of these with a matched agent, 7 with a non-matched treatment; 13 patients were included in the AcSé ESMART trial. Five patients (10%) received a matched targeted therapy outside a clinical trial. CONCLUSION: Patients with neuroblastoma in the European MAPPYACTS trial were more likely to be included in early phase trials compared to previous reports. Early deep sequencing at first treatment failure, comprehensive therapeutic discussions in molecular tumor boards and innovative trials like AcSé -ESMART improve access to innovative therapies for patients with relapsed/refractory neuroblastoma. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT02613962.


Subject(s)
Neoplasm Recurrence, Local , Neuroblastoma , Humans , Prospective Studies , Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/drug therapy , Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/genetics , Neuroblastoma/drug therapy , Neuroblastoma/genetics , Chronic Disease , Recurrence
4.
Pediatr Radiol ; 54(5): 725-736, 2024 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38296856

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Disseminated pulmonary involvement in pediatric Hodgkin lymphoma (pHL) is indicative of Ann Arbor stage IV disease. During staging, it is necessary to assess for coexistence of non-malignant lung lesions due to infection representing background noise to avoid erroneously upstaging with therapy intensification. OBJECTIVE: This study attempts to describe new lung lesions detected on interim staging computed tomography (CT) scans after two cycles of vincristine, etoposide, prednisolone, doxorubicin in a prospective clinical trial. Based on the hypothesis that these new lung lesions are not part of the underlying malignancy but are epiphenomena, the aim is to analyze their size, number, and pattern to help distinguish true lung metastases from benign lung lesions on initial staging. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A retrospective analysis of the EuroNet-PHL-C1 trial re-evaluated the staging and interim lung CT scans of 1,300 pediatric patients with HL. Newly developed lung lesions during chemotherapy were classified according to the current Fleischner glossary of terms for thoracic imaging. Patients with new lung lesions found at early response assessment (ERA) were additionally assessed and compared to response seen in hilar and mediastinal lymph nodes. RESULTS: Of 1,300 patients at ERA, 119 (9.2%) had new pulmonary lesions not originally detectable at diagnosis. The phenomenon occurred regardless of initial lung involvement or whether a patient relapsed. In the latter group, new lung lesions on ERA regressed by the time of relapse staging. New lung lesions on ERA in patients without relapse were detected in 102 (7.8%) patients. Pulmonary nodules were recorded in 72 (5.5%) patients, the majority (97%) being<10 mm. Consolidations, ground-glass opacities, and parenchymal bands were less common. CONCLUSION: New nodules on interim staging are common, mostly measure less than 10 mm in diameter and usually require no further action because they are most likely non-malignant. Since it must be assumed that benign and malignant lung lesions coexist on initial staging, this benign background noise needs to be distinguished from lung metastases to avoid upstaging to stage IV disease. Raising the cut-off size for lung nodules to ≥ 10 mm might achieve the reduction of overtreatment but needs to be further evaluated with survival data. In contrast to the staging criteria of EuroNet-PHL-C1 and C2, our data suggest that the number of lesions present at initial staging may be less important.


Subject(s)
Hodgkin Disease , Lung Neoplasms , Neoplasm Staging , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Humans , Male , Female , Hodgkin Disease/diagnostic imaging , Hodgkin Disease/pathology , Hodgkin Disease/drug therapy , Child , Lung Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Lung Neoplasms/pathology , Adolescent , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods , Retrospective Studies , Prevalence , Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols/therapeutic use , Prospective Studies , Child, Preschool , Doxorubicin/therapeutic use , Etoposide/therapeutic use , Etoposide/administration & dosage , Vincristine/therapeutic use
5.
J Allergy Clin Immunol ; 153(1): 203-215, 2024 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37793571

