Evans, C.
Shepherd, L.
Bryan, G.
Fulbright, H.
Crowther, S.
Wakeling, S.
Stewart, A.
Stewart, C.
Chisholm, J.
Gibson, F.
Phillips, B.
Morgan, J.E.
(2024). A systematic review of early phase studies for children and young people with relapsed and refractory rhabdomyosarcoma: The REFoRMS-SR project. Int j cancer,
Vol.154
(7),
pp. 1235-1260.
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full text
Rhabdomyosarcoma is the commonest soft tissue sarcoma in children. Around one-third of children with rhabdomyosarcoma experience relapse or have refractory disease, which is associated with a poor prognosis. This systematic review of early phase studies in pediatric relapsed/refractory rhabdomyosarcoma was conducted to inform future research and provide accurate information to families and clinicians making difficult treatment choices. Nine databases and five trial registries were searched in June 2021. Early phase studies of interventions for disease control in patients under 18 years old with relapsed/refractory rhabdomyosarcoma were eligible. No language/geographic restrictions were applied. Studies conducted after 2000 were included. Survival outcomes, response rates, quality of life and adverse event data were extracted. Screening, data extraction and quality assessment (Downs and Black Checklist) were conducted by two researchers. Owing to heterogeneity in the included studies, narrative synthesis was conducted. Of 16,965 records screened, 129 published studies including over 1100 relapsed/refractory rhabdomyosarcoma patients were eligible. Most studies evaluated systemic therapies. Where reported, 70% of studies reported a median progression-free survival ≤6 months. Objective response rate was 21.6%. Adverse events were mostly hematological. One-hundred and seven trial registry records of 99 studies were also eligible, 63 of which report they are currently recruiting. Study quality was limited by poor and inconsistent reporting. Outcomes for children with relapsed/refractory rhabdomyosarcoma who enroll on early phase studies are poor. Improving reporting quality and consistency would facilitate the synthesis of early phase studies in relapsed/refractory rhabdomyosarcoma (PROSPERO registration: CRD42021266254)..
De Salvo, G.L.
Del Bianco, P.
Minard-Colin, V.
Chisholm, J.
Jenney, M.
Guillen, G.
Devalck, C.
Van Rijn, R.
Shipley, J.
Orbach, D.
Kelsey, A.
Rogers, T.
Guerin, F.
Scarzello, G.
Ferrari, A.
Cesen Mazic, M.
Merks, J.H.
Bisogno, G.
European Pediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group,
(2024). Reappraisal of prognostic factors used in the European Pediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group RMS 2005 study for localized rhabdomyosarcoma to optimize risk stratification and generate a prognostic nomogram. Cancer,
Vol.130
(13),
pp. 2351-2360.
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BACKGROUND: The objective of this study was to investigate the role of clinical factors together with FOXO1 fusion status in patients with nonmetastatic rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) to develop a predictive model for event-free survival and provide a rationale for risk stratification in future trials. METHODS: The authors used data from patients enrolled in the European Pediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) RMS 2005 study (EpSSG RMS 2005; EudraCT number 2005-000217-35). The following baseline variables were considered for the multivariable model: age at diagnosis, sex, histology, primary tumor site, Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Studies group, tumor size, nodal status, and FOXO1 fusion status. Main effects and significant second-order interactions of candidate predictors were included in a multiple Cox proportional hazards regression model. A nomogram was generated for predicting 5-year event-free survival (EFS) probabilities. RESULTS: The EFS and overall survival rates at 5 years were 70.9% (95% confidence interval, 68.6%-73.1%) and 81.0% (95% confidence interval, 78.9%-82.8%), respectively. The multivariable model retained five prognostic factors, including age at diagnosis interacting with tumor size, tumor primary site, Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Studies clinical group, and FOXO1 fusion status. Based on each patient's total score in the nomogram, patients were stratified into four groups. The 5-year EFS rates were 94.1%, 78.4%, 65.2%, and 52.1% in the low-risk, intermediate-risk, high-risk, and very-high-risk groups, respectively, and the corresponding 5-year overall survival rates were 97.2%, 91.5%, 74.3%, and 60.8%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: The results presented here provide the rationale to modify the EpSSG stratification, with the most significant change represented by the replacement of histology with fusion status. This classification was adopted in the new international trial launched by the EpSSG..
Cameron, A.L.
Mandeville, H.
Coppadoro, B.
Periasamy, M.
Davila Fajardo, R.
Ferrari, A.
Gaze, M.N.
Helfre, S.
Magelssen, H.
Minard-Colin, V.
Ramos, M.
Schoot, R.
Zanetti, I.
Bisogno, G.
Chisholm, J.C.
Merks, J.H.
(2024). The Impact of Radiation Therapy on Metastatic Rhabdomyosarcoma: Results From the EpSSG MTS 2008 Study. Int j radiat oncol biol phys,
.
show abstract
PURPOSE: Radiation oncologists use radiation variably for children with metastatic rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS). Data from the European paediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) MTS 2008 study were retrospectively analyzed to validate the previous observation that the use of radiation is associated with improved outcomes and guide future recommendations on radiation use in this patient group. METHODS AND MATERIALS: The radiation delivered to 216 patients aged 0 to 21 years with metastatic RMS was retrospectively reviewed and classified as radical (all sites of disease irradiated within the protocol parameters), partial (some sites irradiated within the protocol parameters), and none (no radiation or delivered outside the protocol parameters). Landmark analysis excluded those with an event before day 221. Overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival were modeled using the Kaplan-Meier method to investigate the impact of radiation. The joint effect of treatment and known prognostic factors was examined using the Cox regression model. RESULTS: Overall, 56 patients received radical, 104 partial, and 56 no radiation therapy per protocol. Owing to nonrandomized data, the groups were heterogeneous, particularly fewer sites of metatatic disease and less with bone metatases in those receiving radical radiation. The 3-year progression-free survival was 62.0% (95% CI, 47.9-73.4), 39.5% (95% CI, 29.8-49.1), 30.1% (95% CI, 18.7-42.3) for radical, partial, and no radiation therapy groups (P = .002), respectively, and the 3-year OS was 70.1% (95% CI, 55.8-80.6), 53.1% (95% CI, 42.6-62.5), and 52.3% (95% CI, 38.3-64.5; P = .019), respectively. Multivariable analysis confirmed incremental improvement in OS with additional radiation, with hazard ratio of 1, 1.8, and 2.4 (P = .022) for radical, partial, and no radiation therapy per protocol, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Radiation to all sites of disease seems to improve outcomes for children with metastatic RMS and should be considered when feasible. If not feasible, radiation is still recommended to the primary site and involved regional lymphadenopathy. Randomized clinical trials are required to confirm these findings, given the heterogeneity between the groups and potential confounding factors in this analysis..
Chisholm, J.
Mandeville, H.
Adams, M.
Minard-Collin, V.
Rogers, T.
Kelsey, A.
Shipley, J.
van Rijn, R.R.
de Vries, I.
van Ewijk, R.
de Keizer, B.
Gatz, S.A.
Casanova, M.
Hjalgrim, L.L.
Firth, C.
Wheatley, K.
Kearns, P.
Liu, W.
Kirkham, A.
Rees, H.
Bisogno, G.
Wasti, A.
Wakeling, S.
Heenen, D.
Tweddle, D.A.
Merks, J.H.
Jenney, M.
(2024). Correction: Chisholm et al Frontline and Relapsed Rhabdomyosarcoma (FaR-RMS) Clinical Trial: A Report from the European Paediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) Cancers 2024, 16, 998. Cancers (basel),
Vol.16
(19).
show abstract
full text
The authors wish to make corrections to the authorship and title of [...]..
Tong, D.
Chisholm, J.
Madden, B.
Ahmed, M.
(2024). Anaplastic lymphoma kinase-positive pulmonary inflammatory myofibroblastic tumour: a case report. J med case rep,
Vol.18
(1),
p. 167.
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BACKGROUND: Pulmonary inflammatory myofibroblastic tumour (IMT) is a rare condition that usually presents in young individuals and is associated with anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK)-translocation. CASE PRESENTATION: We report a case of an 18-year-old Caucasian man with ALK-translocated pulmonary IMT treated with multimodality therapy. The patient presented with breathlessness and was found to have a collapsed left lung. Further investigations revealed an ALK-translocated pulmonary IMT. This is usually treated with an ALK-inhibitor but patient declined after discussing potential side-effects and had repeated rigid bronchoscopic interventions for local disease control. Due to persistent local recurrence, patient received radical external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) with pulse steroids, and one year later started on Ibuprofen, a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agent (NSAID). Following multimodality treatment, he developed a complete response. He remains treatment-free for the past seven years. Eleven years on from his diagnosis, he remains in remission with a ECOG performance status of zero. CONCLUSIONS: Achieving long-term local control in pulmonary IMT can be challenging. Multimodality treatment is sometimes needed but the overall outlook remains good..
Chisholm, J.
Mandeville, H.
Adams, M.
Minard-Collin, V.
Rogers, T.
Kelsey, A.
Shipley, J.
van Rijn, R.R.
de Vries, I.
van Ewijk, R.
de Keizer, B.
Gatz, S.A.
Casanova, M.
Hjalgrim, L.L.
Firth, C.
Wheatley, K.
Kearns, P.
Liu, W.
Kirkham, A.
Rees, H.
Bisogno, G.
Wasti, A.
Wakeling, S.
Heenen, D.
Tweddle, D.A.
Merks, J.H.
Jenney, M.
(2024). Frontline and Relapsed Rhabdomyosarcoma (FAR-RMS) Clinical Trial: A Report from the European Paediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG). Cancers (basel),
Vol.16
(5).
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full text
The Frontline and Relapsed Rhabdomyosarcoma (FaR-RMS) clinical trial is an overarching, multinational study for children and adults with rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS). The trial, developed by the European Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG), incorporates multiple different research questions within a multistage design with a focus on (i) novel regimens for poor prognostic subgroups, (ii) optimal duration of maintenance chemotherapy, and (iii) optimal use of radiotherapy for local control and widespread metastatic disease. Additional sub-studies focusing on biological risk stratification, use of imaging modalities, including [18F]FDG PET-CT and diffusion-weighted MRI imaging (DWI) as prognostic markers, and impact of therapy on quality of life are described. This paper forms part of a Special Issue on rhabdomyosarcoma and outlines the study background, rationale for randomisations and sub-studies, design, and plans for utilisation and dissemination of results..
Picher, E.A.
Wahajuddin, M.
Barth, S.
Chisholm, J.
Shipley, J.
Pors, K.
(2024). The Capacity of Drug-Metabolising Enzymes in Modulating the Therapeutic Efficacy of Drugs to Treat Rhabdomyosarcoma. Cancers (basel),
Vol.16
(5).
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full text
Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is a rare soft tissue sarcoma (STS) that predominantly affects children and teenagers. It is the most common STS in children (40%) and accounts for 5-8% of total childhood malignancies. Apart from surgery and radiotherapy in eligible patients, standard chemotherapy is the only therapeutic option clinically available for RMS patients. While survival rates for this childhood cancer have considerably improved over the last few decades for low-risk and intermediate-risk cases, the mortality rate remains exceptionally high in high-risk RMS patients with recurrent and/or metastatic disease. The intensification of chemotherapeutic protocols in advanced-stage RMS has historically induced aggravated toxicity with only very modest therapeutic gain. In this review, we critically analyse what has been achieved so far in RMS therapy and provide insight into how a diverse group of drug-metabolising enzymes (DMEs) possess the capacity to modify the clinical efficacy of chemotherapy. We provide suggestions for new therapeutic strategies that exploit the presence of DMEs for prodrug activation, targeted chemotherapy that does not rely on DMEs, and RMS-molecular-subtype-targeted therapies that have the potential to enter clinical evaluation..
Corley, E.A.
Pace, E.
Barnacle, A.M.
Patel, P.A.
Thway, K.
Chisholm, J.C.
(2023). Evidence of Chemoresponsiveness in Unresectable Metastatic Angiomatoid Fibrous Histiocytoma. J pediatr hematol oncol,
Vol.45
(2),
pp. e279-e284.
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full text
Angiomatoid fibrous histiocytoma (AFH) is a soft tissue neoplasm of intermediate biological potential. Typically a slow-growing tumor, it can recur locally. Rarely, it manifests as a soft tissue sarcoma capable of metastasis. When metastases are nonamenable to local therapy, it is believed uniformly fatal. We present 3 patients with metastatic AFH who demonstrated a sustained response to chemotherapy; including one who achieved complete remission with cryoablation. These cases reinforce the potential value of chemotherapy in some patients with unresectable metastatic AFH and provide the first case in the literature of cryoablation in AFH..
Mercolini, F.
Merks, J.H.
Minard-Colin, V.
Cameron, A.
van Scheltinga, S.E.
Sher, O.
Fichera, G.
Orbach, D.
Glosli, H.
Coppadoro, B.
Gallego, S.
Chisholm, J.C.
Bisogno, G.
(2023). Metastatic rhabdomyosarcoma with exclusive distant lymph node involvement: A European Pediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) report. Pediatr blood cancer,
Vol.70
(3),
p. e30143.
show abstract
BACKGROUND: The prognosis of patients with metastatic rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is not uniformly poor. Tumors with nodal involvement beyond the first lymph node station are currently considered to have distant metastases. The aim of this study is to evaluate the characteristics and outcome of RMS patients with distal nodal involvement as the only site of metastasis. METHODS: This study included all patients with a diagnosis of RMS and distant nodal involvement as the only metastatic site, enrolled in the European Pediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) protocols. Treatment comprised chemotherapy, surgery, and/or radiotherapy. The main outcome measures were event-free survival (EFS) and overall survival (OS). RESULTS: A total of 22 patients (median age 7.1 years, range 1.4-16.7) fit the inclusion criteria. The extremities were the most common primary tumor site (59%). Twenty-one patients had regional and distant nodal involvement, 12 were PAX3/7-FOXO1 positive. Twenty patients had radiotherapy including 16 to the nodal metastatic area. After a median follow-up of 53.9 months (range 22.8-110.5), 15 patients remain in complete remission, seven had progressive disease or relapse, and six of them died. The 3-year EFS and OS were 67.1% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 42.9-82.9) and 71.9% (95% CI: 47.7-86.3), respectively. Patients with fusion-negative tumors had better outcomes than those with fusion-positive tumors (3-year EFS 100% vs. 46.6%; p = .04). CONCLUSION: In our experience, patients with RMS and distant lymph node involvement as the only site of metastasis present an outcome superior than other metastatic patients and comparable to patients with locoregional nodal involvement. In particular, excellent outcomes were seen in the limited number of patients with fusion-negative tumors..
Di Carlo, D.
Chisholm, J.
Kelsey, A.
Alaggio, R.
Bisogno, G.
Minard-Colin, V.
Jenney, M.
Dávila Fajardo, R.
Merks, J.H.
Shipley, J.M.
Selfe, J.L.
