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Outcomes of Ewing sarcoma in adults over 40 years of age from a low-middle income country

Authors :
Goutam Panda
Arun Chandrasekharan
Shasanka Das
Prabhat Bhargava
Sujay Srinivas
Siddhartha Laskar
Smruti Mokal
Bharat Rekhi
Nehal Khanna
Nandini Menon
Vijay Patil
Vanita Noronha
Amit Joshi
Kumar Prabhash
Shripad D Banavali
Sudeep Gupta
Jyoti Bajpai
Source :
ecancermedicalscience. 16
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Ecancer Global Foundation, 2022.

Abstract

The data on outcomes and toxicity in adult Ewing sarcoma (ES) patients, particularly those aged ≥40 years, is exceedingly scarce around the world, particularly in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) and mandates research.The study involved histologically ascertained ES patients aged ≥40 years who registered at our institute from 2013 to 2018. Prospectively collected data were analysed for overall survival (OS), event-free survival (EFS) and chemotherapy-related toxicities.There were 66 patients, of which 34 were non-metastatic, and 32 were denovo metastatic, recurrent or had doubtful metastasis. At presentation, median age was 46 years, and 42 (63.6%) had extra-skeletal primary and 24 (36.3%) had extremity tumours. Curative treatment was offered to 40 (60.6%) patients. Significant grade 3/4 toxicities in non-metastatic and metastatic cohort, respectively, were febrile neutropenia (61.3%, 37.5%), anaemia (58.1%, 37.5%), thrombocytopenia (45.2%, 25.0%), peripheral neuropathy (25.8%, 12.5%) and dyselectrolytemia (25.8%, 6.25%). Chemotherapy-related toxicity led to death in three patients in the metastatic cohort, versus none in the non-metastatic patients. The 5 year EFS and OS for non-metastatic cohort were 53.8% and 67.8%, while the same for metastatic cohort were 20.7% and 27.5%, respectively. On multivariate analysis, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group-performance status2 and metastasis at presentation predicted poorer EFS and OS. Additionally, raised lactate dehydrogenase, larger tumours (8 cm) and palliative intent treatment predicted worse EFS, while extra-skeletal primary and female gender were indicators of worse OS.Older adult ES patients benefit from aggressive multimodality treatment even in LMIC infrastructure. However, careful patient selection, close monitoring and pertinent dose modifications is imperative due to higher propensity for potential toxicities.

Subjects

Subjects :
Cancer Research
Oncology

Details

ISSN :
17546605
Volume :
16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ecancermedicalscience
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b5496555783f75cdd101d6fdb7b86385
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3332/ecancer.2022.1361