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome (ALPS) is a noninfectious and nonmalignant lymphoproliferative disease frequently associated with autoimmune cytopenia resulting from defective FAS signaling. We previously described germline monoallelic FAS (TNFRSF6) haploinsufficient mutations associated with somatic events, such as loss of heterozygosity on the second allele of FAS, as a cause of ALPS-FAS. These somatic events were identified by sequencing FAS in DNA from double-negative (DN) T cells, the pathognomonic T-cell subset in ALPS, in which the somatic events accumulated. OBJECTIVE: We sought to identify whether a somatic event affecting the FAS-associated death domain (FADD) gene could be related to the disease onset in 4 unrelated patients with ALPS carrying a germline monoallelic mutation of the FADD protein inherited from a healthy parent. METHODS: We sequenced FADD and performed array-based comparative genomic hybridization using DNA from sorted CD4+ or DN T cells. RESULTS: We found homozygous FADD mutations in the DN T cells from all 4 patients, which resulted from uniparental disomy. FADD deficiency caused by germline heterozygous FADD mutations associated with a somatic loss of heterozygosity was a phenocopy of ALPS-FAS without the more complex symptoms reported in patients with germline biallelic FADD mutations. CONCLUSIONS: The association of germline and somatic events affecting the FADD gene is a new genetic cause of ALPS.


Subject(s)
Autoimmune Lymphoproliferative Syndrome , Fas-Associated Death Domain Protein , Humans , Apoptosis/genetics , Autoimmune Diseases/genetics , Autoimmune Lymphoproliferative Syndrome/genetics , Comparative Genomic Hybridization , DNA , fas Receptor/genetics , Fas-Associated Death Domain Protein/genetics , Fas-Associated Death Domain Protein/metabolism , Germ Cells/pathology , Mutation
9.
Pediatr Blood Cancer ; 70(8): e30421, 2023 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37243889

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Rebound thymic hyperplasia (RTH) is a common phenomenon caused by stress factors such as chemotherapy (CTX) or radiotherapy, with an incidence between 44% and 67.7% in pediatric lymphoma. Misinterpretation of RTH and thymic lymphoma relapse (LR) may lead to unnecessary diagnostic procedures including invasive biopsies or treatment intensification. The aim of this study was to identify parameters that differentiate between RTH and thymic LR in the anterior mediastinum. METHODS: After completion of CTX, we analyzed computed tomographies (CTs) and magnetic resonance images (MRIs) of 291 patients with classical Hodgkin lymphoma (CHL) and adequate imaging available from the European Network for Pediatric Hodgkin lymphoma C1 trial. In all patients with biopsy-proven LR, an additional fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG)-positron emission tomography (PET)-CT was assessed. Structure and morphologic configuration in addition to calcifications and presence of multiple masses in the thymic region and signs of extrathymic LR were evaluated. RESULTS: After CTX, a significant volume increase of new or growing masses in the thymic space occurred in 133 of 291 patients. Without biopsy, only 98 patients could be identified as RTH or LR. No single finding related to thymic regrowth allowed differentiation between RTH and LR. However, the vast majority of cases with thymic LR presented with additional increasing tumor masses (33/34). All RTH patients (64/64) presented with isolated thymic growth. CONCLUSION: Isolated thymic LR is very uncommon. CHL relapse should be suspected when increasing tumor masses are present in distant sites outside of the thymic area. Conversely, if regrowth of lymphoma in other sites can be excluded, isolated thymic mass after CTX likely represents RTH.


Subject(s)
Hodgkin Disease , Lymphoma , Thymus Hyperplasia , Thymus Neoplasms , Humans , Child , Hodgkin Disease/diagnostic imaging , Hodgkin Disease/drug therapy , Hodgkin Disease/complications , Thymus Hyperplasia/diagnostic imaging , Thymus Hyperplasia/etiology , Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/diagnostic imaging , Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/drug therapy , Lymphoma/drug therapy , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Positron-Emission Tomography/methods , Thymus Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Thymus Neoplasms/drug therapy , Thymus Neoplasms/complications , Fluorodeoxyglucose F18/therapeutic use , Radiopharmaceuticals
10.
Bull Cancer ; 110(9): 968-977, 2023 Sep.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37062647

