Siontis Brittany L, McHugh Jonathan B, Roberts Emily, Zhao Lily, Thomas Dafydd G, Owen Dawn, Baker Laurence H, Biermann J Sybil, Schuetze Scott M, Chugh Rashmi
Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States.
Department of Pathology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States.
Front Oncol. 2020 Jan 22;9:1523. doi: 10.3389/fonc.2019.01523. eCollection 2019.
Radiation-associated osteosarcoma (RAO) is a rare, life-threatening complication from radiation. Many physicians presume RAO has a worse prognosis than sporadic osteosarcoma (SO), although limited objective data exist. We conducted a retrospective study comparing these entities. We identified adults treated at our institution with osteosarcoma (1990-2016) and categorized tumors as SO or RAO based on location within a prior radiation field. We extracted data on demographics, treatment and primary malignancy and examined available tumor samples for MTA-1 and ezrin using immunohistochemistry (IHC). Of 159 identified patients, 28 had RAO, diagnosed at a median interval from radiation of 11.5 years (1.5-28 years). Median follow-up was 2.8 years (0.1-19.6 years). Median progression free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) were not significantly different in the small population of patients with metastases, SO ( = 20) vs. RAO ( = 6): PFS 10.3 months vs. 4.8 months ( = 0.45) and OS 15.6 months vs. 6.1 months ( = 0.96), respectively. For the larger group with localized disease, median relapse-free survival (RFS) and OS were significantly different, NR vs. 12.2 months ( < 0.001) and NR vs. 27.6 months ( = 0.001) in SO ( = 111) vs. RAO ( = 22), respectively. On IHC, there were significant differences in distribution of high, intermediate or low MTA-1 ( = 0.015) and ezrin ( = 0.002) between RAO and SO tumors. Patients with metastases at diagnosis fared poorly irrespective of prior radiation. RAO patients with localized disease had worse outcomes without detectable differences in therapy rendered or treatment effect in resected specimens. Higher expression of MTA-1 in RAO patients may suggest an underlying difference in tumor biology to explain differences in outcomes.
放射性骨肉瘤(RAO)是一种罕见的、危及生命的放疗并发症。尽管客观数据有限,但许多医生认为RAO的预后比散发性骨肉瘤(SO)更差。我们进行了一项回顾性研究来比较这两种疾病。我们确定了在我们机构接受治疗的骨肉瘤成年患者(1990 - 2016年),并根据肿瘤是否位于先前放疗野内将其分类为SO或RAO。我们提取了人口统计学、治疗和原发性恶性肿瘤的数据,并使用免疫组织化学(IHC)检测了可用肿瘤样本中的MTA - 1和埃兹蛋白。在159例确诊患者中,28例患有RAO,从放疗到确诊的中位间隔时间为11.5年(1.5 - 28年)。中位随访时间为2.8年(0.1 - 19.6年)。在有转移的小部分患者中,SO(n = 20)与RAO(n = 6)的中位无进展生存期(PFS)和总生存期(OS)无显著差异:PFS分别为10.3个月和4.8个月(P = 0.45),OS分别为15.6个月和6.1个月(P = 0.96)。对于局限性疾病的较大组患者,SO(n = 111)与RAO(n = 22)的中位无复发生存期(RFS)和OS有显著差异,分别为未达到(NR)与12.2个月(P < 0.001)以及NR与27.6个月(P = 0.001)。在免疫组织化学检测中,RAO和SO肿瘤之间高、中或低MTA - 1(P = 0.015)和埃兹蛋白(P = 0.002)的分布存在显著差异。诊断时伴有转移的患者无论是否接受过放疗,预后都很差。局限性疾病的RAO患者预后较差,在给予的治疗或切除标本的治疗效果方面没有可检测到的差异。RAO患者中MTA - 1的高表达可能表明肿瘤生物学存在潜在差异,以解释预后的差异。