Radiation Oncology/Rhabdomyosarcoma
Appearance
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Epidemiology
[edit | edit source]- 350 children per year in US
- Most common soft tissue sarcoma of childhood
- 2/3 occur <6 years, second peak mid-teen
- Clinical presentation depends on site, but frequently an asymptomatic mass
- Most common locations are H&N, GU, and extremities
- Local spread along fascial and muscle planes
- LN+ in 15%, incidence varies by subsite (ocular 1%, paratesticular 25%)
- DM+ in 15% at diagnosis, commonly lung, bone marrow, bone
- Li-Fraumeni syndrome: multiple tumors in siblings/relatives of children with RMS (adrenal, GBM, lung, breast, sarcomas)
Histology
[edit | edit source]- Myogenic precursor markers on IHC (actin, myosin, desmin, myoglobin, myoD, Z-band protein)
- MyoD drives cells to myogenic lineage differentiation, and also stops cell replication. MyoD MAb available for diagnosis
- Two very distinct histologies and behavior patterns
- Embryonal (includes botyroid ERMS and spindle cell ERMS)
- diploid to hyperploid DNA
- no consistent transclocations identified, but loss of heterozygosity at 11p15.5
- predominately in infants/young children
- frequently H&N, GU location
- considered to have favorable prognosis
- Alveolar
- tetraploid DNA
- translocations: t(2,13) PAX3-FKHR and t(1,13) PAX7-FKHR gene fusion, which regulates neuromuscular development
- N-myc amplification (unlike embryonal)
- predominately older children
- predominately extremities, trunk, and retroperitoneum
- Undifferentiated
- diffuse cell population of primitive, noncommitted mesenchymal cells
- primarily a diagnosis of exclusion
Superior prognosis:
- Botyroid ERMS (6%) - 5-yr OS 95%
- "grape like." Occurs in mucosa-lined organs -- bladder, vagina, nasopharynx, middle ear, biliary tree. Generally localized and non-invasive.
- Spindle cell ERMS (3%) - 5-yr OS 88%
- Most common site is paratesticular.
Intermediate prognosis:
- Embryonal (59%) - 5-yr OS 66%
- Orbit, GU, H&N
- Blastemal mesenchymal cells. Resembles normal skeletal muscle of 7-10 wk old foetus. Often with LOH 11p15.5.
Poor prognosis:
- Alveolar (32%) - 5-yr OS 54%
- Extremities, Trunk, Retroperitoneal
- Line connective tissue septa reminiscent of alveoli. Resemble normal skeletal muscle of 10-20 wk old foetus. t(2;13) or t(1;13). Frequent n-myc amplification.
- Undifferentiated (1%) - 5-yr OS 40%
Prognostic factors
[edit | edit source]- Primary site - determines resectability (and thus IRS grouping)
- Tumor size (<5 or >5 cm)
- Lymph node involvement - +LN associated with more advanced primary
- Histology
- Complete resection
Staging and grouping
[edit | edit source]TNM Staging:
- T1 - Confined to anatomic site of origin
- T1a - <= 5 cm
- T1b - > 5 cm
- T2 - Extension beyond site of origin
- T2a - <= 5 cm
- T2b - > 5 cm
- N-stage: N0 or N1
- M-stage: M0 or M1
IRS Staging Classification (pre-treatment): (IRS-IV)
Stage | Sites | TNM | 5-yr OS |
---|---|---|---|
Stage 1 |
Favorable sites: Orbit, H&N (excluding parameningeal), GU (non-bladder, non-prostate), Biliary tract |
any size, N0 or N1 | 90% |
Stage 2 | Unfavorable sites: Parameningeal H&N, GU (Bladder/Prostate,) Extremity, Other (trunk, retroperitoneum, etc.) |
<=5cm and N0 | 85% |
Stage 3 | Unfavorable sites: Same as Stage 2 |
>5cm or N+ | 70% |
Stage 4 | All | M1 | 30% |
- Parameningeal H&N sites include: (IMMNNPPP) - Infratemporal fossa, Middle ear, Mastoid region, Nasal cavity, Nasopharynx, Paranasal sinus, Pterygopalatine fossa, +/- parapharyngeal region (sometimes included).