ABSTRACT

Nodular Lymphocyte predominant Hodgkin lymphoma (NLPHL) are rare lymphomas in pediatric patients comprising less than 10 % of all Hodgkin lymphoma (HL). They are for the most part diagnosed at stage I or II and indolent with lymphadenopathy often preceding the diagnosis by many months/years. Survival is excellent. Historically, patients were treated according to classical HL protocols. Due to high toxicity and excellent prognosis, management of NLPHL shifted to de-escalation protocol with good results. No treatment beyond surgical resection was proposed for localized unique nodal disease completely resected. The closed European protocol (EuroNet PHL LP1) evaluated the efficacy of low intensity chemotherapy protocol based on CVP courses (cyclophosphamide vinblastine prednisone) for stage IA/IIA not fully resected. Final results are not yet available. Advanced stage NLPHL are rare and there is no clinical trial and no consensus treatment in children. The SFCE lymphoma committee recently established recommendations for staging and treatment of limited and advanced NLPHL in children based on current practices and published results. The goal was to allow homogeneous practice on a national scale. If incomplete resection for patients with stage I/IIA combination of low intensity chemotherapy (CVP) and rituximab is recommended. For intermediary and advanced stage intensification with AVD (adriamycine vinblastine dacarbazine) or CHOP courses (cyclophosphamide doxorubicine vincristine prednisone) combined with rituximab are advocated. In children, there is no indication for first-line local treatment with radiotherapy.


Subject(s)
Hodgkin Disease , Lymphoma, Follicular , Humans , Child , Hodgkin Disease/drug therapy , Hodgkin Disease/pathology , Vinblastine/therapeutic use , Rituximab/therapeutic use , Prednisone/therapeutic use , Cyclophosphamide/therapeutic use , Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols/therapeutic use , Lymphoma, Follicular/drug therapy , Lymphocytes/pathology
11.
Lancet Oncol ; 24(3): 252-261, 2023 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36858722

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Children and adolescents with early-stage classical Hodgkin lymphoma have a 5-year event-free survival of 90% or more with vincristine, etoposide, prednisone, and doxorubicin (OEPA) plus radiotherapy, but late complications of treatment affect survival and quality of life. We investigated whether radiotherapy can be omitted in patients with adequate morphological and metabolic responses to OEPA. METHODS: The EuroNet-PHL-C1 trial was designed as a titration study and recruited patients at 186 hospital sites across 16 European countries. Children and adolescents with newly diagnosed stage IA, IB, and IIA classical Hodgkin lymphoma younger than 18 years of age were assigned to treatment group 1 to be treated with two cycles of OEPA (vincristine 1·5 mg/m2 intravenously, capped at 2 mg, on days 1, 8, and 15; etoposide 125 mg/m2 intravenously, on days 1-5; prednisone 60 mg/m2 orally on days 1-15; and doxorubicin 40 mg/m2 intravenously on days 1 and 15). If no adequate response (a partial morphological remission or greater and PET negativity) had been achieved after two cycles of OEPA, involved-field radiotherapy was administered at a total dose of 19·8 Gy (usually in 11 fractions of 1·8 Gy per day). The primary endpoint was event-free survival. The primary objective was maintaining a 5-year event-free survival rate of 90% in patients with an adequate response to OEPA without radiotherapy. We performed intention-to-treat and per-protocol analyses. The trial was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT00433459) and with EUDRACT, (2006-000995-33) and is completed. FINDINGS: Between Jan 31, 2007, and Jan 30, 2013, 2131 patients were registered and 2102 patients were enrolled onto EuroNet-PHL-C1. Of these 2102 patients, 738 with early-stage disease were allocated to treatment group 1. Median follow-up was 63·3 months (IQR 60·1-69·8). We report on 714 patients assigned to and treated on treatment group 1; the intention-to-treat population comprised 713 patients with 323 (45%) male and 390 (55%) female patients. In 440 of 713 patients in the intention-to-treat group who had an adequate response and did not receive radiotherapy, 5-year event-free survival was 86·5% (95% CI 83·3-89·8), which was less than the 90% target rate. In 273 patients with an inadequate response who received radiotherapy, 5-year event-free survival was 88·6% (95% CI 84·8-92·5), for which the 95% CI included the 90% target rate. The most common grade 3-4 adverse events were neutropenia (in 597 [88%] of 680 patients) and leukopenia (437 [61%] of 712). There were no treatment-related deaths. INTERPRETATION: On the basis of all the evidence, radiotherapy could be omitted in patients with early-stage classical Hodgkin lymphoma and an adequate response to OEPA, but patients with risk factors might need more intensive treatment. FUNDING: Deutsche Krebshilfe, Elternverein für Krebs-und leukämiekranke Kinder, Gießen, Kinderkrebsstiftung Mainz of the Journal Oldtimer Markt, Tour der Hoffnung, Menschen für Kinder, Mitteldeutsche Kinderkrebsforschung, Programme Hospitalier de Recherche Clinique, and Cancer Research UK.