(2023). Biological Role and Clinical Implications of MYOD1L122R Mutation in Rhabdomyosarcoma. Cancers (basel),
Vol.15
(6).
show abstract
full text
Major progress in recent decades has furthered our clinical and biological understanding of rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) with improved stratification for treatment based on risk factors. Clinical risk factors alone were used to stratify patients for treatment in the European Pediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) RMS 2005 protocol. The current EpSSG overarching study for children and adults with frontline and relapsed rhabdomyosarcoma (FaR-RMS NCT04625907) includes FOXO1 fusion gene status in place of histology as a risk factor. Additional molecular features of significance have recently been recognized, including the MYOD1L122R gene mutation. Here, we review biological information showing that MYOD1L122R blocks cell differentiation and has a MYC-like activity that enhances tumorigenesis and is linked to an aggressive cellular phenotype. MYOD1L122R mutations can be found together with mutations in other genes, such as PIK3CA, as potentially cooperating events. Using Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines, ten publications in the clinical literature involving 72 cases were reviewed. MYOD1L122R mutation in RMS can occur in both adults and children and is frequent in sclerosing/spindle cell histology, although it is also significantly reported in a subset of embryonal RMS. MYOD1L122R mutated tumors most frequently arise in the head and neck and extremities and are associated with poor outcome, raising the issue of how to use MYOD1L122R in risk stratification and how to treat these patients most effectively..
Bisogno, G.
Minard-Colin, V.
Jenney, M.
Ferrari, A.
Chisholm, J.
Di Carlo, D.
Hjalgrim, L.L.
Orbach, D.
Merks, J.H.
Casanova, M.
(2023). Maintenance Chemotherapy for Patients with Rhabdomyosarcoma. Cancers (basel),
Vol.15
(15).
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full text
Maintenance chemotherapy (MC) defines the administration of prolonged relatively low-intensity chemotherapy with the aim of "maintaining" tumor complete remission. This paper aims to report an update of the RMS2005 trial, which demonstrated better survival for patients with high-risk localized rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) when MC with vinorelbine and low-dose cyclophosphamide was added to standard chemotherapy, and to discuss the published experience on MC in RMS. In the RMS2005 study, the outcome for patients receiving MC vs. those who stopped the treatment remains superior, with a 5-year disease-free survival of 78.1% vs. 70.1% (p = 0.056) and overall survival of 85.0% vs. 72.4% (p = 0.008), respectively. We found seven papers describing MC in RMS, but only one randomized trial that did not demonstrate any advantage when MC with eight courses of trofosfamide/idarubicine alternating with trofosfamide/etoposide has been employed in high-risk RMS. The use of MC showed better results in comparison to high-dose chemotherapy in non-randomized studies, including metastatic patients, and demonstrated feasibility and tolerability in relapsed RMS. Many aspects of MC in RMS need to be investigated, including the best drug combination and the optimal duration. The ongoing EpSSG trial will try to answer some of these questions..
Chisholm, J.
Shipley, J.
Selfe, J.
(2023). Biological Role and Clinical Implications of MYOD1L122R Mutation in Rhabdomyosarcoma. Cancers,
.
full text
Chisholm, J.C.
Schoot, R.A.
Cameron, A.L.
Casanova, M.
Minard-Colin, V.
Coppadoro, B.
Garrido, M.
Rogers, T.
Orbach, D.
Glosli, H.
Ben-Arush, M.
Ferman, S.
Scarzello, G.
van Rijn, R.R.
Hladun, R.
Corradini, N.
Ferrari, A.
Jenney, M.
Bisogno, G.
Merks, J.H.
(2023). Outcomes in lung-only metastatic rhabdomyosarcoma: An analysis of data from the European paediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group MTS 2008 study. Ejc paediatric oncology,
Vol.2,
pp. 100018-100018.
full text
Ferrari, A.
Orbach, D.
Casanova, M.
van Noesel, M.M.
Berlanga, P.
Brennan, B.
Corradini, N.
Schoot, R.A.
Ramirez-Villar, G.L.
Hjalgrim, L.L.
Alaggio, R.
Guillen Burrieza, G.
Safwat, A.
Cameron, A.L.
van Rijn, R.R.
Minard-Colin, V.
Zanetti, I.
Bisogno, G.
Chisholm, J.C.
Merks, J.H.
(2023). Metastatic adult-type non-rhabdomyosarcoma soft tissue sarcomas in children and adolescents: A cohort study from the European paediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group. Cancer,
Vol.129
(16),
pp. 2542-2552.
show abstract
BACKGROUND: Limited data exist on the clinical behavior of pediatric non-rhabdomyosarcoma soft tissue sarcomas (NRSTS) with distant metastases at onset, and a clear standard of care has not yet been defined. METHODS: This cohort study reports on pediatric adult-type metastatic NRSTS enrolled in two concurrent prospective European studies, i.e., the randomized BERNIE study and the single-arm MTS 2008 study developed by the European paediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group. Treatment programs were originally designed for patients with metastatic rhabdomyosarcoma, i.e., nine courses of multidrug chemotherapy (with or without bevacizumab in the BERNIE study), followed by 12 cycles of maintenance therapy, whereas radiotherapy and/or surgery (on primary tumor and/or metastases) were delayed until after seven courses of chemotherapy had been administered. RESULTS: The study included 61 patients <21 years old treated from July 2008 to December 2016. The lung was the site of metastases in 75% of the cases. All patients received multi-agent chemotherapy, 44% had local therapy to primary tumor, and 18% had treatment of metastases. Median time to progression/relapse was 6 months. A high rate of tumor progression was observed during the initial part of the chemotherapy program. With a median follow-up of 41.5 months (range, 2-111 months), 3-year event-free survival and overall survival were 15.4% (95% confidence interval [CI], 7.6-25.7) and 34.9% (95% CI, 22.7-47.5), respectively. There were no statistically significant differences in outcome depending on the type of treatment administered. CONCLUSIONS: The study confirmed the overall poor outcome for patients with metastatic NRSTS, whose treatment remains a challenge. PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY: Pediatric non-rhabdomyosarcoma soft tissue sarcomas form a heterogeneous group of rare tumors. Although recent international studies have defined the standard of care for patients with localized disease, limited data are available on the clinical behavior of patients with distant metastases. This study on 61 metastatic cases treated on two prospective European protocols confirms that the chances of survival of such patients are often dismal and a standard treatment is still lacking..
Aldiss, S.
Hollis, R.
Phillips, B.
Ball-Gamble, A.
Brownsdon, A.
Chisholm, J.
Crowther, S.
Dommett, R.
Gower, J.
Hall, N.J.
Hartley, H.
Hatton, J.
Henry, L.
Langton, L.
Maddock, K.
Malik, S.
McEvoy, K.
Morgan, J.E.
Morris, H.
Parke, S.
Picton, S.
Reed-Berendt, R.
Saunders, D.
Stewart, A.
Tarplee-Morris, W.
Walsh, A.
Watkins, A.
Weller, D.
Gibson, F.
(2023). Research priorities for children's cancer: a James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnership in the UK. Bmj open,
Vol.13
(12),
p. e077387.
show abstract
OBJECTIVES: To engage children who have experienced cancer, childhood cancer survivors, their families and professionals to systematically identify and prioritise research questions about childhood cancer to inform the future research agenda. DESIGN: James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnership. SETTING: UK health service and community. METHODS: A steering group oversaw the initiative. Potential research questions were collected in an online survey, then checked to ensure they were unanswered. Shortlisting via a second online survey identified the highest priority questions. A parallel process with children was undertaken. A final consensus workshop was held to determine the Top 10 priorities. PARTICIPANTS: Children and survivors of childhood cancer, diagnosed before age 16, their families, friends and professionals who work with this population. RESULTS: Four hundred and eighty-eight people submitted 1299 potential questions. These were refined into 108 unique questions; 4 were already answered and 3 were under active study, therefore, removed. Three hundred and twenty-seven respondents completed the shortlisting survey. Seventy-one children submitted questions in the children's surveys, eight children attended a workshop to prioritise these questions. The Top 5 questions from children were taken to the final workshop where 23 questions in total were discussed by 25 participants (young adults, carers and professionals). The top priority was 'can we find effective and kinder (less burdensome, more tolerable, with fewer short and long-term effects) treatments for children with cancer, including relapsed cancer?' CONCLUSIONS: We have identified research priorities for children's cancer from the perspectives of children, survivors, their families and the professionals who care for them. Questions reflect the breadth of the cancer experience, including diagnosis, relapse, hospital experience, support during/after treatment and the long-term impact of cancer. These should inform funding of future research as they are the questions that matter most to the people who could benefit from research..
Berlanga, P.
Orbach, D.
Schoot, R.A.
Casanova, M.
Alaggio, R.
Corradini, N.
Brennan, B.
Ramirez-Villar, G.L.
Hjalgrim, L.L.
Chisholm, J.C.
Bisogno, G.
Coppadoro, B.
Safwat, A.
Merks, J.H.
Burrieza, G.G.
van Noesel, M.M.
Ferrari, A.
(2023). Intra-abdominal desmoplastic small round cell tumor: The European pediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) experience. Pediatr blood cancer,
,
p. e30447.
show abstract
BACKGROUND: This study describes the clinical findings of a consecutive series of pediatric and adolescent patients with a diagnosis of intra-abdominal desmoplastic small round cell tumor (DSRCT) prospectively enrolled in European pediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) protocols: the BERNIE study, the EpSSG MTS 2008 study, and the EpSSG NRSTS 2005 study. METHODS: Patients aged less than 21 years with a diagnosis of DSRCT arising in the abdomen were included. All trials recommended a multimodal approach including intensive multidrug chemotherapy and loco-regional treatment with surgery and/or radiotherapy whenever possible. RESULTS: The analysis included 32 cases (median age 13.7 years, male:female ratio 1.5:1). Three patients had localized tumors, seven had regionally disseminated disease, and 22 extraperitoneal metastases. All but one patient received multidrug chemotherapy and 11 had maintenance chemotherapy. Loco-regional treatment consisted of surgery only in seven cases, surgery plus adjuvant radiotherapy in 10, and radiotherapy only in six. Among the 17 cases who had radiotherapy, six had irradiation of the primary site, 10 had whole abdominopelvic radiotherapy plus boost to macroscopic residual disease, and one had irradiation to lung metastases only. With a median follow-up of 76 months (range: 18-124 months), 5-year event-free and overall survivals were 19.7% and 21.0%, respectively. Event-free survival was significantly worse for patients who did not receive loco-regional treatment (p-value .007). CONCLUSIONS: The study confirmed that the outcome of patients with DSRCT remains dismal and did not improve over recent years despite an intensive multimodal treatment approach..
Doz, F.
van Tilburg, C.M.
Geoerger, B.
Højgaard, M.
Øra, I.
Boni, V.
Capra, M.
Chisholm, J.
Chung, H.C.
DuBois, S.G.
Gallego-Melcon, S.
Gerber, N.U.
Goto, H.
Grilley-Olson, J.E.
Hansford, J.R.
Hong, D.S.
Italiano, A.
Kang, H.J.
Nysom, K.
Thorwarth, A.
Stefanowicz, J.
Tahara, M.
Ziegler, D.S.
Gavrilovic, I.T.
Norenberg, R.
Dima, L.
De La Cuesta, E.
Laetsch, T.W.
Drilon, A.
Perreault, S.
(2022). Efficacy and safety of larotrectinib in TRK fusion-positive primary central nervous system tumors. Neuro oncol,
Vol.24
(6),
pp. 997-1007.
show abstract
full text
BACKGROUND: Larotrectinib is a first-in-class, highly selective tropomyosin receptor kinase (TRK) inhibitor approved to treat adult and pediatric patients with TRK fusion-positive cancer. The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of larotrectinib in patients with TRK fusion-positive primary central nervous system (CNS) tumors. METHODS: Patients with TRK fusion-positive primary CNS tumors from two clinical trials (NCT02637687, NCT02576431) were identified. The primary endpoint was investigator-assessed objective response rate (ORR). RESULTS: As of July 2020, 33 patients with TRK fusion-positive CNS tumors were identified (median age: 8.9 years; range: 1.3-79.0). The most common histologies were high-grade glioma (HGG; n = 19) and low-grade glioma (LGG; n = 8). ORR was 30% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 16-49) for all patients. The 24-week disease control rate was 73% (95% CI: 54-87). Twenty-three of 28 patients (82%) with measurable disease had tumor shrinkage. The 12-month rates for duration of response, progression-free survival, and overall survival were 75% (95% CI: 45-100), 56% (95% CI: 38-74), and 85% (95% CI: 71-99), respectively. Median time to response was 1.9 months (range 1.0-3.8 months). Duration of treatment ranged from 1.2-31.3+ months. Treatment-related adverse events were reported for 20 patients, with grade 3-4 in 3 patients. No new safety signals were identified. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with TRK fusion-positive CNS tumors, larotrectinib demonstrated rapid and durable responses, high disease control rate, and a favorable safety profile..
Stankunaite, R.
George, S.L.
Gallagher, L.
Jamal, S.
Shaikh, R.
Yuan, L.
Hughes, D.
Proszek, P.Z.
Carter, P.
Pietka, G.
Heide, T.
James, C.
Tari, H.
Lynn, C.
Jain, N.
Portela, L.R.
Rogers, T.
Vaidya, S.J.
Chisholm, J.C.
Carceller, F.
Szychot, E.
Mandeville, H.
Angelini, P.
Jesudason, A.B.
Jackson, M.
Marshall, L.V.
Gatz, S.A.
Anderson, J.
Sottoriva, A.
Chesler, L.
Hubank, M.
(2022). Circulating tumour DNA sequencing to determine therapeutic response and identify tumour heterogeneity in patients with paediatric solid tumours. Eur j cancer,
Vol.162,
pp. 209-220.
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OBJECTIVE: Clinical diagnostic sequencing of circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) is well advanced for adult patients, but application to paediatric cancer patients lags behind. METHODS: To address this, we have developed a clinically relevant (67 gene) NGS capture panel and accompanying workflow that enables sensitive and reliable detection of low-frequency genetic variants in cell-free DNA (cfDNA) from children with solid tumours. We combined gene panel sequencing with low pass whole-genome sequencing of the same library to inform on genome-wide copy number changes in the blood. RESULTS: Analytical validity was evaluated using control materials, and the method was found to be highly sensitive (0.96 for SNVs and 0.97 for INDEL), specific (0.82 for SNVs and 0.978 for INDEL), repeatable (>0.93 [95% CI: 0.89-0.95]) and reproducible (>0.87 [95% CI: 0.87-0.95]). Potential for clinical application was demonstrated in 39 childhood cancer patients with a spectrum of solid tumours in which the single nucleotide variants expected from tumour sequencing were detected in cfDNA in 94.4% (17/18) of cases with active extracranial disease. In 13 patients, where serial samples were available, we show a close correlation between events detected in cfDNA and treatment response, demonstrate that cfDNA analysis could be a useful tool to monitor disease progression, and show cfDNA sequencing has the potential to identify targetable variants that were not detected in tumour samples. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first pan-cancer DNA sequencing panel that we know to be optimised for cfDNA in children for blood-based molecular diagnostics in paediatric solid tumours..
Ferrari, A.
Chisholm, J.C.