- Alternate (MMNNOOPP) - Middle ear, Mastoid region, Nasal cavity, Nasopharynx, Infratemporal fOssa, Pterygopalatine fOssa, Paranasal sinus, +/- parapharyngeal region (sometimes included)
IRS Grouping (after resection):
Group | Status |
---|---|
Group I | SM-, localized disease |
Group IIA | SM+ |
Group IIB | LN+ (resected) |
Group IIC | IIA & IIB |
Group III | gross residual disease |
Group IV | distant mets |
Risk stratification
[edit | edit source]EMB = Embryonal, Botryoid, or Spindle cell
ALV = Alveolar or undifferentiated
- Low risk:
- EMB Stage 1 (favorable site), Group I-III (non-metastatic)
- EMB Stage 2-3 (unfavorable site), Group I-II (R0, R1, or LN+)
- Intermediate risk:
- EMB Stage 2-3 (unfavorable site), Group III (gross disease)
- ALV Stage 1-3 (any alveolar)
- High risk:
- Metastases (Stage 4, Group IV)
Treatment
[edit | edit source]- Prior to 1970, RMS was treated with surgery alone or RT alone and had poor outcomes (OS <25%). Only exception was orbit and GU
- Series of trials: Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study Group IRS I-IV, V ongoing
- Risk adapted therapy based on: tumor size, site, histology, residual disease after surgery, LN involvement, distant mets, and patient age (see above)
- 5-year OS improved from IRS-I 55% to IRS-II 63% to IRS-III/IV 71%
- Recommend treating all patients on protocol
IRS Trials
[edit | edit source]- IRSG-D9602 (1997-2004) - non-randomized.
- Purpose: (1) decrease toxicity by reducing RT doses(2) eliminate cyclophosphamide in lowest-risk patients.
- Subgroup A (lowest risk) - (embryonal, stage 1, group I/IIA; stage 1, group III orbit; or stage 2, group I) -- received VA (vincristine, dactinomycin)
- Subgroup B - (embryonal, stage 1, group IIB/C; stage 1, group III non-orbit; stage 2, group II; stage 3, group I/II) -- received VA + cyclophosphamide
- 342 pts (264 in subgroup A, 78 in subgroup B). No RT for Group I pts. Pts in group II-III received RT. In patients with stage I, group IIA disease, dose was reduced to 36 Gy (41.4 Gy in IRS-IV). For those with group III orbit disease, dose was reduced to 45 Gy (50-59 Gy in IRS-IV).
- 2011 PMID 21357783 (Median f/u 5.1 yrs) -- "Results of the Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study Group D9602 Protocol, Using Vincristine and Dactinomycin With or Without Cyclophosphamide and Radiation Therapy, for Newly Diagnosed Patients With Low-Risk Embryonal Rhabdomyosarcoma: A Report From the Soft Tissue Sarcoma Committee of the Children's Oncology Group." (Raney RB, J Clin Oncol. 2011 Apr 1;29(10):1312-8)
- 5-yr FFS 89% for subgroup A, 85% subgroup B. 5-yr FFS 81% (stage 1, group IIA), 86% (group III orbit)
- Conclusion: Compared with historical controls (in IRS-III/IV, 5-yr FFS 83% and OS 95%), FFS and OS rates were similar to IRS-III including those with reduced RT doses, but inferior to IRS-IV pts with VA + cyclophosphamide. FFS rates were similar among subgroups A and B.
- IRS-IV (1991-1997)
- Randomized. 883 patients with non-metastatic RMS after surgery. Treatment by tumor site, Group (1-3), and Stage (I-III)
- CG III RT: conventional (50.4/28) vs. hyperfractionated (59.4/54 in 1.1 Gy BID). Also, WBRT omitted for all parameningeal unless CSF involvement documented
- 2001 PMID 11408506 -- "Intergroup rhabdomyosarcoma study-IV: results for patients with nonmetastatic disease." (Crist WM, J Clin Oncol. 2001 Jun 15;19(12):3091-102.)
- 3-year OS: 86%
- CG III: HF-RT comparable to conventional RT
- VAC and VAI or VIE equally effective
- Embryonal RMS benefited from intense chemo, no difference for alveolar/undifferentiated
- Prognostic subgroups developed (see above)
- IRS III (1984-1991)
- Randomized. 1062 previously untreated patients. Treatment by clinical group (I-IV), histology (favorable-unfavorable), and site
- RT: none in CG I favorable, CG I unfavorable and CG II 41.4 Gy, CG III 41.4 Gy if <5cm and <6 years, 50.4 Gy if >5cm or >6 years
- 1995 PMID 7884423 -- "The Third Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study." (Crist W, J Clin Oncol. 1995 Mar;13(3):610-30.)