Subject(s)
Hodgkin Disease , Adolescent , Child , Female , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Male , Doxorubicin , Etoposide , Prednisone , Quality of Life , Vincristine
12.
Blood ; 141(22): 2713-2726, 2023 06 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36952639

ABSTRACT

Dedicator of cytokinesis (DOCK) proteins play a central role in actin cytoskeleton regulation. This is highlighted by the DOCK2 and DOCK8 deficiencies leading to actinopathies and immune deficiencies. DOCK8 and DOCK11 activate CDC42, a Rho-guanosine triphosphate hydrolases involved in actin cytoskeleton dynamics, among many cellular functions. The role of DOCK11 in human immune disease has been long suspected but, to the best of our knowledge, has never been described to date. We studied 8 male patients, from 7 unrelated families, with hemizygous DOCK11 missense variants leading to reduced DOCK11 expression. The patients were presenting with early-onset autoimmunity, including cytopenia, systemic lupus erythematosus, skin, and digestive manifestations. Patients' platelets exhibited abnormal ultrastructural morphology and spreading as well as impaired CDC42 activity. In vitro activated T cells and B-lymphoblastoid cell lines from patients exhibited aberrant protrusions and abnormal migration speed in confined channels concomitant with altered actin polymerization during migration. Knock down of DOCK11 recapitulated these abnormal cellular phenotypes in monocytes-derived dendritic cells and primary activated T cells from healthy controls. Lastly, in line with the patients' autoimmune manifestations, we also observed abnormal regulatory T-cell (Treg) phenotype with profoundly reduced FOXP3 and IKZF2 expression. Moreover, we found reduced T-cell proliferation and impaired STAT5B phosphorylation upon interleukin-2 stimulation of the patients' lymphocytes. In conclusion, DOCK11 deficiency is a new X-linked immune-related actinopathy leading to impaired CDC42 activity and STAT5 activation, and is associated with abnormal actin cytoskeleton remodeling as well as Treg phenotype, culminating in immune dysregulation and severe early-onset autoimmunity.


Subject(s)
Immune System Diseases , Immunologic Deficiency Syndromes , Humans , Male , Actin Cytoskeleton/metabolism , Autoimmunity , Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factors/genetics , Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factors/metabolism , Immune System Diseases/metabolism , Immunologic Deficiency Syndromes/complications , Immunologic Deficiency Syndromes/genetics , T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory
13.
Eur J Med Genet ; 66(1): 104672, 2023 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36423786

