Dome Jeffrey S, Graf Norbert, Geller James I, Fernandez Conrad V, Mullen Elizabeth A, Spreafico Filippo, Van den Heuvel-Eibrink Marry, Pritchard-Jones Kathy
Jeffrey S. Dome, Children's National Health System, Washington, DC; James I. Geller, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH; Elizabeth A. Mullen, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA; Norbert Graf, Saarland University, Homburg, Germany; Conrad V. Fernandez, IWK Health Centre, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada; Filippo Spreafico, Fondazione Istituto di Ricovero e Cura a Carattere Scientifico, Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori, Milan, Italy; Marry Van den Heuvel-Eibrink, Princess Màxima Center for Pediatric Oncology, Utrecht, the Netherlands; and Kathy Pritchard-Jones, University College London Institute of Child Health, London, United Kingdom.
J Clin Oncol. 2015 Sep 20;33(27):2999-3007. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2015.62.1888. Epub 2015 Aug 24.
Clinical trials in Wilms tumor (WT) have resulted in overall survival rates of greater than 90%. This achievement is especially remarkable because improvements in disease-specific survival have occurred concurrently with a reduction of therapy for large patient subgroups. However, the outcomes for certain patient subgroups, including those with unfavorable histologic and molecular features, bilateral disease, and recurrent disease, remain well below the benchmark survival rate of 90%. Therapy for WT has been advanced in part by an increasingly complex risk-stratification system based on patient age; tumor stage, histology, and volume; response to chemotherapy; and loss of heterozygosity at chromosomes 1p and 16q. A consequence of this system has been the apportionment of patients into such small subgroups that only collaboration between large international WT study groups will support clinical trials that are sufficiently powered to answer challenging questions that move the field forward. This article gives an overview of the Children's Oncology Group and International Society of Pediatric Oncology approaches to WT and focuses on four subgroups (stage IV, initially inoperable, bilateral, and relapsed WT) for which international collaboration is pressing. In addition, biologic insights resulting from collaborative laboratory research are discussed. A coordinated expansion of international collaboration in both clinical trials and laboratory science will provide real opportunity to improve the treatment and outcomes for children with renal tumors on a global level.
肾母细胞瘤(WT)的临床试验使总生存率超过了90%。这一成就尤为显著,因为在提高疾病特异性生存率的同时,针对大部分患者亚组的治疗却有所减少。然而,某些患者亚组的预后,包括那些具有不良组织学和分子特征、双侧病变以及复发性疾病的患者,仍远低于90%的基准生存率。WT的治疗在一定程度上得益于一个日益复杂的风险分层系统,该系统基于患者年龄、肿瘤分期、组织学和体积、对化疗的反应以及1号和16号染色体杂合性缺失。这一系统的结果是,患者被划分到如此小的亚组中,以至于只有大型国际WT研究组之间的合作才能支持那些有足够效力回答推动该领域发展的挑战性问题的临床试验。本文概述了儿童肿瘤学组和国际儿科肿瘤学会对WT的治疗方法,并重点关注四个迫切需要国际合作的亚组(IV期、初始不可切除、双侧和复发性WT)。此外,还讨论了合作实验室研究得出的生物学见解。在临床试验和实验室科学方面协调扩大国际合作,将为在全球范围内改善肾肿瘤患儿的治疗和预后提供真正的机会。