Jenney, M.
Minard-Colin, V.
Orbach, D.
Casanova, M.
Guillen, G.
Glosli, H.
van Rijn, R.R.
Schoot, R.A.
Cameron, A.L.
Rogers, T.
Alaggio, R.
Ben-Arush, M.
Mandeville, H.C.
Devalck, C.
Defachelles, A.-.
Coppadoro, B.
Bisogno, G.
Merks, J.H.
(2022). Adolescents and young adults with rhabdomyosarcoma treated in the European paediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) protocols: a cohort study. Lancet child adolesc health,
Vol.6
(8),
pp. 545-554.
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BACKGROUND: Adolescent and young adult patients with rhabdomyosarcoma often have poorer outcomes than do children. We aimed to compare the findings of adolescent and young adult patients with children enrolled in two prospective clinical protocols. METHODS: This retrospective observational analysis was based on data from the European paediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) rhabdomyosarcoma 2005 trial (phase 3 randomised trial for localised rhabdomyosarcoma, open from April, 2006, to December, 2016) and the EpSSG MTS 2008 protocol (prospective, observational, single-arm study for metastatic rhabdomyosarcoma, open from June, 2010, to December, 2016), which involved 108 centres from 14 different countries in total. For this analysis, patients were categorised according to their age into children (age 0-14 years) and adolescents and young adults (age 15-21 years). For the analysis of adherence to treatment and toxicity, only patients with high-risk localised rhabdomyosarcoma included in the randomised part of the rhabdomyosarcoma 2005 study were considered. The primary outcome of event-free survival (assessed in all participants) was defined as the time from diagnosis to the first event (eg, tumour progression, relapse) or to the latest follow-up. Secondary outcomes were overall survival, response to chemotherapy, and toxicity. FINDINGS: Our analysis included 1977 patients, 1720 children (median age 4·7 years; IQR 2·6-8·4) and 257 adolescents and young adults (16·6 years; 15·8-18·0). 1719 patients were from the EpSSG rhabdomyosarcoma 2005 study (1523 aged <15 years and 196 aged 15-21 years) and 258 patients were from the EPSSG MTS 2008 study (197 aged <15 years and 61 aged 15-21 years). Adolescent and young adult patients were more likely than were children to have metastatic tumours (61 [23·7%] of 257 vs 197 [11·5%] of 1720; p<0·0001), unfavourable histological subtypes (119 [46·3%] vs 451 [26·2%]; p<0·0001), tumours larger than 5 cm (177 [68·9%] vs 891 [51·8%]; p<0·0001), and regional lymph node involvement (109 [42·4%] vs 339 [19·7%]; p<0·0001). Adolescent and young adult patients had lower 5-year event-free survival (52·6% [95% CI 46·3-58·6] vs 67·8% [65·5-70·0]; p<0·0001) and lower 5-year overall survival (57·1% [50·4-63·1] vs 77·9% [75·8-79·8]; p<0·0001) than did children. The multivariable analysis confirmed the inferior prognosis of patients aged 15-21 years (hazard ratios 1·48 [95% CI 1·20-1·83; p=0·0002] for poorer event-free survival and 1·73 [1·37-2·19; p<0·0001] for poorer overall survival). Modifications of administered chemotherapy occurred in 13 (15·3%) of 85 adolescents and young adults, and in 161 (21·4%) of 754 children. Grade 3-4 haematological toxicity and infection were observed more frequently in children than in adolescent and young adult patients. INTERPRETATION: This study found better outcomes for adolescent and young adult patients than those reported in epidemiological studies (eg, the EUROCARE-5 study reported 5-year overall survival of 39·6% for patients aged 15-19 years in the 2000-07 study period), suggesting that adolescent and young adult patients, at least up to age 21 years, can be treated with intensive paediatric therapies with no major tolerability issues and should be included in paediatric rhabdomyosarcoma trials. However, the inferior outcomes in adolescent and young adult patients compared with those in children, despite receiving similar therapy, suggest that a tailored and intensive treatment strategy might be warranted for these patients. FUNDING: Fondazione Città della Speranza..
Ferrari, A.
Gatz, S.A.
Minard-Colin, V.
Alaggio, R.
Hovsepyan, S.
Orbach, D.
Gasparini, P.
Defachelles, A.-.
Casanova, M.
Milano, G.M.
Chisholm, J.C.
Jenney, M.
Bisogno, G.
Rogers, T.
Mandeville, H.C.
Shipley, J.
Miah, A.B.
Merks, J.H.
van der Graaf, W.T.
(2022). Shedding a Light on the Challenges of Adolescents and Young Adults with Rhabdomyosarcoma. Cancers (basel),
Vol.14
(24).
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Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is a typical tumour of childhood but can occur at any age. Several studies have reported that adolescent and young adult (AYA) patients with RMS have poorer survival than do younger patients. This review discusses the specific challenges in AYA patients with pediatric-type RMS, exploring possible underlying factors which may influence different outcomes. Reasons for AYA survival gap are likely multifactorial, and might be related to differences in tumor biology and intrinsic aggressiveness, or differences in clinical management (that could include patient referral patterns, time to diagnosis, enrolment into clinical trials, the adequacy and intensity of treatment), as well as patient factors (including physiology and comorbidity that may influence treatment tolerability, drug pharmacokinetics and efficacy). However, improved survival has been reported in the most recent studies for AYA patients treated on pediatric RMS protocols. Different strategies may help to further improve outcome, such as supporting trans-age academic societies and national/international collaborations; developing specific clinical trials without upper age limit; defining integrated and comprehensive approach to AYA patients, including the genomic aspects; establishing multidisciplinary tumor boards with involvement of both pediatric and adult oncologists to discuss all pediatric-type RMS patients; developing dedicated projects with specific treatment recommendations and registry/database..
Schoot, R.A.
Chisholm, J.C.
Casanova, M.
Minard-Colin, V.
Geoerger, B.
Cameron, A.L.
Coppadoro, B.
Zanetti, I.
Orbach, D.
Kelsey, A.
Rogers, T.
Guizani, C.
Elze, M.
Ben-Arush, M.
McHugh, K.
van Rijn, R.R.
Ferman, S.
Gallego, S.
Ferrari, A.
Jenney, M.
Bisogno, G.
Merks, J.H.
(2022). Metastatic Rhabdomyosarcoma: Results of the European Paediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group MTS 2008 Study and Pooled Analysis With the Concurrent BERNIE Study. J clin oncol,
Vol.40
(32),
pp. 3730-3740.
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PURPOSE: Outcome for patients with metastatic rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is poor. This study presents the results of the MTS 2008 study with a pooled analysis including patients from the concurrent BERNIE study. PATIENTS AND METHODS: In MTS 2008, patients with metastatic RMS received four cycles of ifosfamide, vincristine, and actinomycin D (IVA) plus doxorubicin, five cycles of IVA, and 12 cycles of maintenance chemotherapy (low-dose cyclophosphamide and vinorelbine). The BERNIE study randomly assigned patients to the addition or not of bevacizumab to the same chemotherapy. Local therapy (surgery/radiotherapy) was given to the primary tumor and all metastatic sites when feasible. RESULTS: MTS 2008 included 270 patients (median age, 9.6 years; range, 0.07-20.8 years). With a median follow-up of 50.3 months, 3-year event-free survival (EFS) and overall survival (OS) were 34.9% (95% CI, 29.1 to 40.8) and 47.9% (95% CI, 41.6 to 53.9), respectively. In pooled analyses on 372 patients with a median follow-up of 55.2 months, 3-year EFS and OS were 35.5% (95% CI, 30.4 to 40.6) and 49.3% (95% CI, 43.9 to 54.5), respectively. Patients with ≤ 2 Oberlin risk factors (ORFs) had better outcome than those with ≥ 3 ORFs: 3-year EFS was 46.1% versus 12.5% (P < .0001) and 3-year OS 60.0% versus 26.0% (P < .0001). Induction chemotherapy and maintenance appeared tolerable; however, about two third of patients needed dose adjustments during maintenance. CONCLUSION: Outcome remains poor for patients with metastatic RMS and multiple ORFs. Because of the design of the studies, it was not possible to determine whether the intensive induction regimen and/or the addition of maintenance treatment resulted in apparent improvement of outcome compared with historical cohorts. Further studies, with novel treatment approaches are urgently needed, to improve outcome for the group of patients with adverse prognostic factors..
Ruhen, O.
Lak, N.S.
Stutterheim, J.
Danielli, S.G.
Chicard, M.
Iddir, Y.
Saint-Charles, A.
Di Paolo, V.
Tombolan, L.
Gatz, S.A.
Aladowicz, E.
Proszek, P.
Jamal, S.
Stankunaite, R.
Hughes, D.
Carter, P.
Izquierdo, E.
Wasti, A.
Chisholm, J.C.
George, S.L.
Pace, E.
Chesler, L.
Aerts, I.
Pierron, G.
Zaidi, S.
Delattre, O.
Surdez, D.
Kelsey, A.
Hubank, M.
Bonvini, P.
Bisogno, G.
Di Giannatale, A.
Schleiermacher, G.
Schäfer, B.W.
Tytgat, G.A.
Shipley, J.
(2022). Molecular Characterization of Circulating Tumor DNA in Pediatric Rhabdomyosarcoma: A Feasibility Study. Jco precis oncol,
Vol.6,
p. e2100534.
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PURPOSE: Rhabdomyosarcomas (RMS) are rare neoplasms affecting children and young adults. Efforts to improve patient survival have been undermined by a lack of suitable disease markers. Plasma circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) has shown promise as a potential minimally invasive biomarker and monitoring tool in other cancers; however, it remains underexplored in RMS. We aimed to determine the feasibility of identifying and quantifying ctDNA in plasma as a marker of disease burden and/or treatment response using blood samples from RMS mouse models and patients. METHODS: We established mouse models of RMS and applied quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and droplet digital PCR (ddPCR) to detect ctDNA within the mouse plasma. Potential driver mutations, copy-number alterations, and DNA breakpoints associated with PAX3/7-FOXO1 gene fusions were identified in the RMS samples collected at diagnosis. Patient-matched plasma samples collected from 28 patients with RMS before, during, and after treatment were analyzed for the presence of ctDNA via ddPCR, panel sequencing, and/or whole-exome sequencing. RESULTS: Human tumor-derived DNA was detectable in plasma samples from mouse models of RMS and correlated with tumor burden. In patients, ctDNA was detected in 14/18 pretreatment plasma samples with ddPCR and 7/7 cases assessed by sequencing. Levels of ctDNA at diagnosis were significantly higher in patients with unfavorable tumor sites, positive nodal status, and metastasis. In patients with serial plasma samples (n = 18), fluctuations in ctDNA levels corresponded to treatment response. CONCLUSION: Comprehensive ctDNA analysis combining high sensitivity and throughput can identify key molecular drivers in RMS models and patients, suggesting potential as a minimally invasive biomarker. Preclinical assessment of treatments using mouse models and further patient testing through prospective clinical trials are now warranted..
Affinita, M.C.
Merks, J.H.
Chisholm, J.C.
Haouy, S.
Rome, A.
Rabusin, M.
Brennan, B.
Bisogno, G.
(2022). Rhabdomyosarcoma with unknown primary tumor site: A report from European pediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG). Pediatr blood cancer,
Vol.69
(12),
p. e29967.
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BACKGROUND: Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is an aggressive malignancy, and 20% of children present with metastases at diagnosis. Patients presenting with disseminated disease very occasionally have no clear evidence of a primary tumor mass. As these patients have rarely been investigated, we report on a series of patients with RMS and unknown primary tumor site registered in the Metastatic (MTS) RMS 2008 protocol (October 2008 to December 2016) coordinated by the European pediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group. METHODS: Patients were administered nine cycles of induction chemotherapy, and 48 weeks of maintenance chemotherapy. Surgery and/or radiotherapy were planned after the first assessment of tumor response, and implemented after six cycles of chemotherapy. If feasible, radiotherapy to all sites of metastasis was recommended. RESULTS: We identified 10 patients with RMS and unknown primary site, most of them adolescents (median age 15.8 years, range: 4.6-20.4). Nine had fusion-positive alveolar RMS. Multiple organ involvement was identified in seven patients, two only had bone marrow disease, and one only had leptomeningeal dissemination. All patients were given chemotherapy, four were irradiated, and none had surgery. Three patients underwent allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. At the time of this analysis, only two patients are alive in complete remission: one had received radiotherapy; and one had a bone marrow transplant. CONCLUSIONS: RMS with unknown primary tumor occurs mainly in adolescents and is typically fusion-positive alveolar. Radiotherapy may be important, but survival is poor and patients should be offered enrollment in investigational trials..
Bernauer, C.
Man, Y.K.
Chisholm, J.C.
Lepicard, E.Y.
Robinson, S.P.
Shipley, J.M.
(2021). Hypoxia and its therapeutic possibilities in paediatric cancers. Br j cancer,
Vol.124
(3),
pp. 539-551.
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In tumours, hypoxia-a condition in which the demand for oxygen is higher than its availability-is well known to be associated with reduced sensitivity to radiotherapy and chemotherapy, and with immunosuppression. The consequences of hypoxia on tumour biology and patient outcomes have therefore led to the investigation of strategies that can alleviate hypoxia in cancer cells, with the aim of sensitising cells to treatments. An alternative therapeutic approach involves the design of prodrugs that are activated by hypoxic cells. Increasing evidence indicates that hypoxia is not just clinically significant in adult cancers but also in paediatric cancers. We evaluate relevant methods to assess the levels and extent of hypoxia in childhood cancers, including novel imaging strategies such as oxygen-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Preclinical and clinical evidence largely supports the use of hypoxia-targeting drugs in children, and we describe the critical need to identify robust predictive biomarkers for the use of such drugs in future paediatric clinical trials. Ultimately, a more personalised approach to treatment that includes targeting hypoxic tumour cells might improve outcomes in subgroups of paediatric cancer patients..
Bergeron, C.
Jenney, M.
De Corti, F.
Gallego, S.
Merks, H.
Glosli, H.
Ferrari, A.
Ranchère-Vince, D.
De Salvo, G.L.
Zanetti, I.
Chisholm, J.
Minard-Colin, V.
Rogers, T.
Bisogno, G.
European paediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG),
(2021). Embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma completely resected at diagnosis: The European paediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group RMS2005 experience. Eur j cancer,
Vol.146,
pp. 21-29.