ABSTRACT

Our understanding of Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) molecular biology has been radically transformed over recent years due to the advent and the spreading of the new generation sequencing approaches. These advances offer new insights about genetic predisposition to HL in children and are currently being translated into promising and more selective drugs (brentuximab and checkpoint inhibitors) offering the perspective to reduce treatment-related toxicity. Thus, as more than 90% of pediatric patients are cured after the first line treatment, a major emphasis is placed on survivorship by reducing treatment intensity, in particular, the use of radiotherapy and chemotherapy associated with long-term toxicities. The purposes of this review are to summarize the recent advances performed in the field of molecular biology of HL, in particular the promising development of liquid biopsies. We also provide an update review of immunodeficiencies associated to HL in children recently identified. Finally, we report the recent studies supporting the efficacy of new targeted therapeutics in adult and pediatric cHL (anti-CD30 and anti-PD1).


Subject(s)
Antineoplastic Agents , Hodgkin Disease , Adult , Humans , Child , Hodgkin Disease/drug therapy , Hodgkin Disease/pathology
16.
J Pediatr Hematol Oncol ; 44(8): e1033-e1038, 2022 11 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35091521

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The aim was to analyze the role of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) in the bioclinical characteristics of patients treated for classic Hodgkin lymphoma (cHL) in France. METHODS: Biopathologic data of 301 patients treated for a cHL in/or according to the EuroNet PHL-C1 trial between November 2008 and February 2013 were centrally reviewed. RESULTS: Median age at diagnosis was 14 (3 to 18) years and the F/M ratio 0.86, 0.47 before 10 years and 0.9 from 11 to 18. CHL subtypes were nodular sclerosis for 266/301 (88%) patients, mixed cellularity for 22/301 (7%), lymphocyte rich for 2/301 (1%), and 11/301 were unclassified. EBV positivity by in situ hybridization was observed for 68/301 (23%) patients, significantly associated with mixed cellularity subtype and male sex, particularly overrepresented in boys below 10 years: 15/23 (65%) versus 28/139 among other male patients (20%). EBV viral load was detectable in 22 of 108 (22%) tested cases and was overrepresented in EBV cHL (13/28) versus non-EBV cHL (9/80) patients. Detailed semiquantitative histologic analysis showed a high number of B-cell residual follicles in EBV cHL relative to EBV-negative HL. CONCLUSION: Distribution of EBV cHL in children and adolescents is associated with young age and male sex, suggesting a specific physiopathology and may require a differential therapeutic approach.


Subject(s)
Epstein-Barr Virus Infections , Hodgkin Disease , Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin , Child , Humans , Adolescent , Male , Herpesvirus 4, Human/genetics , Hodgkin Disease/pathology , Epstein-Barr Virus Infections/complications , Epstein-Barr Virus Infections/epidemiology , Immunohistochemistry , In Situ Hybridization , Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin/complications
17.
Lancet Oncol ; 23(1): 125-137, 2022 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34895479

