Postoperative Radiation Therapy in Patients with Extracranial Chondrosarcoma: A Joint Study of the French Sarcoma Group and Rare Cancer Network.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_7F8BCBDEB9CE
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Postoperative Radiation Therapy in Patients with Extracranial Chondrosarcoma: A Joint Study of the French Sarcoma Group and Rare Cancer Network.
Journal
International journal of radiation oncology, biology, physics
Author(s)
Terlizzi M., Le Pechoux C., Salas S., Rapeaud E., Lerouge D., Sunyach M.P., Vogin G., Sole C.V., Zilli T., Lutsyk M., Mampuya A., Calvo F.A., Attal J., Karahissarlian V., De Bari B., Ozsahin M., Baumard F., Krengli M., Gomez-Brouchet A., Sargos P., Rochcongar G., Bazille C., Roth V., Salleron J., Thariat J.
ISSN
1879-355X (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0360-3016
Publication state
Published
Issued date
15/07/2020
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
107
Number
4
Pages
726-735
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Postoperative radiation therapy (poRT) of intracranial/skull base chondrosarcomas (CHSs) is standard treatment. However, consensus is lacking for poRT in extracranial CHS (eCHS) owing to their easier resectability and intrinsic radioresistance. We assessed the practice and efficacy of poRT in eCHS.
This multicentric retrospective study of the French Sarcoma Group/Rare Cancer Network included patients with eCHS who were operated on between 1985 and 2015. Inverse propensity score weighting (IPTW) was used to minimize poRT allocation biases.
Of 182 patients, 60.4% had bone and 39.6% had soft-tissue eCHS. eCHS were of conventional (31.9%), myxoid (28.6%; 41 extraskeletal, 11 skeletal), mesenchymal (9.9%), or other subtypes. En-bloc surgery with complete resection was performed in 52.6% and poRT in 36.8% of patients (median dose, 54 Gy). Irradiated patients had unfavorable initial characteristics, with higher grade and incomplete resection. Median follow-up time was 61 months. Five-year incidence of local relapse was 10% with poRT versus 21.6% without (P = .050). Using the IPTW method, poRT reduced the local relapse risk (hazard ratio, 0.27; 95% confidence interval, 0.14-0.52; P < .001). Five-year disease-free survival (DFS) was 71.8% with poRT and 64.2% without (P = .680). Using the IPTW method, poRT improved DFS (hazard ratio, 0.51; 95% confidence interval, 0.30-0.85; P = .010). The benefit of poRT on local relapse and DFS was confirmed after exclusion of the extraskeletal subtype. There was no difference in overall survival. Prognostic factors of poorer DFS in multivariate analysis were deeper location, higher grade, incomplete resection, and no poRT.
poRT should be offered in patients with eCHS and high-grade or incomplete resection, regardless of the histologic subtype.
Keywords
adjuvant, bone, chondrosarcoma, mesenchymal, myxoid, postoperative, radioresistance, radiotherapy, soft tissue, surgery, survival
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
25/04/2020 20:51
Last modification date
23/02/2021 7:26
Usage data