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BACKGROUND: Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is the most common form of soft tissue sarcoma in children. We report the results of the European paediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) RMS 2005 study, which prospectively evaluated the reduction of chemotherapy in patients with embryonal RMS (ERMS) after initial surgery. METHODS: Between October 2005 and December 2016, all patients with localised ERMS with an initial microscopically complete resection (IRS group I) with lymph node-negative (N0) were prospectively enrolled in the low-risk (n = 70, subgroup A; age < 10 years and tumour size ≤ 5 cm) or standard-risk group (n = 108, subgroup B; age ≥ 10 years or tumour size > 5 cm. Subgroup A received 8 courses of vincristine and dactinomycin (VA) for 22 weeks; subgroup B received 4 courses of VA with ifosfamide (IVA) and 5 courses of VA for 25 weeks. RESULTS: The 5-year event-free survival (EFS) and overall survival (OS) were 90.8% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 85.0-94.4) and 95.7% (95% CI: 90.5-98.1), respectively (n = 178). The EFS and OS were 95.5% (95% CI: 86.8-98.5) and 100% (subgroupA), and 87.8% (95% CI: 79.3-93.0) and 93.0% (95% CI: 84.8-96.8)(subgroup B), respectively. Bearman stage 2 veno-occlusive disease (VOD) occurred in 4 very young patients. CONCLUSION: VA treatment for 8 courses was effective and well tolerated by the subgroup of patients with low-risk ERMS (group A). Four courses of IVA and 5 courses of VA instead of 9 courses of IVA also has very good results. Careful monitoring for liver toxicity is important in very young patients. European union drug regulating authorities clinical trials EUDRACT No. 2005-000217-35..
Glosli, H.
Bisogno, G.
Kelsey, A.
Chisholm, J.C.
Gaze, M.
Kolb, F.
McHugh, K.
Shipley, J.
Gallego, S.
Merks, J.H.
Smeele, L.E.
Mandeville, H.
Ferrari, A.
Minard-Colin, V.
Corradini, N.
Jenney, M.
Zanetti, I.
De Salvo, G.L.
Orbach, D.
EpSSG members,
(2021). Non-parameningeal head and neck rhabdomyosarcoma in children, adolescents, and young adults: Experience of the European paediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) - RMS2005 study. Eur j cancer,
Vol.151,
pp. 84-93.
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BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: The primary aim of this study was to analyse and evaluate the impact of different local treatments on the pattern of relapse in children with primary head and neck non-parameningeal (HNnPM) rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS), treated in the European paediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) RMS2005 study. The secondary aim was to assess whether current risk stratification is valid for this specific site. DESIGN/METHODS: This study includes all patients with localised HNnPM RMS enrolled in the RMS2005 study between 2005 and 2016. Treatment comprised chemotherapy adapted to risk group, with local surgery and/or radiation therapy. The main outcome measures were event-free survival (EFS) and overall survival (OS). RESULTS: A total of 165 patients were identified; the median age was 6.4 years (range, 0.1-25). The most common tumour sites were cheek/chin (22%) and nasal ala/nasolabial fold (20%). Histology was unfavourable for 40%, and regional nodal involvement present in 26%. Local therapy included surgery (58%) and/or radiotherapy (72%) to primary tumour and/or regional lymph nodes. After a median follow-up of 66 months (range, 6-158), 42 patients experienced an event, and 17 are still alive. Tumour events were frequent in oral primary (36%), parotid site (26%), cheek/chin (24%), and nasal ala/nasolabial fold (24%) and included locoregional failure in 84% of cases. The 5-year EFS and OS were 75% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 67.3-81.2) and 84.9% (95% CI: 77.5-89.7), respectively. Favourable histology was associated with a better EFS (82.3% versus 64.6%; p = 0.02) and nodal spread with a worse OS (88.6% versus 76.1%; p = 0.04). Different sublocations within the HNnPM primary did not have significant impact on outcome. CONCLUSION: Locoregional relapse/progression is the main tumour failure event in this site. Despite frequent unfavourable risk factors, HNnPM RMS remains a favourable location in the context of a risk-adapted strategy..
Mercolini, F.
Zucchetta, P.
Jehanno, N.
Corradini, N.
Van Rijn, R.R.
Rogers, T.
Cameron, A.
Scarzello, G.
Coppadoro, B.
Minard-Colin, V.
Gallego, S.
Chisholm, J.
Merks, J.H.
Bisogno, G.
(2021). Role of 18F-FDG-PET/CT in the staging of metastatic rhabdomyosarcoma: a report from the European paediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group. Eur j cancer,
Vol.155,
pp. 155-162.
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BACKGROUND: Initial staging of rhabdomyosarcoma is crucial for prognosis and to tailor the treatment. The standard radiology workup (SRW) includes magnetic resonance imaging, chest computed tomography (CT) and bone scintigraphy, but 18 Fluorine-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT) (18F-FDG-PET/CT (PET-CT)) use is increasing. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of PET-CT in the initial staging of patients with metastatic rhabdomyosarcoma enrolled in the European protocol MTS2008. METHODS: Two authors retrospectively reviewed the SRW and PET-CT reports comparing the number and sites of metastases detected. For bone marrow involvement, PET-CT and bone marrow aspirates/biopsies were compared. RESULTS: Among 263 metastatic patients enrolled from October 2008 to December 2016, 121 had PET-CT performed at diagnosis, and for 118 of 121 patients, both PET-CT and radiological reports were available for review. PET-CT showed higher sensitivity than SRW in the ability to detect locoregional (96.2% versus 78.5%, P value = 0.0013) and distant lymph node involvement (94.8% versus 79.3%, P value = 0.0242), but sensitivity was lower for intrathoracic sites (lung 79.6% versus 100%, P value = 0.0025). For bone metastasis, PET-CT was more sensitive than bone scintigraphy (96.4% versus 67.9%, P value = 0.0116). The PET-CT sensitivity and specificity to detect marrow involvement were 91.8% and 93.8%, respectively. The mean number of metastatic sites was 1.94 (range 0-5) with PET-CT and 1.72 (range 0-5) with SRW. In four patients (3.4%), PET-CT changed the staging from localised to metastatic disease. CONCLUSION: PET can identify metastatic disease not evident on SRW in a small number of patients. This is because of its higher ability to recognise lymph node and bone involvement. Chest CT remains essential to detect lesions in intrathoracic sites, which can be performed in a one stop-shot routine examination or on a dedicated chest CT scan. PET-CT could replace bone scintigraphy to study bone involvement..
Shern, J.F.
Selfe, J.
Izquierdo, E.
Patidar, R.
Chou, H.-.
Song, Y.K.
Yohe, M.E.
Sindiri, S.
Wei, J.
Wen, X.
Rudzinski, E.R.
Barkauskas, D.A.
Lo, T.
Hall, D.
Linardic, C.M.
Hughes, D.
Jamal, S.
Jenney, M.
Chisholm, J.
Brown, R.
Jones, K.
Hicks, B.
Angelini, P.
George, S.
Chesler, L.
Hubank, M.
Kelsey, A.
Gatz, S.A.
Skapek, S.X.
Hawkins, D.S.
Shipley, J.M.
Khan, J.
(2021). Genomic Classification and Clinical Outcome in Rhabdomyosarcoma: A Report From an International Consortium. J clin oncol,
Vol.39
(26),
pp. 2859-2871.
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PURPOSE: Rhabdomyosarcoma is the most common soft tissue sarcoma of childhood. Despite aggressive therapy, the 5-year survival rate for patients with metastatic or recurrent disease remains poor, and beyond PAX-FOXO1 fusion status, no genomic markers are available for risk stratification. We present an international consortium study designed to determine the incidence of driver mutations and their association with clinical outcome. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Tumor samples collected from patients enrolled on Children's Oncology Group trials (1998-2017) and UK patients enrolled on malignant mesenchymal tumor and RMS2005 (1995-2016) trials were subjected to custom-capture sequencing. Mutations, indels, gene deletions, and amplifications were identified, and survival analysis was performed. RESULTS: DNA from 641 patients was suitable for analyses. A median of one mutation was found per tumor. In FOXO1 fusion-negative cases, mutation of any RAS pathway member was found in > 50% of cases, and 21% had no putative driver mutation identified. BCOR (15%), NF1 (15%), and TP53 (13%) mutations were found at a higher incidence than previously reported and TP53 mutations were associated with worse outcomes in both fusion-negative and FOXO1 fusion-positive cases. Interestingly, mutations in RAS isoforms predominated in infants < 1 year (64% of cases). Mutation of MYOD1 was associated with histologic patterns beyond those previously described, older age, head and neck primary site, and a dismal survival. Finally, we provide a searchable companion database (ClinOmics), containing all genomic variants, and clinical annotation including survival data. CONCLUSION: This is the largest genomic characterization of clinically annotated rhabdomyosarcoma tumors to date and provides prognostic genetic features that refine risk stratification and will be incorporated into prospective trials..
Cameron, A.L.
Elze, M.C.
Casanova, M.
Geoerger, B.
Gaze, M.N.
Minard-Colin, V.
McHugh, K.
van Rijn, R.R.
Kelsey, A.
Martelli, H.
Mandeville, H.
Bisogno, G.
Lowis, S.
Ronghe, M.
Orbach, D.
Guizani, C.
Fürst-Recktenwald, S.
Chisholm, J.C.
Merks, J.H.
European Paediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) and the European Innovative Therapies for Children with Cancer (ITCC) Consortium,
(2021). The Impact of Radiation Therapy in Children and Adolescents With Metastatic Rhabdomyosarcoma. Int j radiat oncol biol phys,
Vol.111
(4),
pp. 968-978.
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PURPOSE: There is limited evidence to define the role of radiation therapy in children with metastatic rhabdomyosarcoma (mRMS). In the international BERNIE study, children with mRMS or non-RMS soft tissue sarcoma were randomized to receive standard chemotherapy with or without bevacizumab, with radiation therapy to all disease sites recommended after chemotherapy cycle 6. We retrospectively evaluated the impact of radiation therapy on survival in the mRMS cohort. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Patients were grouped according to the radiation therapy they received: radical, partial, or none. Radical irradiation was defined as radiation therapy delivered to all disease sites, unless a site was completely surgically resected. Partial irradiation was defined as radiation therapy to ≥1, but not all, disease sites. Landmark analysis excluded patients with an event before day 221. Overall survival (OS) and event-free survival (EFS) were modeled using Cox proportional hazards models. RESULTS: Of 102 patients with mRMS, 97 were included in the analysis for OS and 85 for EFS. Overall, 27 patients received radical irradiation, 46 partial irradiation, and 24 no irradiation. EFS was not significantly different among patient groups after adjustment for prognostic factors (hazard ratio [HR] = 0.520; P = .054 for any vs no irradiation). Radiation therapy was associated with improved OS compared with no radiation therapy (adjusted HR = 0.249; P = .00025), with OS being greater for radical versus partial irradiation (HR = 0.245; P = .039). The 3-year OS rate was 84%, 54%, and 23% for patients receiving radical, partial, and no irradiation, respectively. Radical treatment (surgery, irradiation, or both) of the primary site improved EFS and OS compared with no treatment. CONCLUSIONS: These findings demonstrate variability in the application of radiation therapy for mRMS and support the routine use of radical treatment to the primary site. Radical irradiation to metastatic sites may further improve OS. The burden of such treatment should be balanced against prognosis; further studies are needed..
Defachelles, A.-.
Bogart, E.
Casanova, M.
Merks, J.H.
Bisogno, G.
Calareso, G.
Gallego Melcon, S.
Gatz, S.A.
Le Deley, M.-.
McHugh, K.
Probst, A.
Rocourt, N.
van Rijn, R.R.
Wheatley, K.
Minard-Colin, V.
Chisholm, J.C.
(2021). Randomized Phase II Trial of Vincristine-Irinotecan With or Without Temozolomide, in Children and Adults With Relapsed or Refractory Rhabdomyosarcoma: A European Paediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group and Innovative Therapies for Children With Cancer Trial. J clin oncol,
Vol.39
(27),
pp. 2979-2990.
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PURPOSE: The VIT-0910 trial was conducted to evaluate efficacy and safety of the vincristine-irinotecan combination with and without temozolomide (VIT and VI, respectively) in relapsed or refractory rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS). METHODS: In this randomized European phase II trial, patients age 0.5-50 years received 21-day cycles combining vincristine (1.5 mg/m2 once a day on day 1 and day 8) and irinotecan (50 mg/m2 once a day from day 1 to day 5) with and without temozolomide (125 mg/m2 once a day from day 1 to day 5 and 150 mg/m2 once a day from cycle 2), until progression or unacceptable toxicity. The primary end point was objective response rate after two cycles. Secondary end points included best response, progression-free survival, overall survival, and adverse events. A Simon 2-stage design was initially planned to separately analyze 40 patients/arm. After amendment, the trial sample size was increased to 120 and a comparison between arms, adjusted for confounding factors, was added to the statistical plan (ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01355445). RESULTS: Overall, 120 patients (60 per arm) were recruited in 37 European centers. The median age was 11 years (range, 0.75-45); 89% of patients had a relapsed RMS. The objective response rate was 44% (24 of 55 evaluable patients) for VIT versus 31% (18 of 58) for VI (adjusted odds ratio, 0.50; 95% CI, 0.22 to 1.12; P = .09). The VIT arm achieved significantly better overall survival (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.55; 95% CI, 0.35 to 0.84; P = .006) compared with VI, with consistent progression-free survival results (adj-hazard ratio, 0.68; 95% CI, 0.46 to 1.01; P = .059). Overall, patients experienced adverse events ≥ grade 3 more frequently with VIT than VI (98% v 78%, respectively; P = .009), including a significant excess of hematologic toxicity (81% v 61%; P = .025). CONCLUSION: The addition of temozolomide to VI improved chemotherapy efficacy for patients with relapsed RMS, with manageable increase in toxicity. VIT is considered the new standard treatment in these patients in the European paediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Group and will be the control arm in the next randomized trial..
Sjoberg Bexelius, T.
Chisholm, J.C.
Okoye, B.
Cecil, T.
Angelini, P.
Dayal, S.
(2021). Hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) as another treatment modality for desmoplastic round cell tumour patients: first paediatric experience from UK. Bmj case rep,
Vol.14
(1).
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We present the first young paediatric patient with desmoplastic small round cell tumour (DSRCT) treated in UK with hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC). A 7-year-old girl was diagnosed with abdominal DSRCT with peritoneal and liver metastases. After six cycles of chemotherapy she obtained a partial response, including almost complete resolution of the two liver metastases. It was decided to pursue cytoreductive surgery (CRS) combined with HIPEC, a procedure commonly performed in adults, but seldom in a child. The surgery was macroscopically complete and the HIPEC uncomplicated. She continued treatment without delays, including whole abdomino-pelvic radiotherapy and maintenance chemotherapy (cyclophosphamide/vinorelbine for 12 months). She is currently in complete remission 4 months after end of treatment and 26 months after diagnosis. HIPEC was made possible by successful collaboration between multiple teams. CRS-HIPEC proved to be safe and feasible and could be offered to other children with diagnoses of peritoneal malignancies across the UK..
Morgan, J.E.
Phillips, B.
Haeusler, G.M.
Chisholm, J.C.
(2021). Optimising Antimicrobial Selection and Duration in the Treatment of Febrile Neutropenia in Children. Infect drug resist,
Vol.14,
pp. 1283-1293.