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Children and adolescents with intermediate-stage and advanced-stage classical Hodgkin lymphoma achieve an event-free survival at 5 years of about 90% after treatment with vincristine, etoposide, prednisone, and doxorubicin (OEPA) followed by cyclophosphamide, vincristine, prednisone, and procarbazine (COPP) and radiotherapy, but long-term treatment effects affect survival and quality of life. We aimed to investigate whether radiotherapy can be omitted in patients with morphological and metabolic adequate response to OEPA and whether modified consolidation chemotherapy reduces gonadotoxicity. METHODS: Our study was designed as a titration study with an open-label, embedded, multinational, non-inferiority, randomised controlled trial, and was carried out at 186 hospital sites across 16 European countries. Children and adolescents with newly diagnosed intermediate-stage (treatment group 2) and advanced-stage (treatment group 3) classical Hodgkin lymphoma who were younger than 18 years and stratified according to risk using Ann Arbor disease stages IIAE, IIB, IIBE, IIIA, IIIAE, IIIB, IIIBE, and all stages IV (A, B, AE, and BE) were included in the study. Patients with early disease (treatment group 1) were excluded from this analysis. All patients were treated with two cycles of OEPA (1·5 mg/m2 vincristine taken intravenously capped at 2 mg, on days 1, 8, and 15; 125 mg/m2 etoposide taken intravenously on days 1-5; 60 mg/m2 prednisone taken orally on days 1-15; and 40 mg/m2 doxorubicin taken intravenously on days 1 and 15). Patients were randomly assigned to two (treatment group 2) or four (treatment group 3) cycles of COPP (500 mg/m2 cyclophosphamide taken intravenously on days 1 and 8; 1·5 mg/m2 vincristine taken intravenously capped at 2 mg, on days 1 and 8; 40 mg/m2 prednisone taken orally on days 1 to 15; and 100 mg/m2 procarbazine taken orally on days 1 to 15) or COPDAC, which was identical to COPP except that 250 mg/m2 dacarbazine administered intravenously on days 1 to 3 replaced procarbazine. The method of randomisation (1:1) was minimisation with stochastic component and was centrally stratified by treatment group, country, trial sites, and sex. The primary endpoint was event-free survival, defined as time from treatment start until the first of the following events: death from any cause, progression or relapse of classical Hodgkin lymphoma, or occurrence of secondary malignancy. The primary objectives were maintaining 90% event-free survival at 5 years in patients with adequate response to OEPA treated without radiotherapy and to exclude a decrease of 8% in event-free survival at 5 years in the embedded COPDAC versus COPP randomisation to show non-inferiority of COPDAC. Efficacy analyses are reported per protocol and safety in the intention-to-treat population. The trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (trial number NCT00433459) and EUDRACT (trial number 2006-000995-33), and is closed to recruitment. FINDINGS: Between Jan 31, 2007, and Jan 30, 2013, 2102 patients were recruited. 737 (35%) of the 2102 recruited patients were in treatment group 1 (early-stage disease) and were not included in our analysis. 1365 (65%) of the 2102 patients were in treatment group 2 (intermediate-stage disease; n=455) and treatment group 3 (advanced-stage disease; n=910). Of these 1365, 1287 (94%) patients (435 [34%] of 1287 in treatment group 2 and 852 [66%] of 1287 in treatment group 3) were included in the titration trial per-protocol analysis. 937 (69%) of 1365 patients were randomly assigned to COPP (n=471) or COPDAC (n=466) in the embedded trial. Median follow-up was 66·5 months (IQR 62·7-71·7). Of 1287 patients in the per-protocol group, 514 (40%) had an adequate response to treatment and were not treated with radiotherapy (215 [49%] of 435 in treatment group 2 and 299 [35%] of 852 in treatment group 3). 773 (60%) of 1287 patients with inadequate response were scheduled for radiotherapy (220 [51%] of 435 in the treatment group 2 and 553 [65%] of 852 in treatment group 3. In patients who responded adequately, event-free survival rates at 5 years were 90·1% (95% CI 87·5-92·7). event-free survival rates at 5 years in 892 patients who were randomly assigned to treatment and analysed per protocol were 89·9% (95% CI 87·1-92·8) for COPP (n=444) versus 86·1% (82·9-89·4) for COPDAC (n=448). The COPDAC minus COPP difference in event-free survival at 5 years was -3·7% (-8·0 to 0·6). The most common grade 3-4 adverse events (intention-to-treat population) were decreased haemoglobin (205 [15%] of 1365 patients during OEPA vs 37 [7%] of 528 treated with COPP vs 20 [2%] of 819 treated with COPDAC), decreased white blood cells (815 [60%] vs 231 [44%] vs 84 [10%]), and decreased neutrophils (1160 [85%] vs 223 [42%] vs 174 [21%]). One patient in treatment group 2 died of sepsis after the first cycle of OEPA; no other treatment-related deaths occurred. INTERPRETATION: Our results show that radiotherapy can be omitted in patients who adequately respond to treatment, when consolidated with COPP or COPDAC. COPDAC might be less effective, but is substantially less gonadotoxic than COPP. A high proportion of patients could therefore be spared radiotherapy, eventually reducing the late effects of treatment. With more refined criteria for response assessment, the number of patients who receive radiotherapy will be further decreased. FUNDING: Deutsche Krebshilfe, Elternverein für Krebs-und leukämiekranke Kinder Gießen, Kinderkrebsstiftung Mainz, Tour der Hoffnung, Menschen für Kinder, Programme Hospitalier de Recherche Clinique, and Cancer Research UK.