- 5-year OS: 71% (compared with 62% in IRS II). 5-year PFS 65% (compared with 55% in IRS II)
- CG I favorable: VA alone as good as VAC. 5-year PFS 83%
- CG II favorable (excluding orbit, head, paratesticular): VA + RT comparable to VAD + RT
- CG III (excluding orbit, head): intensive chemo better than VAC or VAC-VADRC. 5-year PFS 62%
- CG III (bladder, vagina, pelvis): much better outcome due to early RT, with better bladder salvage (60% vs. 25%)
- CG IV: no benefit from aggressive therapy
- Whole brain RT omitted for parameningeal tumors with nerve palsy or base of skull erosion - risk of CNS relapse comparable
- IRS II (1978-1984)
- Randomized. 999 previously untreated patients. Treatment by clinical group (I-IV), histology (favorable-unfavorable), and site
- RT Dose escalation (CG I no RT, CG II 40-45 Gy, CG III and <5cm and <6 years 40-45 Gy, CG III and >5 cm or >6 years 50-55 Gy). WBRT if parameningeal tumors with nerve palsy, base of skull erosion, or intracranial extent
- 1993 PMID 8448756 -- "The Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study-II." (Maurer HM, Cancer. 1993 Mar 1;71(5):1904-22.)
- 5-year OS: 62% (compared with 55% in IRS I)
- CG I (excluding extremity alveolar): VA comparable to VAC. Alveolar had high rate of relapse
- CG II: intensive VA comparable to repetitive-pulse VAC
- CG III (excluding pelvic): VAC comparable to VDC-VAC
- Whole brain RT improved meningeal recurrence and increased survival in high risk patients with parameningeal sites (67% vs. 45% in IRS-I)
- CG IV: no benefit over IRS-I
- IRS I (1972-1978)
- Randomized. 686 previously untreated patients. Minimum F/U 7 years
- 1988 PMID 3275486 -- "The Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study-I. A final report." (Maurer HM, Cancer. 1988 Jan 15;61(2):209-20.)
- 5-year OS: 55%, after relapse 32% at 1 year. Risk of DM much greater than LR
- CG I: VAC, no benefit to RT. Subsequent analysis showed benefit in alveolar or undifferentiated histology.
- CG II: No difference between VA + RT or VAC + RT
- CG III and IV: No difference between VAC + RT or VACD + RT. 5-year OS CG III 52% vs. CG IV 20%
- No dose-response relationship 40-60 Gy
- No difference in RT to whole muscle bundle vs. tumor + margin only
- Parameningeal sites with high risk factors (palsy, erosion of base of skull, etc) had high incidence of CNS relapse
Surgery
[edit | edit source]- Only ~20% of patients can undergo R0 resection, and another 20% can undergo compromised R1 resection
- Trend toward less aggressive surgical resection and more reliance on chemo-RT
- Normal margin of 5mm typically required (Perez 5th edition) to be considered complete excision
Radiotherapy
[edit | edit source]General:
- RMS infiltrates along tissues planes, and may extend beyond obvious visible margins
- Treat pre-chemo, pre-surgery tumor volume. 2 cm margin is sufficient (per IRS-IV)
- For parameningeal sites, treatment of adjacent meninges can prevent meningeal relapse
- Elective LN irradiation not necessary if clinically negative and will be treated with chemotherapy (Perez 5th ed)
- Hyperfractionated BID RT does not improve outcomes in a randomized setting
- Timing (newly-revised): Low risk - week 13 of chemo. Intermediate risk - week 4 of chemo. High risk - week 20 of chemo. Day 0 for documented intracranial extension.
IRS-V (ongoing):
- low risk disease
- complete resection, SM- = no RT
- microscopic SM+ and LN- = 36 Gy
- microscopic SM+ and LN+ = 41.4 Gy
- orbital primary with residual gross disease = 45 Gy
- non-orbital primaries with residual gross disease = 50.4 Gy
- intermediate risk disease
- complete resection, SM- = 36 Gy
- miscroscopic SM+ = 41.4 Gy
- gross residual disease = 50.4 Gy
- RT guidelines
- CTV = pre-chemo GTV + 1.5 cm
- PTV = CTV + institutional margin (0.3 - 0.5 cm)
- Since this margin (1.8 - 2cm) is larger than the original IRS margin (2cm from block, which translates to effective 1.5cm due to penumbra), next generation of protocols will have CTV - PTV expansion of 1.5 cm
- Start time: Day 0 if intracranial extension, week 13 for low risk, week 4 intermediate risk, week 20 high risk (primary site) and week 47 (metastases)
Chemotherapy
[edit | edit source]- Chemotherapy is used for all patients
- Non-metastatic: VAC (vincristine, actinomycin D, cyclophosphamide)
- Metastatic: Currently using "up-front window" approach:
- Test 1-2 agents for 1-2 cycles during 6 weeks
- If they respond, add to standard VAC + XRT
- Topotecan
- Metastatic disease: highly active
- Melphalan
- Metastatic disease: inferior survival compared to IE
- Ifosfamide/Etoposide
- Recurrent disease: active
- Local disease: comparable outcome VAC vs. VAI vs. VIE, but toxicity and logistics better for VAC
- Cisplatin/Etoposide
- No benefit VAC/dox/cisplatin and VAC/dox/cisplatin/etoposide vs. VAC alone
- Doxorubicin
- No benefit VAC/dox vs. VAC alone
- Base chemotherapy is VAC (vincristine, actinomycin D, cyclophosphamide)
Specific Subsets
[edit | edit source]Clinical Group I (complete resection)
- IRS-I/II/III, 1999 (1972-1991) PMID 10550144 -- "Indications for radiotherapy and chemotherapy after complete resection in rhabdomyosarcoma: A report from the Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Studies I to III." (Wolden SL, J Clin Oncol. 1999 Nov;17(11):3468-75.)