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Febrile neutropenia (FN) is a frequent complication of cancer treatment in children. Owing to the potential for overwhelming bacterial sepsis, the recognition and management of FN requires rapid implementation of evidenced-based management protocols. Treatment paradigms have progressed from hospitalisation with broad spectrum antibiotics for all patients, through to risk adapted approaches to management. Such risk adapted approaches aim to provide safe care through incorporating antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) principles such as implementation of comprehensive clinical pathways incorporating de-escalation strategies with the imperative to reduce hospital stay and antibiotic exposure where possible in order to improve patient experience, reduce costs and diminish the risk of nosocomial infection. This review summarises the principles of risk stratification in FN, the current key considerations for optimising empiric antimicrobial selection including knowledge of antimicrobial resistance patterns and emerging technologies for rapid diagnosis of specific infections and summarises existing evidence on time to treatment, investigations required and duration of treatment. To aid treating physicians we suggest the key features based on current evidence that should be part of any FN management guideline and highlight areas for future research. The focus is on treatment of bacterial infections although fungal and viral infections are also important in this patient group..
Lyons, O.
Forbat, L.
Menson, E.
Chisholm, J.C.
Pryde, K.
Conlin, S.
Felton, V.
Ingle, S.
McKenzie, C.
Ramachandran, R.
Sayer, C.
Snowball, C.
Strachan-Gadsby, E.
Tisovszky, N.
Barclay, S.
(2021). Transforming training into practice with the conflict management framework: a mixed methods study. Bmj paediatr open,
Vol.5
(1),
p. e001088.
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OBJECTIVE: To implement and evaluate the use of the conflict management framework (CMF) in four tertiary UK paediatric services. DESIGN: Mixed methods multisite evaluation including prospective pre and post intervention collection of conflict data alongside semistructured interviews. SETTING: Eight inpatient or day care wards across four tertiary UK paediatric services. INTERVENTIONS: The two-stage CMF was used in daily huddles to prompt the recognition and management of conflict. RESULTS: Conflicts were recorded for a total of 67 weeks before and 141 weeks after implementation of the CMF across the four sites. 1000 episodes of conflict involving 324 patients/families across the four sites were recorded. After implementation of the CMF, time spent managing episodes of conflict around the care of a patient was decreased by 24% (p<0.001) (from 73 min to 55 min) and the estimated cost of this staff time decreased by 20% (p<0.02) (from £26 to £21 sterling per episode of conflict). This reduction occurred despite conflict episodes after implementation of the CMF having similar severity to those before implementation. Semistructured interviews highlighted the importance of broad multidisciplinary leadership and training to embed a culture of proactive and collaborative conflict management. CONCLUSIONS: The CMF offers an effective adjunct to conflict management training, reducing time spent managing conflict and the associated staff costs..
Drabbe, C.
Benson, C.
Younger, E.
Zaidi, S.
Jones, R.L.
Judson, I.
Chisholm, J.
Mandeville, H.
Fisher, C.
Thway, K.
Al Muderis, O.
Messiou, C.
Strauss, D.
Husson, O.
Miah, A.
Van der Graaf, W.T.
(2020). Embryonal and Alveolar Rhabdomyosarcoma in Adults: Real-Life Data From a Tertiary Sarcoma Centre. Clin oncol (r coll radiol),
Vol.32
(1),
pp. e27-e35.
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AIMS: Embryonal and alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma (ERMS, ARMS) are subtypes of RMS that mainly occur in children, with relatively good outcomes. The incidence in adults is extremely low and survival is significantly worse compared with children. Data are scarce and literature generally combines all RMS subtypes, including pleomorphic RMS, which primarily occurs in adults and behaves more like undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcoma. The aim of this study was to evaluate patient and tumour characteristics, outcome and prognostic factors in adult patients with ERMS and ARMS. MATERIALS AND METHODS: All adult (18 years or older) ERMS and ARMS patients (presenting 1990-2016) were identified from a prospectively maintained database and were included in this analysis. RESULTS: Overall, 66 patients were included (42 men, 24 women). The median age at presentation was 28 years (range 18-71). The median overall survival for all ARMS (n = 42) and ERMS (n = 24) patients was 18 months, with a 5-year overall survival rate of 27%. Patients presenting with localised disease (n = 38, 58%) and metastatic disease (n = 25, 42%), had a 5-year overall survival rate of 36% and 11%, respectively. In univariate analysis we found alveolar subtype, fusion gene positivity, infiltrative tumour and metastatic presentation to be negative prognostic factors. CONCLUSION: Survival in adult ERMS and ARMS patients is poor and the current data may be useful in the design of trials with novel agents. Ideally, paediatric and adult oncologists should set up trials together to get a better understanding of biological, genetic and clinically relevant factors in this disease..
Ferrari, A.
Merks, J.H.
Chisholm, J.C.
Orbach, D.
Brennan, B.
Gallego, S.
van Noesel, M.M.
McHugh, K.
van Rijn, R.R.
Gaze, M.N.
Martelli, H.
Bergeron, C.
Corradini, N.
Minard-Colin, V.
Bisogno, G.
Geoerger, B.
Caron, H.N.
De Salvo, G.L.
Casanova, M.
(2020). Outcomes of metastatic non-rhabdomyosarcoma soft tissue sarcomas (NRSTS) treated within the BERNIE study: a randomised, phase II study evaluating the addition of bevacizumab to chemotherapy. Eur j cancer,
Vol.130,
pp. 72-80.
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PURPOSE: We analysed the cohort of paediatric patients with metastatic non-rhabdomyosarcoma soft tissue sarcomas (NRSTS) treated in the BERNIE protocol, i.e. open-label, multicentre, randomised phase II study evaluating the role of bevacizumab (BO20924/ITCC-006; ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT00643565). METHODS: Eligible patients were randomised 1:1 to add or not add bevacizumab to nine courses of intensive multi-drug chemotherapy, followed by 12-month maintenance chemotherapy (plus surgery and radiotherapy). The primary end-point was event-free survival (EFS); secondary objectives were objective response rate (ORR) and overall survival (OS). RESULTS: From 2008 and 2013, 49 NRSTS patients (out of 154 cases) were treated, 26 in the standard arm and 23 in the bevacizumab arm. ORR was seen in 10 out of 36 evaluable cases (27.7%), i.e. 4/18 standard arm cases and 6/18 bevacizumab arm cases. Two-year EFS was 27.3% (95% confidence interval [CI] 13.9-42.5) for all NRSTS patients, i.e. 34.9% (95% CI 14.6-56.2) for bevacizumab arm and 22.9% (95% CI 7.1-43.9) for standard arm (p-value = 0.19). Three-year OS (median follow-up 48.6 months) was 35.2%, with no differences in the two arms. Time to event and time to death were 16.3 and 17.2 months for bevacizumab arm and 2.1 and 7.6 months for standard arm, respectively. Patients not receiving any local treatment on primary disease had a worse outcome as compared to others. Treatment results were better for patients receiving surgical resection and worse for those who did not receive any specific treatment. CONCLUSION: The addition of the anti-angiogenic agent to the standard chemotherapy did not show statistically significant improvement in survival in metastatic NRSTS..
Williams, A.P.
Bate, J.
Brooks, R.
Chisholm, J.
Clarke, S.C.
Dixon, E.
Faust, S.N.
Galanopoulou, A.
Heath, P.T.
Maishman, T.
Mapstone, S.
Patel, S.R.
Vora, A.
Wilding, S.A.
Gray, J.C.
(2020). Immune reconstitution in children following chemotherapy for acute leukemia. Ejhaem,
Vol.1
(1),
pp. 142-151.
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Although survival rates for pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia are now excellent, this is at the expense of prolonged chemotherapy regimens. We report the long-term immune effects in children treated according to the UK Medical Research Council UKALL 2003 protocol. Peripheral blood lymphocyte subsets and immunoglobulin levels were studied in 116 participants, at six time points, during and for 18-month following treatment, with 30-39 patients analyzed at each time point. Total lymphocytes were reduced during maintenance chemotherapy and remained low 18 months following treatment completion. CD4 T cells remained significantly reduced 18 months after treatment, but CD8 cells and natural killer cells recovered to normal values. The fall in naïve B-cell numbers during maintenance was most marked, but numbers recovered rapidly after cessation of treatment. Memory B cells, particularly nonclass-switched memory B cells, remained below normal levels 18 months following treatment. All immunoglobulin subclasses were reduced during treatment compared to normal values, with IgM levels most affected. This study demonstrates that immune reconstitution differs between lymphocyte compartments. Although total B-cell numbers recover rapidly, disruption of memory/naïve balance persists and T-cell compartment persist at 18 months. This highlights the impact of modern chemotherapy regimens on immunity, and thus, infectious susceptibility and response to immunization..
Amoroso, L.
Castel, V.
Bisogno, G.
Casanova, M.
Marquez-Vega, C.
Chisholm, J.C.
Doz, F.
Moreno, L.
Ruggiero, A.
Gerber, N.U.
Fagioli, F.
Hingorani, P.
Melcón, S.G.
Slepetis, R.
Chen, N.
le Bruchec, Y.
Simcock, M.
Vassal, G.
(2020). Phase II results from a phase I/II study to assess the safety and efficacy of weekly nab-paclitaxel in paediatric patients with recurrent or refractory solid tumours: A collaboration with the European Innovative Therapies for Children with Cancer Network. Eur j cancer,
Vol.135,
pp. 89-97.
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BACKGROUND: The phase I component of a phase I/II study defined the recommended phase II dose and established the tolerability of nab-paclitaxel monotherapy in paediatric patients with recurrent or refractory solid tumours. The activity and safety of nab-paclitaxel monotherapy was further investigated in this phase II study. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Paediatric patients with recurrent or refractory Ewing sarcoma, neuroblastoma or rhabdomyosarcoma received 240 mg/m2 of nab-paclitaxel on days 1, 8 and 15 of each 28-day cycle. The primary end-point was the overall response rate (ORR; complete response [CR] + partial response [PR]). Secondary end-points included duration of response, disease control rate (DCR; CR + PR + stable disease [SD]), progression-free survival, 1-year overall survival, safety and pharmacokinetics. RESULTS: Forty-two patients were enrolled, 14 each with Ewing sarcoma, neuroblastoma and rhabdomyosarcoma. The ORRs were 0%, 0% and 7.1% (1 confirmed PR), respectively. The DCRs were 30.8% (4 SD), 7.1% (1 SD) and 7.1% (1 confirmed PR and 0 SD) in the Ewing sarcoma, neuroblastoma and rhabdomyosarcoma groups, respectively. The median progression-free survival was 13.0, 7.4 and 5.1 weeks, respectively, and the 1-year overall survival rates were 48%, 25% and 15%, respectively. The most common grade III/4IVadverse events were haematologic (neutropenia [50%] and anaemia [48%]), and grade III/IV peripheral neuropathy occurred in 2 patients (14%) in the rhabdomyosarcoma group. Pharmacokinetics analyses revealed that paclitaxel tissue distribution was both rapid and extensive. CONCLUSIONS: In this phase II study, limited activity was observed; however, the safety of nab-paclitaxel in paediatric patients was confirmed. TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT01962103 and EudraCT 2013-000144-26..
Terwisscha van Scheltinga, S.E.
Wijnen, M.H.
Martelli, H.
Rogers, T.
Mandeville, H.
Gaze, M.N.
McHugh, K.
Corradini, N.
Orbach, D.
Jenney, M.
Kelsey, A.
Chisholm, J.
Gallego, S.
Glosli, H.
Ferrari, A.
Zanetti, I.
De Salvo, G.L.
Minard-Colin, V.
Bisogno, G.
van Noesel, M.M.
Merks, H.H.
(2020). Local staging and treatment in extremity rhabdomyosarcoma A report from the EpSSG-RMS2005 study. Cancer med,
Vol.9
(20),
pp. 7580-7589.
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UNLABELLED: Rhabdomyosarcoma of the extremities present with two main challenges: correct evaluation of initial regional nodal involvement and define adequate local treatment. METHODS: Pediatric patients with localized rhabdomyosarcoma of the extremity included in the EpSSG-RMS2005 study between 2005 and 2014 were evaluated for staging, treatment, and survival. The outcome was compared to the preceding European SIOP-MMT studies. RESULTS: Of the 162 patients included, histology was unfavorable in 113 (70%), 124 (77%) were younger than 10 years, 128 (79%) were IRS III, and 47 (29%) were node-positive. A regional node biopsy was performed in 97 patients (60%) and modified the lymph node stage in 15/97 (16%). Primary and delayed surgery was performed in 155 (96%) and radiotherapy delivered in 118 (73%) patients. Relapse occurred in 61 cases (38%), local in 14 (23%), regional in 13 (21%), distant in 22 (36%), and combined relapse in 12 (20%) with five progressive diseases (8%) and four secondary tumors (7%). Five-year event free (EFS) and overall survival (OS) were 58.4% (95%CI, 50.3-65.7) and 71.7% (63.6-78.4), respectively. In the previous studies MMT89 and MMT95, tumor surgery was performed in 32/53 (60%) and 74/82(90%), respectively, and radiotherapy delivered in 13/53 (25%) and 26/82 (30%), respectively. Five-year EFS and OS were 35.6%, and 50.3% in MMT89 and 54.3% and 68.2% in the MMT95 study. CONCLUSIONS: Even if the lymph node staging was not always complete according to the RMS2005 protocol, node sampling changed lymph node status in a significant number of patients. Despite the higher rate of patients treated with locoregional radiotherapy, survival in RMS2005 did not improve compared to the previous European SIOP-MMT95 study..
Vaarwerk, B.
Mallebranche, C.
Affinita, M.C.
van der Lee, J.H.
Ferrari, A.
Chisholm, J.C.
Defachelles, A.-.
De Salvo, G.L.
Corradini, N.
Minard-Colin, V.
Morosi, C.
Brisse, H.J.
McHugh, K.
Bisogno, G.
van Rijn, R.R.
Orbach, D.
Merks, J.H.
(2020). Is surveillance imaging in pediatric patients treated for localized rhabdomyosarcoma useful? The European experience. Cancer,
Vol.126
(4),
pp. 823-831.
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BACKGROUND: After the completion of therapy, patients with localized rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) are subjected to intensive radiological tumor surveillance. However, the clinical benefit of this surveillance is unclear. This study retrospectively analyzed the value of off-therapy surveillance by comparing the survival of patients in whom relapse was detected by routine imaging (the imaging group) and patients in whom relapse was first suspected by symptoms (the symptom group). METHODS: This study included patients with relapsed RMS after the completion of therapy for localized RMS who were treated in large pediatric oncology hospitals in France, the United Kingdom, Italy, and the Netherlands and who were enrolled in the International Society of Paediatric Oncology Malignant Mesenchymal Tumor 95 (1995-2004) study, the Italian Paediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Committee Rhabdomyosarcoma 96 (1996-2004) study, or the European Paediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group Rhabdomyosarcoma 2005 (2005-2013) study. The survival times after relapse were compared with a log-rank test between patients in the imaging group and patients in the symptom group. RESULTS: In total, 199 patients with relapsed RMS were included: 78 patients (39.2%) in the imaging group and 121 patients (60.8%) in the symptom group. The median follow-up time after relapse was 7.4 years (interquartile range, 3.9-11.5 years) for survivors (n = 86); the 3-year postrelapse survival rate was 50% (95% confidence interval [CI], 38%-61%) for the imaging group and 46% (95% CI, 37%-55%) for the symptom group (P = .7). CONCLUSIONS: Although systematic routine imaging is the standard of care after RMS therapy, the majority of relapses were detected as a result of clinical symptoms. This study found no survival advantage for patients whose relapse was detected before the emergence of clinical symptoms. These results show that the value of off-therapy surveillance is controversial, particularly because repeated imaging may also entail potential harm..
