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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 92-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 475 - 476
1 Jul 2010
Entz-Werlé N Lavaux T Modrowski D Lasthaus C Guérin E Brugières L Marec-Berard P Tabone M Schmitt C Gentet J Gaub M
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Despite the recent progress, non-metastatic pediatric osteosarcomas have now a 5-year overall survival (OS) around 75% and the metastatic forms are decreasing to 20–30%. To increase these survival rates, new molecular approaches are on development to understand and highlight new candidates for targeted therapies. Tyrosine kinase receptors (TKR) are one of this target class, where new drugs were especially developped, screening now a large spectrum of TKR. After the demonstration among cancers of TKR’s clinical utility as surrogate markers to guide the selection of patients susceptible to respond to these treatments, this success was recently tempered in part because of cancers developping resistance mechanisms to these drugs. A study was conducted to evaluate the interest of these molecular targets among pediatric osteosarcomas.

Materiel and methods: 91 pediatric patients treated homogeneously with the French OS94 protocol were included in this analysis. Allelotyping, real-time quantitative PCR (QPCR), sequencing and immunhistochemistry were performed to analyse the following targets: EGFR, MET, PDGFRA, KIT and ERBB2.

Results and discussion: Most of these targets were rearranged in more than 45% of the population and mainly deleted. Only 11.4% were amplified at MET and 8.6% at PDGFRA. By QPCR, ERBB2 was normal in 78 out of 81 informative patients. Surprinsingly, wild-type KIT protein was amplified in 37%. EGFR was rearranged by allelotyping in 48% and QPCR evaluation just started. MET amplified subgroup is linked to a worst OS than normal and deleted subgroups (p=0.04) whereas PDGFRA amplified tumors tend to be significantly linked to a better patient OS (p=0.08). Considering all amplified subgroups, no ovelap was found as if an osteosarcoma could only be amplified for one gene. This observation could be considered as a way to increase the potential targeted populations where the use of large spectrum TKR inhibitors would be useful in osteosarcoma treatment.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 92-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 478 - 478
1 Jul 2010
Guillon M Mary P Brugière L Marec-Berard P Pacquement H Schmitt C Habay C Lemoine P Verite C Guinebretière J Tabone M
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Osteosarcoma rarely affects young children. To determine the clinical characteristics and the prognosis of this cancer in children of less than 5 years at diagnosis, we retrospectively analysed medical records of these patients treated in French centers between 1980 and 2007. A centralised histological review was carried out.

Fifteen patients were studied. Long bones were involved in 14 cases. Metastases at diagnosis were observed in 40% of patients. Histologic type was 74% osteoblastic.

In 3 cases (20%) tumours occurred on a particular background (tall constitutional size, treatment with growth hormone and pregnancy induced by clomiphene). One child had a second cancer 13 years after the first diagnosis.

Twelve children received pre-operative chemotherapy including high dose methotrexate: 5 of them had progressive disease; only 36% had good histological response (less than 10% viable cells). Limb salvage surgery was performed in six cases (40%).

Chemotherapy was well tolerated in most patients. A one-year-old child developed a severe late convulsant encephalopathy with lesions of the white substance that could be due to methotrexate despite adjustment of doses to his weight.

The functional recovery of the three analysable children who underwent limb salvage surgery is uneven and shows frequent mechanical or infectious complications (2 to 5 reinterventions per patients).

First complete remission (CR) was obtained in 12 children, six of them relapsed. With a median follow-up of 15 years, six are alive in CR, six died of disease (40%), two were lost to follow-up and one has stable disease with metastasis.

This study shows that osteosarcoma seems to be more aggressive in children under five years of age. Surgical management remains difficult in this population. Prospective studies are still needed to confirm these observations.