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Management of High-Risk Neuroblastoma with Soft-Tissue-Only Disease in the Era of Anti-GD2 Immunotherapy.

Authors :
Gorostegui, Maite
Muñoz, Juan Pablo
Perez-Jaume, Sara
Simao-Rafael, Margarida
Larrosa, Cristina
Garraus, Moira
Salvador, Noelia
Lavarino, Cinzia
Krauel, Lucas
Mañe, Salvador
Castañeda, Alicia
Mora, Jaume
Source :
Cancers. May2024, Vol. 16 Issue 9, p1735. 14p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Simple Summary: Neuroblastoma (NB) presents with two patterns of disease: with or without metastasis. Both types of disease presentation include tumors with high-risk (HR) features. The management of HR-NB includes chemotherapy, surgery, radiotherapy, and anti-GD2 immunotherapy. Anti-GD2 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) have significantly improved the outcome of HR-NB patients but they are mostly effective against disease affecting the bone and/or bone marrow (known as the osteomedullary compartment), and less so against soft tissue disease. The question arises as to whether anti-GD2 immunotherapy might benefit HR-NB patients with disease compounded by only soft tissue. In this retrospective review, we found that achieving first complete remission with chemotherapy, surgery, and radiotherapy does not prevent the risk of relapse. However, adding anti-GD2 mAbs once the patient has achieved complete remission significantly decreases the chances of relapse by 80%. Our study provides further support to indicate anti-GD2 mAbs in all cases with HR-NB. Neuroblastoma presents with two patterns of disease: locoregional or systemic. The poor prognostic risk factors of locoregional neuroblastoma (LR-NB) include age, MYCN or MDM2-CDK4 amplification, 11q, histology, diploidy with ALK or TERT mutations, and ATRX aberrations. Anti-GD2 immunotherapy has significantly improved the outcome of high-risk (HR) NB and is mostly effective against osteomedullary minimal residual disease (MRD), but less so against soft tissue disease. The question is whether adding anti-GD2 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) benefits patients with HR-NB compounded by only soft tissue. We reviewed 31 patients treated at SJD for HR-NB with no osteomedullary involvement at diagnosis. All tumors had molecular genetic features of HR-NB. The outcome after first-line treatment showed 25 (80.6%) patients achieving CR. Thirteen patients remain in continued CR, median follow-up 3.9 years. We analyzed whether adding anti-GD2 immunotherapy to first-line treatment had any prognostic significance. The EFS analysis using Cox models showed a HR of 0.20, p = 0.0054, and an 80% decrease in the risk of relapse in patients treated with anti-GD2 immunotherapy in the first line. Neither EFS nor OS were significantly different by CR status after first-line treatment. In conclusion, adding treatment with anti-GD2 mAbs at the stage of MRD helps prevent relapse that unequivocally portends poor survival. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20726694
Volume :
16
Issue :
9
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Cancers
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177182612
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16091735