Bate, J.
Borrow, R.
Chisholm, J.
Clarke, S.C.
Dixon, E.
Faust, S.N.
Galanopoulou, A.
Goldblatt, D.
Heath, P.T.
Maishman, T.
Mapstone, S.
Patel, S.R.
Williams, A.P.
Gray, J.C.
(2020). Thirteen-Valent Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine in Children With Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia: Protective Immunity Can Be Achieved on Completion of Treatment. Clin infect dis,
Vol.71
(5),
pp. 1271-1280.
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BACKGROUND: Children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) are at increased risk of developing invasive pneumococcal disease. This study describes the immunogenicity of 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV13) during and after chemotherapy. METHODS: Children with ALL were allocated to study groups and received a single dose of PCV13: group 1, maintenance chemotherapy; group 2, end of chemotherapy; group 3, 6 months after chemotherapy. A protective vaccine response was defined as at least 10 of 12 serotypes (or >83% of serotypes with data) achieving postvaccination serotype-specific immunoglobulin G ≥0.35 µg/mL and ≥4-fold rise, compared to prevaccination at 1 and 12 months. RESULTS: One hundred eighteen children were recruited. Only 12.8% (5/39; 95% confidence interval [CI], 4.3%-27.4%) of patients vaccinated during maintenance (group 1) achieved a protective response at 1 month postvaccination and none had a protective response at 12 months. For group 2 patients, 59.5% (22/37; 95% CI, 42.1%-75.3%) achieved a response at 1 month and 37.9% (11/29; 95% CI, 20.7%-57.7%) maintained immunity at 12 months. For group 3 patients, 56.8% (21/37; 95% CI, 39.5%-72.9%) achieved a protective response at 1 month and 43.3% (13/30; 95% CI, 25.5%-62.6%) maintained immunity at 12 months. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrated that the earliest time point at which protective immunity can be achieved in children with ALL is on completion of chemotherapy. This is earlier than current recommendations and may improve protection during a period when children are most susceptible to infection. CLINICAL TRIALS REGISTRATION: EudraCT 2009-011587-11..
Bexelius, T.S.
Wasti, A.
Chisholm, J.C.
(2020). Mini-Review on Targeted Treatment of Desmoplastic Small Round Cell Tumor. Front oncol,
Vol.10,
p. 518.
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Desmoplastic small round cell tumor (DSRCT) is a devastating disease which most commonly affects adolescents, with a male predominance. Despite the best multimodality treatment efforts, most patients will ultimately not survive more than 3-5 years after diagnosis. Some research trials in soft-tissue sarcoma and Ewing sarcoma include DSRCT patients but few studies have been tailored to the specific clinical needs and underlying cytogenetic abnormalities characterizing this disease such as the typical EWSR1-WT1 gene fusion. Downstream activation of EWSR1-WT1 gene fusion includes signaling pathways of platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF), vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), and insulin growth factor (IGF)-1. Other biological pathways that are activated and expressed in DSRCT cells include endothelial growth factor receptor (EGFR), androgen receptor pathway, c-KIT, MET, and transforming growth factor (TGF) beta. Investigation of somatic mutations, copy number alterations (CNA), and chromosomes in DSRCT samples suggests that deregulation of mesenchymal-epithelial reverse transition (MErT)/epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and DNA damage repair (DDR) may be important in DSRCT. This mini review looks at known druggable targets in DSRCT and existing clinical evidence for targeted treatments, particularly multityrosine kinase inhibitors such as pazopanib, imatinib, and sorafenib alone or in combination with other agents such as mTOR (mammalian target of rapamycin) inhibitors. The aim is to increase shared knowledge about current available treatments and identify gaps in research to further efforts toward clinical development of targeted agents..
Bate, J.
Baker, S.
Breuer, J.
Chisholm, J.C.
Gray, J.
Hambleton, S.
Houlton, A.
Jit, M.
Lowis, S.
Makin, G.
O'Sullivan, C.
Patel, S.R.
Phillips, R.
Ransinghe, N.
Ramsay, M.E.
Skinner, R.
Wheatley, K.
Heath, P.T.
(2019). PEPtalk2: results of a pilot randomised controlled trial to compare VZIG and aciclovir as postexposure prophylaxis (PEP) against chickenpox in children with cancer. Arch dis child,
Vol.104
(1),
pp. 25-29.
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OBJECTIVE: To determine the likely rate of patient randomisation and to facilitate sample size calculation for a full-scale phase III trial of varicella zoster immunoglobulin (VZIG) and aciclovir as postexposure prophylaxis against chickenpox in children with cancer. DESIGN: Multicentre pilot randomised controlled trial of VZIG and oral aciclovir. SETTING: England, UK. PATIENTS: Children under 16 years of age with a diagnosis of cancer: currently or within 6 months of receiving cancer treatment and with negative varicella zoster virus (VZV) serostatus at diagnosis or within the last 3 months. INTERVENTIONS: Study participants who have a significant VZV exposure were randomised to receive PEP in the form of VZIG or aciclovir after the exposure. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Number of patients registered and randomised within 12 months of the trial opening to recruitment and incidence of breakthrough varicella. RESULTS: The study opened in six sites over a 13-month period. 482 patients were screened for eligibility, 32 patients were registered and 3 patients were randomised following VZV exposure. All three were randomised to receive aciclovir and there were no cases of breakthrough varicella. CONCLUSIONS: Given the limited recruitment to the PEPtalk2 pilot, it is unlikely that the necessary sample size would be achievable using this strategy in a full-scale trial. The study identified factors that could be used to modify the design of a definitive trial but other options for defining the best means to protect such children against VZV should be explored. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN48257441, EudraCT number: 2013-001332-22, sponsor: University of Birmingham..
Vaarwerk, B.
Schoot, R.A.
Maurice-Stam, H.
Slater, O.
Hartley, B.
Saeed, P.
Gajdosova, E.
van den Brekel, M.W.
Balm, A.J.
Hol, M.L.
van Jaarsveld, S.
Kremer, L.C.
Ronckers, C.M.
Mandeville, H.C.
Pieters, B.R.
Gaze, M.N.
Davila Fajardo, R.
Strackee, S.D.
Dunaway, D.
Smeele, L.E.
Chisholm, J.C.
Caron, H.N.
Grootenhuis, M.A.
Merks, J.H.
(2019). Psychosocial well-being of long-term survivors of pediatric head-neck rhabdomyosarcoma. Pediatr blood cancer,
Vol.66
(2),
p. e27498.
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BACKGROUND: Head and neck rhabdomyosarcoma (HNRMS) survivors are at risk to develop adverse events (AEs). The impact of these AEs on psychosocial well-being is unclear. We aimed to assess psychosocial well-being of HNRMS survivors and examine whether psychosocial outcomes were associated with burden of therapy. PROCEDURE: Sixty-five HNRMS survivors (median follow-up: 11.5 years), treated in the Netherlands and the United Kingdom between 1990 and 2010 and alive ≥2 years after treatment visited the outpatient multidisciplinary follow-up clinic once, in which AEs were scored based on a predefined list according to the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events. Survivors were asked to complete questionnaires on health-related quality of life (HRQoL; PedsQL and YQOL-FD), self-perception (KIDSCREEN), and satisfaction with appearances (SWA). HRQoL and self-perception scores were compared with reference values, and the correlation between physician-assessed AEs and psychosocial well-being was assessed. RESULTS: HNRMS survivors showed significantly lower scores on PedsQL school/work domain (P ≤ 0.01, P = 0.02, respectively), YQOL-FD domains negative self-image and positive consequences (P ≤ 0.01, P = 0.04, respectively) compared with norm data; scores on negative consequences domain were significantly higher (P = 0.03). Over 50% of survivors negatively rated their appearances on three or more items. Burden of AEs was not associated with generic HRQoL and self-perception scores, but was associated with disease-specific QoL (YQOL-FD). CONCLUSION: In general, HRQoL in HNRMS survivors was comparable to reference groups; however, survivors did report disease-specific consequences. We therefore recommend including specific questionnaires related to difficulties with facial appearance in a systematic monitoring program to determine the necessity for tailored care..
Roy Moulik, N.
Vaidya, S.
Mandeville, H.
Chisholm, J.C.
(2019). Managing peritoneal involvement in children and young people with rhabdomyosarcoma: A single-center experience from the United Kingdom. Pediatr blood cancer,
Vol.66
(9),
p. e27805.
show abstract
We describe our experience in managing nine children and adolescents with rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) and peritoneal involvement. The radiological pattern of peritoneal involvement was diverse from only ascites to solid peritoneal mass/omental caking. Treatment included systemic chemotherapy in all, surgery in three, and radiotherapy in eight. Two patients with presumed nonmalignant ascites, no solid peritoneal metastasis, nonalveolar histology, near-complete resection of residual disease, and radiotherapy survived long term. One patient has just completed treatment, and the remaining six relapsed/progressed at the time of reporting. Five of six patients died after a median of 5 (3-7) months from relapse despite second-line chemotherapy..
Bisogno, G.
De Salvo, G.L.
Bergeron, C.
Gallego Melcón, S.
Merks, J.H.
Kelsey, A.
Martelli, H.
Minard-Colin, V.
Orbach, D.
Glosli, H.
Chisholm, J.
Casanova, M.
Zanetti, I.
Devalck, C.
Ben-Arush, M.
Mudry, P.
Ferman, S.
Jenney, M.
Ferrari, A.
European paediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group,
(2019). Vinorelbine and continuous low-dose cyclophosphamide as maintenance chemotherapy in patients with high-risk rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS 2005): a multicentre, open-label, randomised, phase 3 trial. Lancet oncol,
Vol.20
(11),
pp. 1566-1575.
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BACKGROUND: For more than three decades, standard treatment for rhabdomyosarcoma in Europe has included 6 months of chemotherapy. The European paediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) aimed to investigate whether prolonging treatment with maintenance chemotherapy would improve survival in patients with high-risk rhabdomyosarcoma. METHODS: RMS 2005 was a multicentre, open-label, randomised, controlled, phase 3 trial done at 102 hospitals in 14 countries. We included patients aged 6 months to 21 years with rhabdomyosarcoma who were considered to be at high risk of relapse: those with non-metastatic incompletely resected embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma occurring at unfavourable sites with unfavourable age (≥10 years) or tumour size (>5 cm), or both; those with any non-metastatic rhabdomyosarcoma with nodal involvement; and those with non-metastatic alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma but without nodal involvement. Patients in remission after standard treatment (nine cycles of ifosfamide, vincristine, dactinomycin with or without doxorubicin, and surgery or radiotherapy, or both) were randomly assigned (1:1) to stop treatment or continue maintenance chemotherapy (six cycles of intravenous vinorelbine 25 mg/m2 on days 1, 8, and 15, and daily oral cyclophosphamide 25 mg/m2, on days 1-28). Randomisation was done by use of a web-based system and was stratified (block size of four) by enrolling country and risk subgroup. Neither investigators nor patients were masked to treatment allocation. The primary outcome was disease-free survival in the intention-to-treat population. Secondary outcomes were overall survival and toxicity. This trial is registered with EudraCT, number 2005-000217-35, and ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00339118, and follow-up is ongoing. FINDINGS: Between April 20, 2006, and Dec 21, 2016, 371 patients were enrolled and randomly assigned to the two groups: 186 to stop treatment and 185 to receive maintenance chemotherapy. Median follow-up was 60·3 months (IQR 32·4-89·4). In the intention-to-treat population, 5-year disease-free survival was 77·6% (95% CI 70·6-83·2) with maintenance chemotherapy versus 69·8% (62·2-76·2) without maintenance chemotherapy (hazard ratio [HR] 0·68 [95% CI 0·45-1·02]; p=0·061), and 5-year overall survival was 86·5% (95% CI 80·2-90·9) with maintenance chemotherapy versus 73·7% (65·8-80·1) without (HR 0·52 [95% CI 0·32-0·86]; p=0·0097). Toxicity was manageable in patients who received maintenance chemotherapy: 136 (75%) of 181 patients had grade 3-4 leucopenia, 148 (82%) had grade 3-4 neutropenia, 19 (10%) had anaemia, two (1%) had thrombocytopenia, and 56 (31%) had an infection. One (1%) patient had a grade 4 non-haematological toxicity (neurotoxicity). Two treatment-related serious adverse events occurred: one case of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion and one of a severe steppage gait with limb pain, both of which resolved. INTERPRETATION: Adding maintenance chemotherapy seems to improve survival for patients with high-risk rhabdomyosarcoma. This approach will be the new standard of care for patients with high-risk rhabdomyosarcoma in future EpSSG trials. FUNDING: Fondazione Città della Speranza, Association Léon Berard Enfant Cancéreux, Clinical Research Hospital Program (French Ministry of Health), and Cancer Research UK..
George, S.L.
Izquierdo, E.
Campbell, J.
Koutroumanidou, E.
Proszek, P.
Jamal, S.
Hughes, D.
Yuan, L.
Marshall, L.V.
Carceller, F.
Chisholm, J.C.
Vaidya, S.
Mandeville, H.
Angelini, P.
Wasti, A.
Bexelius, T.
Thway, K.
Gatz, S.A.
Clarke, M.
Al-Lazikani, B.
Barone, G.
Anderson, J.
Tweddle, D.A.
Gonzalez, D.
Walker, B.A.
Barton, J.
Depani, S.
Eze, J.
Ahmed, S.W.
Moreno, L.
Pearson, A.
Shipley, J.
Jones, C.
Hargrave, D.
Jacques, T.S.
Hubank, M.
Chesler, L.
(2019). A tailored molecular profiling programme for children with cancer to identify clinically actionable genetic alterations. Eur j cancer,
Vol.121,
pp. 224-235.
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BACKGROUND: For children with cancer, the clinical integration of precision medicine to enable predictive biomarker-based therapeutic stratification is urgently needed. METHODS: We have developed a hybrid-capture next-generation sequencing (NGS) panel, specifically designed to detect genetic alterations in paediatric solid tumours, which gives reliable results from as little as 50 ng of DNA extracted from formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissue. In this study, we offered an NGS panel, with clinical reporting via a molecular tumour board for children with solid tumours. Furthermore, for a cohort of 12 patients, we used a circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA)-specific panel to sequence ctDNA from matched plasma samples and compared plasma and tumour findings. RESULTS: A total of 255 samples were submitted from 223 patients for the NGS panel. Using FFPE tissue, 82% of all submitted samples passed quality control for clinical reporting. At least one genetic alteration was detected in 70% of sequenced samples. The overall detection rate of clinically actionable alterations, defined by modified OncoKB criteria, for all sequenced samples was 51%. A total of 8 patients were sequenced at different stages of treatment. In 6 of these, there were differences in the genetic alterations detected between time points. Sequencing of matched ctDNA in a cohort of extracranial paediatric solid tumours also identified a high detection rate of somatic alterations in plasma. CONCLUSION: We demonstrate that tailored clinical molecular profiling of both tumour DNA and plasma-derived ctDNA is feasible for children with solid tumours. Furthermore, we show that a targeted NGS panel-based approach can identify actionable genetic alterations in a high proportion of patients..