Subject(s)
Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols/therapeutic use , Hodgkin Disease/drug therapy , Adolescent , Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols/adverse effects , Child , Cyclophosphamide/therapeutic use , Female , Follicle Stimulating Hormone/blood , Hodgkin Disease/mortality , Hodgkin Disease/radiotherapy , Humans , Male , Neoplasm Staging , Prednisone/therapeutic use , Procarbazine/therapeutic use , Vincristine/therapeutic use
18.
Haematologica ; 107(2): 457-466, 2022 02 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33440924

ABSTRACT

Pediatric-onset Evans syndrome (pES) is defined by both immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) and autoimmune hemolytic anemia (AIHA) before the age of 18 years. There have been no comprehensive long-term studies of this rare disease, which can be associated to various immunopathological manifestations (IM). We report outcomes of the 151 patients with pES and more than 5 years of follow-up from the nationwide French prospective OBS'CEREVANCE cohort. Median age at final follow-up was 18.5 years (range, 6.8-50.0 years) and the median follow-up period was 11.3 years (range, 5.1-38.0 years). At 10 years, ITP and AIHA were in sustained complete remission in 54.5% and 78.4% of patients, respectively. The frequency and number of clinical and biological IM increased with age: at the age of 20 years, 74% had at least one clinical IM (cIM). A wide range of cIM occurred, mainly lymphoproliferation, dermatological, gastrointestinal/hepatic and pneumological IM. The number of cIM was associated with a subsequent increase in the number of second-line treatments received (other than steroids and immunoglobulins; hazard ratio 1.4, 95% Confidence Interval: 1.15-1.60, P=0.0002, Cox proportional hazards method). Survival at 15 years after diagnosis was 84%. Death occurred at a median age of 18 years (range, 1.7-31.5 years), and the most frequent cause was infection. The number of second-line treatments and severe/recurrent infections were independently associated with mortality. In conclusion, long-term outcomes of pES showed remission of cytopenias but frequent IM linked to high second-line treatment burden. Mortality was associated to drugs and/or underlying immunodeficiencies, and adolescents-young adults are a high-risk subgroup.


Subject(s)
Anemia, Hemolytic, Autoimmune , Adolescent , Adult , Anemia, Hemolytic, Autoimmune/diagnosis , Anemia, Hemolytic, Autoimmune/therapy , Child , Child, Preschool , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Infant , Prospective Studies , Retrospective Studies , Thrombocytopenia , Young Adult
19.
Pediatr Blood Cancer ; 68(4): e28903, 2021 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33538093