- Retrospective analysis of IRS-I to IRS-III protocols. 439 patients with completely resected RMS (Group I), treated with VAC +/- dox/cisplatin. 19% received RT
- 10-year outcomes: OS 89%, FFS 79%. Failures: 6% local, 6% regional, 7% distal
- ERMS: no difference in OS, trend to benefit for FFS
- ARMS/undifferentiated:
- IRS I/II: 10-year OS RT+ 82% vs. RT- 52% (SS), 10-year FFS 73% vs. 44% (SS)
- IRS III: 10-year OS RT+ 95% vs. RT- 86% (NS), 10-year FFS 95% vs. 69% (SS)
- Conclusion: Patients with Group I embryonal RMS have excellent prognosis without RT; alveolar RMS outcomes substantially improved with RT
Head & Neck
- 35% of RMS patients (15% parameningeal, 10% orbit, 10% other)
- Majority are unresectable (CG III) at diagnosis
- Orbit and non-parameningeal sites have high cure rates
- Parameningeal sites (see above) have worse control
- Bad prognostic factors: base of skull erosion, intracranial extension, cranial nerve palsy, primary location in paranasal sinuses or pterygoid/infratemporal fossa
- Local failure in IRS-IV was 16%, with DM 11%
- Local failure from MSKCC series was 5%, and 0% in CG I-III as reported in IRS-IV
- SIOP MMT 89 & 95 1989-2003) PMID 19204197 -- "Treatment of nonmetastatic cranial parameningeal rhabdomyosarcoma in children younger than 3 years old: results from international society of paediatric oncology studies MMT 89 and 95." (Defachelles AS, J Clin Oncol. 2009 Mar 10;27(8):1310-5. Epub 2009 Feb 9.)
- Prospective. 59 children, cranial parameningeal RMS. Goal to avoid RT if CR after chemo
- Outcome: 5-year EFS if RT used 59% vs. if no RT used 28% (SS). Only 12% ultimately cured without RT
- Conclusion: Despite concerns about late effects, cure of PM RMS remains unlikely without RT
- MSKCC, 2005 PMID 15817347 -- "Intensity-modulated radiotherapy for head-and-neck rhabdomyosarcoma." (Wolden SL, Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2005 Apr 1;61(5):1432-8.)
- Retrospective. 28 patients (21 parameningeal, 3 orbital, 4 other), treated with IMRT. 89% Group III disease, 71% intracranial extension . Median tumor size 5.2 cm. RT median dose 50.4 Gy (30-55.8), 1.5 cm margin (1cm CTV + 0.5 PTV). No boost.
- 3-year OS: 65%, 3-year FFF 95% locally (100% for Groups I-III), 90% regional LN, 88% CNS, 80% distal sites. Alveolar RMS significantly worse
- Toxicity: acute comparable to IRS trials, late was mild (1 cataract, 1 GH deficiency, 1 mild facial asymmetry)
- Conclusion: Outstanding local control despite reduced margin
- IRS II-IV, 2004 (1978-1997) PMID 15234036 -- "Influence of radiation therapy parameters on outcome in children treated with radiation therapy for localized parameningeal rhabdomyosarcoma in Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study Group trials II through IV." (Michalski JM, Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2004 Jul 15;59(4):1027-38.)
- Retrospective. 595 patients with PM-RMS registered. 95% with Group III disease. RT varied per protocol (40, 50.4, 59.4 BID). 21% patients (40% on IRS-II) received WBRT
- 5-year OS: 73%. 5-year LF: 17%
- Intracranial extension: increased 24% to 41% with cross-sectional imaging
- Timing of RT:
- Meningeal impingement: <2 weeks after chemo 18% LF vs. >2 weeks 33% (SS)
- Intracranial extension: <2 weeks after chemo 16% LF vs. >2 weeks 37% (NS, p=0.07)
- Cranial nerve palsy/ base of skull bone erosion: <2 weeks after chemo 21% LF vs. >2 weeks 30% (NS)
- If no signs of meningeal impingement: no difference in LF if RT start earlier/later than 10 weeks
- RT Dose
- Large (>=5 cm) tumors: <47.5 Gy LF 35% vs. >47.5 Gy 15%. Small tumors no difference
- WBRT no impact on LR or CNS failure