Masters, E.
Weston, C.
Chisholm, J.
Soanes, L.
(2019). Role of the Advanced Nurse Practitioner Within Teenage and Young Adult Oncology What is the Impact on Patient and Staff Experience of a New Nurse Practitioner Role to a Teenage and Young Adult Service?. J adolesc young adult oncol,
Vol.8
(6),
pp. 668-673.
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Background: Advanced Practice is recognized by the Royal College of Nursing as a distinctive level of practice encompassing direct care provision, education, research, and management. Advanced Nurse Practitioners (ANP) are educated to MSc level and assessed as competent in their field. A teenage and young adult advanced nurse practitioner (TYA ANP) was introduced in 2015, one of few within the United Kingdom. This service evaluation assesses the impact of the new role on patient and staff experience. Aims/Objectives: To evaluate the impact of TYA ANP role on the experience of TYA oncology patients and the multidisciplinary team (MDT) and to assess perception of quality, safety, and efficiency of this role. Methodology: Retrospective data collection using Australia Nurse Practitioner Study Questionnaire to MDT and patients treated within the TYA unit since the ANP role was introduced. Descriptive statistics were used to analyze outcomes of the data collected. Results: Eighty-six percent of patients and 90% of staff felt they understood the ANP role. While 100% of patients felt the TYA ANP service was a success, met their needs, prescribed correctly, offered holistic and safe care, and had a positive impact on care. Furthermore, 86% of patients felt the TYA ANP service was easy to use and 90% of staff felt the TYA ANP service met the needs of the patients. Discussion/Conclusion: Overall patients and staff reported a positive experience particularly on correct diagnosis, safe prescribing, and having a positive impact on care. Areas for improvement include wider understanding of the role..
Vaarwerk, B.
Bisogno, G.
McHugh, K.
Brisse, H.J.
Morosi, C.
Corradini, N.
Jenney, M.
Orbach, D.
Chisholm, J.C.
Ferrari, A.
Zanetti, I.
De Salvo, G.L.
van Rijn, R.R.
Merks, J.H.
E pSSG Radiology Group,
(2019). Indeterminate Pulmonary Nodules at Diagnosis in Rhabdomyosarcoma: Are They Clinically Significant? A Report From the European Paediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group. J clin oncol,
Vol.37
(9),
pp. 723-730.
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PURPOSE: To evaluate the clinical significance of indeterminate pulmonary nodules at diagnosis (defined as ≤ 4 pulmonary nodules < 5 mm or 1 nodule measuring ≥ 5 and < 10 mm) in patients with pediatric rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS). PATIENTS AND METHODS: We selected patients with supposed nonmetastatic RMS treated in large pediatric oncology centers in the United Kingdom, France, Italy, and the Netherlands, who were enrolled in the European Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group (E pSSG) RMS 2005 study. Patients included in the current study received a diagnosis between September 2005 and December 2013, and had chest computed tomography scans available for review that were done at time of diagnosis. Local radiologists were asked to review the chest computed tomography scans for the presence of pulmonary nodules and to record their findings on a standardized case report form. In the E pSSG RMS 2005 Study, patients with indeterminate pulmonary nodules were treated identically to patients without pulmonary nodules, enabling us to compare event-free survival and overall survival between groups by log-rank test. RESULTS: In total, 316 patients were included; 67 patients (21.2%) had indeterminate pulmonary nodules on imaging and 249 patients (78.8%) had no pulmonary nodules evident at diagnosis. Median follow-up for survivors (n = 258) was 75.1 months; respective 5-year event-free survival and overall survival rates (95% CI) were 77.0% (64.8% to 85.5%) and 82.0% (69.7% to 89.6%) for patients with indeterminate nodules and 73.2% (67.1% to 78.3%) and 80.8% (75.1% to 85.3%) for patients without nodules at diagnosis ( P = .68 and .76, respectively). CONCLUSION: Our study demonstrated that indeterminate pulmonary nodules at diagnosis do not affect outcome in patients with otherwise localized RMS. There is no need to biopsy or upstage patients with RMS who have indeterminate pulmonary nodules at diagnosis..
Gatz, S.A.
Aladowicz, E.
Casanova, M.
Chisholm, J.C.
Kearns, P.R.
Fulda, S.
Geoerger, B.
Schäfer, B.W.
Shipley, J.M.
(2019). A Perspective on Polo-Like Kinase-1 Inhibition for the Treatment of Rhabdomyosarcomas. Front oncol,
Vol.9,
p. 1271.
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Rhabdomyosarcomas are the most common pediatric soft tissue sarcoma and are a major cause of death from cancer in young patients requiring new treatment options to improve outcomes. High-risk patients include those with metastatic or relapsed disease and tumors with PAX3-FOXO1 fusion genes that encode a potent transcription factor that drives tumourigenesis through transcriptional reprogramming. Polo-Like Kinase-1 (PLK1) is a serine/threonine kinase that phosphorylates a wide range of target substrates and alters their activity. PLK1 functions as a pleiotropic master regulator of mitosis and regulates DNA replication after stress. Taken together with high levels of expression that correlate with poor outcomes in many cancers, including rhabdomyosarcomas, it is an attractive therapeutic target. This is supported in rhabdomyosarcoma models by characterization of molecular and phenotypic effects of reducing and inhibiting PLK1, including changes to the PAX3-FOXO1 fusion protein. However, as tumor re-growth has been observed, combination strategies are required. Here we review preclinical evidence and consider biological rationale for PLK1 inhibition in combination with drugs that promote apoptosis, interfere with activity of PAX3-FOXO1 and are synergistic with microtubule-destabilizing drugs such as vincristine. The preclinical effects of low doses of the PLK1 inhibitor volasertib in combination with vincristine, which is widely used in rhabdomyosarcoma treatment, show particular promise in light of recent clinical data in the pediatric setting that support achievable volasertib doses predicted to be effective. Further development of novel therapeutic strategies including PLK1 inhibition may ultimately benefit young patients with rhabdomyosarcoma and other cancers..
Gallego, S.
Zanetti, I.
Orbach, D.
Ranchère, D.
Shipley, J.
Zin, A.
Bergeron, C.
de Salvo, G.L.
Chisholm, J.
Ferrari, A.
Jenney, M.
Mandeville, H.C.
Rogers, T.
Merks, J.H.
Mudry, P.
Glosli, H.
Milano, G.M.
Ferman, S.
Bisogno, G.
European Paediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG),
(2018). Fusion status in patients with lymph node-positive (N1) alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma is a powerful predictor of prognosis: Experience of the European Paediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG). Cancer,
Vol.124
(15),
pp. 3201-3209.
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BACKGROUND: Alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma (aRMS) with lymph node involvement (N1 classification) accounts for up to 10% of all cases of RMS. The prognosis is poor, and is comparable to that of distant metastatic disease. In the European Paediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) RMS2005 protocol, patients with a histologic diagnosis of aRMS/N1 received intensified chemotherapy with systematic locoregional treatment. METHODS: Patients with aRMS/N1 were enrolled prospectively after primary surgery/biopsy and fusion status was assessed in tumor samples. All patients received 9 cycles of induction chemotherapy and 6 months of maintenance therapy. Local treatment included radiotherapy to the primary site and lymph nodes with or without secondary surgical resection. RESULTS: A total of 103 patients were enrolled. The clinical characteristics of the patients were predominantly unfavorable: 90% had macroscopic residual disease after initial surgery/biopsy, 63% had locally invasive tumors, 77% had a tumor measuring >5 cm, and 81% had disease at unfavorable sites. Fusion genes involving forkhead box protein O1 (FOXO1) were detected in 56 of 84 patients. Events occurred in 52 patients: 43 developed disease recurrence, 7 had disease that was refractory to treatment, and 2 patients developed second neoplasms. On univariate analysis, unfavorable disease site, tumor invasiveness, Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study group III, and fusion-positive status correlated with worse prognosis. The 5-year event-free survival rate of patients with fusion-positive tumors was 43% compared with 74% in patients with fusion-negative tumors (P = .01). On multivariate analysis, fusion positivity and tumor invasiveness proved to be unfavorable prognostic markers. CONCLUSIONS: Fusion status and tumor invasiveness appear to have a strong impact on prognosis in patients with aRMS/N1. Fusion status will be used to stratify these patients in the next EpSSG RMS study, and treatment will be intensified in patients with fusion-positive tumors. Cancer 2018. © 2018 American Cancer Society..
Vaarwerk, B.
van der Lee, J.H.
Breunis, W.B.
Orbach, D.
Chisholm, J.C.
Cozic, N.
Jenney, M.
van Rijn, R.R.
McHugh, K.
Gallego, S.
Glosli, H.
Devalck, C.
Gaze, M.N.
Kelsey, A.
Bergeron, C.
Stevens, M.C.
Oberlin, O.
Minard-Colin, V.
Merks, J.H.
(2018). Prognostic relevance of early radiologic response to induction chemotherapy in pediatric rhabdomyosarcoma: A report from the International Society of Pediatric Oncology Malignant Mesenchymal Tumor 95 study. Cancer,
Vol.124
(5),
pp. 1016-1024.
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BACKGROUND: Early response to induction chemotherapy is used in current European guidelines to evaluate the efficacy of chemotherapy and subsequently to adapt treatment in pediatric patients with rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS). However, existing literature on the prognostic value of early radiologic response on survival is contradictory; here the prognostic value is analyzed with data from the International Society of Pediatric Oncology (SIOP) Malignant Mesenchymal Tumor 95 (MMT-95) study. METHODS: This study examined 432 Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study Grouping III (macroscopic residue) patients enrolled in the SIOP MMT-95 study with a response assessment after 3 courses of chemotherapy (a 2-dimensional assessment). Patients with progressive disease (PD) after 3 courses of chemotherapy were excluded (n = 7). Failure-free survival (FFS) and overall survival (OS), calculated with the Kaplan-Meier method, were compared for 3 groups (complete response [CR]/partial response [PR], objective response [OR], and no response [NR]). The prognostic impact of early response was assessed through the calculation of Cox proportional hazards. RESULTS: After 3 courses of chemotherapy, 85.2% of the patients had CR/PR, 8.6% had OR, and 6.3% had NR. For all patients, the 5-year FFS and OS rates were 60% (95% confidence interval [CI], 56%-65%) and 74% (95% CI, 70%-78%), respectively. However, a Cox proportional hazards regression analysis revealed no significant difference in FFS or OS between the response groups. The adjusted hazard ratios for an OR and NR were 1.09 (95% CI, 0.63-1.88) and 0.81 (95% CI, 0.39-1.67), respectively, for FFS and 0.91 (95% CI, 0.47-1.76) and 1.27 (95% CI, 0.61-2.64), respectively, for OS. CONCLUSIONS: No evidence was found for the idea that early radiologic response to chemotherapy is prognostic for survival for patients with RMS. Treatment adaptation based on early response (except for patients with PD) should, therefore, no longer be incorporated into future studies. Cancer 2018;124:1016-24. © 2017 American Cancer Society..
Chisholm, J.C.
Suvada, J.
Dunkel, I.J.
Casanova, M.
Zhang, W.
Ritchie, N.
Choi, Y.
Park, J.
Das Thakur, M.
Simko, S.
Wan Rachel Tam, N.
Ferrari, A.
(2018). BRIM-P: A phase I, open-label, multicenter, dose-escalation study of vemurafenib in pediatric patients with surgically incurable, BRAF mutation-positive melanoma. Pediatr blood cancer,
Vol.65
(5),
p. e26947.
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BACKGROUND: Vemurafenib, a selective inhibitor of BRAF kinase, is approved for the treatment of adult stage IIIc/IV BRAF V600 mutation-positive melanoma. We conducted a phase I, open-label, dose-escalation study in pediatric patients aged 12-17 years with this tumor type (NCT01519323). PROCEDURE: Patients received vemurafenib orally until disease progression. Dose escalation was conducted using a 3 + 3 design. Patients were monitored for dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs) during the first 28 days of treatment to determine the maximum tolerated dose (MTD). Safety/tolerability, tumor response, and pharmacokinetics were evaluated. RESULTS: Six patients were enrolled (720 mg twice daily [BID], n = 3; 960 mg BID [n = 3]). The study was terminated prematurely due to low enrollment. No DLTs were observed; thus, the MTD could not be determined. All patients experienced at least one adverse event (AE); the most common were diarrhea, headache, photosensitivity, rash, nausea, and fatigue. Three patients experienced serious AEs, one patient developed secondary cutaneous malignancies, and five patients died following disease progression. Mean steady-state plasma concentrations of vemurafenib following 720 mg and 960 mg BID dosing were similar or higher, respectively, than in adults. There were no objective responses. Median progression-free survival and overall survival were 4.4 months (95% confidence interval [CI] = 2.7-5.2) and 8.1 months (95% CI = 5.1-12.0), respectively. CONCLUSIONS: A recommended and effective dose of vemurafenib for patients aged 12-17 years with metastatic or unresectable melanoma was not identified. Extremely low enrollment in this trial highlights the importance of considering the inclusion of adolescents with adult cancers in adult trials..
Bisogno, G.
Jenney, M.
Bergeron, C.
Gallego Melcón, S.
Ferrari, A.
Oberlin, O.
Carli, M.
Stevens, M.
Kelsey, A.
De Paoli, A.
Gaze, M.N.
Martelli, H.
Devalck, C.
Merks, J.H.
Ben-Arush, M.
Glosli, H.
Chisholm, J.
Orbach, D.
Minard-Colin, V.
De Salvo, G.L.
European paediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group,
(2018). Addition of dose-intensified doxorubicin to standard chemotherapy for rhabdomyosarcoma (EpSSG RMS 2005): a multicentre, open-label, randomised controlled, phase 3 trial. Lancet oncol,
Vol.19
(8),
pp. 1061-1071.