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In the EuroNet Pediatric Hodgkin Lymphoma (EuroNet-PHL) trials, decision on Waldeyer's ring (WR) involvement is usually based on clinical assessment, that is, physical examination and/or nasopharyngoscopy. However, clinical assessment only evaluates mucosal surface and is prone to interobserver variability. Modern cross-sectional imaging technology may provide valuable information beyond mucosal surface, which may lead to a more accurate WR staging. PATIENTS, MATERIALS, AND METHODS: The EuroNet-PHL-C1 trial recruited 2102 patients, of which 1752 underwent central review including reference reading of their cross-sectional imaging data. In 14 of 1752 patients, WR was considered involved according to clinical assessment. In these 14 patients, the WR was re-assessed by applying an imaging-based algorithm considering information from 18 F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography, contrast-enhanced computed tomography, and/or magnetic resonance imaging. For verification purposes, the imaging-based algorithm was applied to 100 consecutive patients whose WR was inconspicuous on clinical assessment. RESULTS: The imaging-based algorithm confirmed WR involvement only in four of the 14 patients. Of the remaining 10 patients, four had retropharyngeal lymph node involvement and six an inconspicuous WR. Applying the imaging-based algorithm to 100 consecutive patients with physiological appearance of their WR on clinical assessment, absence of WR involvement could be confirmed in 99. However, suspicion of WR involvement was raised in one patient. CONCLUSIONS: The imaging-based algorithm was feasible and easily applicable at initial staging of young patients with Hodgkin lymphoma. It increased the accuracy of WR staging, which may contribute to a more individualized treatment in the future.


Subject(s)
Hodgkin Disease/diagnostic imaging , Adolescent , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Fluorodeoxyglucose F18/analysis , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Multimodal Imaging , Neoplasm Staging , Positron-Emission Tomography , Tomography, X-Ray Computed
20.
Cancer Med ; 10(5): 1589-1604, 2021 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33452711

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Optimal Phase-II design to evaluate new therapies in refractory/relapsed Ewing sarcomas (ES) remains imperfectly defined. OBJECTIVES: Recurrent/refractory ES phase-I/II trials analysis to improve trials design. METHODS: Comprehensive review of therapeutic trials registered on five databases (who.int/trialsearch, clinicaltrials.gov, clinicaltrialsregister.eu, e-cancer.fr, and umin.ac.jp) and/or published in PubMed/ASCO/ESMO websites, between 2005 and 2018, using the criterion: (Ewing sarcoma OR bone sarcoma OR sarcoma) AND (Phase-I or Phase-II). RESULTS: The 146 trials identified (77 phase-I/II, 67 phase-II, and 2 phase-II/III) tested targeted (34%), chemo- (23%), immune therapies (19%), or combined therapies (24%). Twenty-three trials were ES specific and 48 had a specific ES stratum. Usually multicentric (88%), few trials were international (30%). Inclusion criteria cover the recurrent ES age range for only 12% of trials and allowed only accrual of measurable diseases (RECIST criteria). Single-arm design was the most frequent (88%) testing mainly single drugs (61%), only 5% were randomized. Primary efficacy outcome was response rate (RR=CR+PR; Complete+Partial response) (n = 116/146; 79%), rarely progression-free or overall survival (16% PFS and 3% OS). H0 and H1 hypotheses were variable (3%-25% and 20%-50%, respectively). The 62 published trials enrolled 827 ES patients. RR was poor (10%; 15 CR=1.7%, 68 PR=8.3%). Stable disease was the best response for 186 patients (25%). Median PFS/OS was of 1.9 (range 1.3-14.7) and 7.6 months (5-30), respectively. Eleven (18%) published trials were considered positive, with median RR/PFS/OS of 15% (7%-30%), 4.5 (1.3-10), and 16.6 months (6.9-30), respectively. CONCLUSION: This review supports the need to develop the international randomized phase-II trials across all age ranges with PFS as primary endpoint.


Subject(s)
Bone Neoplasms/therapy , Clinical Trials, Phase I as Topic/standards , Clinical Trials, Phase II as Topic/standards , Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/therapy , Research Design/standards , Sarcoma, Ewing/therapy , Antineoplastic Agents/therapeutic use , Clinical Trials, Phase I as Topic/statistics & numerical data , Clinical Trials, Phase II as Topic/statistics & numerical data , Combined Modality Therapy/statistics & numerical data , Databases, Factual/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Immunotherapy/statistics & numerical data , Molecular Targeted Therapy/statistics & numerical data , Multicenter Studies as Topic/statistics & numerical data , Progression-Free Survival , Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic/statistics & numerical data , Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors , Treatment Outcome
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