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Treatment outcomes in patients with Ewing sarcoma of the spine in a resource-challenged setting: 17-year experience from a single center in India.

Authors :
Sasi, Archana
Chitikela, Sindhura
Ganguly, Shuvadeep
Biswas, Bivas
Pushpam, Deepam
Kumar, Akash
Khan, Shah Alam
Kumar, Venkatesan Sampath
Kale, Shashank Sharad
Biswas, Ahitagni
Barwad, Adarsh
Mridha, Asit Ranjan
Thulkar, Sanjay
Bakhshi, Sameer
Source :
Pediatric Hematology & Oncology. 2024, Vol. 41 Issue 3, p211-223. 13p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Ewing sarcoma (ES) of the spine is a rare childhood cancer with sparse literature on treatment outcomes. We aimed to describe survival outcomes and prognostic factors in patients with spinal ES treated at a single institute in a resource-challenged setting. We conducted a retrospective analysis of patients with spinal ES registered at a tertiary care oncology center between 2003–2019. Clinical patient data was retrieved from hospital records. Cox regression analysis was used to identify the association of baseline clinical parameters with event free survival (EFS) and overall survival (OS). A cohort of 85 patients was analyzed including 38 (45%) patients with metastatic disease. The median age was 15 years with 73% being male. Local therapy was administered in 62 (72.9%) patients with surgery alone in 8 (9.4%), radiotherapy alone in 36 (42.4%) and both in 18 (21.2%) patients. A higher proportion of males received local therapy than females (80.3% versus 59.1%; p = 0.049). The median EFS and OS were 20.1 and 28.6 months, respectively. On univariable analysis, age ≤ 15 years, female sex, serum albumin ≤3.5 g/dL and hemoglobin ≤11 g/dL were associated with inferior EFS while younger age, female sex, hypoalbuminemia and metastatic disease were associated with inferior OS. On multivariable analysis, only hypoalbuminemia was predictive for inferior EFS (HR:2.41; p = 0.005) while hypoalbuminemia (HR:2.06;p = 0.033) and female sex (HR:1.83; p = 0.046) were associated with inferior OS. We concluded that hypoalbuminemia confers poor prognosis in ES spine. Survival outcomes are poorer in females treated in our setting, possibly due to prevailing sex-based biases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08880018
Volume :
41
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Pediatric Hematology & Oncology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176476942
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/08880018.2023.2296949