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BACKGROUND: Rhabdomyosarcoma is an aggressive tumour that can develop in almost any part of the body. Doxorubicin is an effective drug against rhabdomyosarcoma, but its role in combination with an established multidrug regimen remains controversial. Therefore, we aimed to evaluate the possible benefit of early dose intensification with doxorubicin in patients with non-metastatic rhabdomyosarcoma. METHODS: We did a multicentre, open-label, randomised controlled, phase 3 trial involving 108 hospitals from 14 countries. We included patients older than 6 months but younger than 21 years with a pathologically proven diagnosis of rhabdomyosarcoma. We assigned each patient to a specific subgroup according to the EpSSG stratification system. Those with embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma incompletely resected and localised at unfavourable sites with or without nodal involvement, or those with alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma without nodal involvement were considered at high risk of relapse. These high-risk patients were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive either nine cycles of IVA (ifosfamide 3 g/m2 given as a 3-h intravenous infusion on days 1 and 2, vincristine 1·5 mg/m2 weekly during the first 7 weeks then only on day 1 of each cycle [given as a single intravenous injection], and dactinomycin 1·5 mg/m2 on day 1 given as a single intravenous injection) or four cycles of IVA with doxorubicin 30 mg/m2 given as a 4-h intravenous infusion on days 1 and 2 followed by five cycles of IVA. The interval between cycles was 3 weeks. Randomisation was done using a web-based system and was stratified (block sizes of four) by enrolling country and risk subgroup. Neither investigators nor patients were masked to treatment allocation. The primary endpoint was 3-year event-free survival assessed by the investigator at each centre in the intention-to-treat population. Patients who received at least one dose of study treatment were considered in the safety analysis. In agreement with the independent data monitoring committee, the study was closed to patient entry on Dec 16, 2013, after futility analysis. This trial is registered with EudraCT, number 2005-000217-35, and is currently in follow-up. FINDINGS: Between Oct 1, 2005, and Dec 16, 2013, 484 patients were randomly assigned to receive each chemotherapy regimen (242 in the IVA group and 242 in the IVA plus doxorubicin group). Median follow-up was 63·9 months (IQR 44·6-78·9). The 3-year event-free survival was 67·5% (95% CI 61·2-73·1) in the IVA plus doxorubicin group and 63·3% (56·8-69·0) in the IVA group (hazard ratio 0·87, 95% CI 0·65-1·16; p=0·33). Grade 3-4 leucopenia (232 [93%] of 249 patients in the IVA plus doxorubicin group vs 194 [85%] of 227 in the IVA group; p=0·0061), anaemia (195 [78%] vs 111 [49%]; p<0·0001), thrombocytopenia (168 [67%] vs 59 [26%]; p<0.0001), and gastrointestinal adverse events (78 [31%] vs 19 [8%]; p<0·0001) were significantly more common in the IVA plus doxorubicin group than in the IVA group. Grade 3-5 infections (198 [79%] vs 128 [56%]; p<0·0001) were also significantly more common in the IVA plus doxorubicin group than in the IVA group, in which one patient had grade 5 infection. Two treatment-related deaths were reported (one patient developed septic shock and one affected by Goldenhar syndrome developed intractable seizures) in the IVA plus doxorubicin group, both occurring after the first cycle of treatment, and none were reported in the IVA group. INTERPRETATIONS: The addition of dose-intensified doxorubicin to standard IVA chemotherapy did not show a significant improvement in the outcome of patients with high-risk non-metastatic rhabdomyosarcoma. Therefore, the IVA chemotherapy regimen should remain the standard of care for patients with localised rhabdomyosarcoma in Europe. FUNDING: Fondazione Città della Speranza, Italy, and the Association Léon Berard Enfant Cancéreux, France..
Moreno, L.
Casanova, M.
Chisholm, J.C.
Berlanga, P.
Chastagner, P.B.
Baruchel, S.
Amoroso, L.
Gallego Melcón, S.
Gerber, N.U.
Bisogno, G.
Fagioli, F.
Geoerger, B.
Glade Bender, J.L.
Aerts, I.
Bergeron, C.
Hingorani, P.
Elias, I.
Simcock, M.
Ferrara, S.
Le Bruchec, Y.
Slepetis, R.
Chen, N.
Vassal, G.
(2018). Phase I results of a phase I/II study of weekly nab-paclitaxel in paediatric patients with recurrent/refractory solid tumours: A collaboration with innovative therapies for children with cancer. Eur j cancer,
Vol.100,
pp. 27-34.
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BACKGROUND: nab-Paclitaxel has demonstrated efficacy in adults with solid tumours and preclinical activity in paediatric solid tumour models. Results from phase I of a phase I/II study in paediatric patients with recurrent/refractory solid tumours treated with nab-paclitaxel are reported. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Patients with recurrent/refractory extracranial solid tumours received nab-paclitaxel on days 1, 8 and 15 every 4 weeks at 120, 150, 180, 210, 240, or 270 mg/m2 (rolling-6 dose-escalation) to establish the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) and recommended phase II dose (RP2D). RESULTS: Sixty-four patients were treated. Dose-limiting toxicities were grade 3 dizziness at 120 mg/m2 and grade 4 neutropenia >7 days at 270 mg/m2. The most frequent grade 3/4 adverse events were haematologic, including neutropenia (36%), leukopenia (36%) and lymphopenia (25%). Although the MTD was not reached, 270 mg/m2 was declared non-tolerable due to grade 3/4 toxicities during cycles 1-2 (neutropenia, n = 5/7; skin toxicity, n = 2/7; peripheral neuropathy, n = 1/7). Of 58 efficacy-evaluable patients, complete response occurred in one patient (2%; Ewing sarcoma) and partial responses in four patients (7%; rhabdomyosarcoma, Ewing sarcoma, renal tumour with pulmonary metastases [high-grade, malignant] and sarcoma not otherwise specified); all responses occurred at ≥210 mg/m2. Thirteen patients (22%) had stable disease (5 lasting ≥16 weeks) per RECIST. CONCLUSIONS: nab-Paclitaxel 240 mg/m2 qw3/4 (nearly double the adult recommended monotherapy dose for this schedule in metastatic breast cancer) was selected as the RP2D based on the tolerability profile, pharmacokinetics and antitumour activity. Phase II is currently enrolling patients with recurrent/refractory neuroblastoma, rhabdomyosarcoma and Ewing sarcoma. CLINICALTRIALS.GOV: NCT01962103. EUDRACT: 2013-000144-26..
Ali, A.
Mohamed, M.
Chisholm, J.
Thway, K.
(2017). Solid-Pattern Desmoplastic Small Round Cell Tumor. Int j surg pathol,
Vol.25
(2),
pp. 158-161.
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Desmoplastic small round cell tumor (DSRCT) is an aggressive small round cell sarcoma that typically occurs intra-abdominally in adolescents and young adults, and is characterized by a recurrent t(11;22)(p13;q12) translocation leading to generation of the EWSR1-WT1 fusion gene, which codes for a chimeric protein with transcriptional regulatory activity. DSRCT has a characteristic histologic appearance of nests of uniform small cells within prominent fibroblastic stroma and immunohistochemically it shows multidirectional differentiation, with expression of epithelial, neural, and muscle markers. We illustrate a case of DSRCT that presented as a large intra-abdominal mass, which harbored EWSR1 rearrangement by fluorescence in situ hybridization and EWSR1-WT1 fusion transcripts by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), and which histologically had an entirely solid morphology, lacking evidence of desmoplastic stroma. This purely solid variant emphasizes that even when occurring at a typical location, DSRCT may be difficult to recognize when lacking nonclassical morphology. This is of clinical relevance, as DSRCT with this pattern could be misdiagnosed as Ewing sarcoma if RT-PCR is not performed, with resulting prognostic and therapeutic implications..
Ferrari, A.
Trama, A.
De Paoli, A.
Bergeron, C.
Merks, J.H.
Jenney, M.
Orbach, D.
Chisholm, J.C.
Gallego, S.
Glosli, H.
De Salvo, G.L.
Botta, L.
Gatta, G.
Bisogno, G.
Grp, R.W.
(2017). Access to clinical trials for adolescents with soft tissue sarcomas: Enrollment in European pediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) protocols. Pediatric blood & cancer,
Vol.64
(6).
full text
Ferrari, A.
Trama, A.
De Paoli, A.
Bergeron, C.
Merks, J.H.
Jenney, M.
Orbach, D.
Chisholm, J.C.
Gallego, S.
Glosli, H.
De Salvo, G.L.
Botta, L.
Gatta, G.
Bisogno, G.
RARECAREnet Working Group,
(2017). Access to clinical trials for adolescents with soft tissue sarcomas: Enrollment in European pediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) protocols. Pediatr blood cancer,
Vol.64
(6).
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BACKGROUND: Adolescents with cancer are enrolled in clinical trials at far lower rates than children. This report compares the number of adolescents (15-19-year-olds) and children (0-14-year-olds) enrolled in the protocols of the European pediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) with the number of cases expected to occur. METHODS: The observed-to-expected (O/E) ratio was detected in the EpSSG countries contributing most of the cases, that is, Italy, France, Spain, the Netherlands, United Kingdom, and Ireland. The observed cases included patients enrolled in any of the EpSSG protocols from October 2008 to October 2015, when all EpSSG protocols were open in these countries. The number of expected cases was calculated from the incidence rates estimated throughout the RARECAREnet database in the countries' population-based cancer registries. RESULTS: In the countries considered, 2,118 cases aged 0-19 years were enrolled in the EpSSG trials from 2008 to 2015: 82.8% were children and 17.2% were adolescents. The O/E ratio was 0.30 among patients 15-19 years old, as opposed to 0.64 for those 0-14 years old. The O/E ratio differed for the different subtypes: in adolescents, it was 0.64 and 0.18 for rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) and non-rhabdomyosarcoma soft tissue sarcomas (NRSTS), respectively; in children, it was 0.77 and 0.50, respectively. The O/E ratios differed across the countries considered. CONCLUSIONS: Adolescents were less well represented than children on the EpSSG protocols, with better enrolment for RMS than for NRSTS for all age groups..
Selfe, J.
Olmos, D.
Al-Saadi, R.
Thway, K.
Chisholm, J.
Kelsey, A.
Shipley, J.
(2017). Impact of fusion gene status versus histology on risk-stratification for rhabdomyosarcoma: Retrospective analyses of patients on UK trials. Pediatr blood cancer,
Vol.64
(7).
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BACKGROUND: Long-term toxicities from current treatments are a major issue in paediatric cancer. Previous studies, including our own, have shown prognostic value for the presence of PAX3/7-FOXO1 fusion genes in rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS). It is proposed to introduce PAX3/7-FOXO1 positivity as a component of risk stratification, rather than alveolar histology, in future clinical trials. PROCEDURE: To assess the potential impact of this reclassification, we have determined the changes to risk category assignment of 210 histologically reviewed patients treated in the UK from previous malignant mesenchymal tumour clinical trials for non-metastatic RMS based on identification of PAX3/7-FOXO1 by fluorescence in situ hybridisation and/or reverse transcription PCR. RESULTS: Using fusion gene positivity in the current risk stratification would reassign 7% of patients to different European Paediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) risk groups. The next European trial would have 80% power to detect differences in event-free survival of 15% over 10 years and 20% over 5 years in reassigned patients. This would decrease treatment for over a quarter of patients with alveolar histology tumours that lack PAX3/7-FOXO1. CONCLUSIONS: Fusion gene status used in stratification may result in significant numbers of patients benefitting from lower treatment-associated toxicity. Prospective testing to show this reassignment maintains current survival rates is now required and is shown to be feasible based on estimated recruitment to a future EpSSG trial. Together with developing novel therapeutic strategies for patients identified as higher risk, this may ultimately improve the outcome and quality of life for patients with RMS..
Chisholm, J.C.
Merks, J.H.
Casanova, M.
Bisogno, G.
Orbach, D.
Gentet, J.-.
Thomassin-Defachelles, A.-.
Chastagner, P.
Lowis, S.
Ronghe, M.
McHugh, K.
van Rijn, R.R.
Hilton, M.
Bachir, J.
Fürst-Recktenwald, S.
Geoerger, B.
Oberlin, O.
European paediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) and the European Innovative Therapies for Children with Cancer (ITCC) Consortium,
(2017). Open-label, multicentre, randomised, phase II study of the EpSSG and the ITCC evaluating the addition of bevacizumab to chemotherapy in childhood and adolescent patients with metastatic soft tissue sarcoma (the BERNIE study). Eur j cancer,
Vol.83,
pp. 177-184.
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full text
PURPOSE: We evaluated the role of bevacizumab as part of the multi-modality treatment of children and adolescents with metastatic rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) or non-rhabdomyosarcoma soft tissue sarcoma (NRSTS). PATIENTS AND METHODS: Eligible patients aged ≥6 months to <18 years were randomised to receive induction chemotherapy (four cycles of IVADo + five cycles of IVA, ±bevacizumab), surgery and/or radiotherapy, followed by maintenance chemotherapy (12 cycles of low-dose cyclophosphamide + vinorelbine, ±bevacizumab). The primary objective was event-free survival (EFS) evaluated by an independent radiological review committee. RESULTS: One hundred and fifty-four patients were randomised to receive chemotherapy alone (n = 80) or with bevacizumab (n = 74). At the data cut-off for the primary efficacy analysis, median EFS was 14.9 months (95% confidence interval [CI]: 10.8-35.9) with chemotherapy and 20.6 months (95% CI: 15.2-24.9) with bevacizumab plus chemotherapy (stratified hazard ratio [HR] = 0.93; 95% CI: 0.61-1.41; P = 0.72). The HR for EFS in patients with RMS (n = 103) was 1.24 (95% CI: 0.73-2.09) versus 0.64 (95% CI: 0.32-1.26) for those with NRSTS (n = 49). Objective response rate was 36.0% (95% CI: 25.2-47.9) with chemotherapy and 54.0% (95% CI: 40.9-66.6) with bevacizumab plus chemotherapy (difference of 18.0%; 95% CI: 0.6-35.3). There were no treatment-related deaths and no increased incidence of grade 3/4 toxicities with bevacizumab. CONCLUSION: The addition of bevacizumab to chemotherapy appeared tolerable in children and adolescents with metastatic RMS/NRSTS, but the primary end-point of EFS did not show statistically significant improvement. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT00643565..
Kieran, M.W.
Chisholm, J.
Casanova, M.
Brandes, A.A.
Aerts, I.
Bouffet, E.
Bailey, S.
Leary, S.
MacDonald, T.J.
Mechinaud, F.
Cohen, K.J.
Riccardi, R.
Mason, W.
Hargrave, D.
Kalambakas, S.
Deshpande, P.
Tai, F.
Hurh, E.
Geoerger, B.
(2017). Phase I study of oral sonidegib (LDE225) in pediatric brain and solid tumors and a phase II study in children and adults with relapsed medulloblastoma. Neuro oncol,
Vol.19
(11),
pp. 1542-1552.
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BACKGROUND: Sonidegib (LDE225) is a potent, selective hedgehog (Hh) inhibitor of Smoothened. This study explored the safety and pharmacokinetics of sonidegib in children with relapsed/recurrent tumors followed by a phase II trial in pediatric and adult patients with relapsed medulloblastoma (MB) to assess tumor response. METHODS: Pediatric patients aged ≥1 to <18 years were included according to a Bayesian design starting at 372 mg/m2 of continuous once daily oral sonidegib. Tumor samples were analyzed for Hh pathway activation using a validated 5-gene Hh signature assay. In phase II, pediatric patients were treated at the recommended phase II dose (RP2D) while adults received 800 mg daily. RESULTS: Sixteen adult (16 MB) and 60 pediatric (39 MB, 21 other) patients with an age range of 2-17 years were enrolled. The RP2D of sonidegib in pediatric patients was established at 680 mg/m2 once daily. The phase II study was closed prematurely. The 5-gene Hh signature assay showed that the 4 complete responders (2 pediatric and 2 adult) and 1 partial responder (adult) all had Hh-activated tumors, while 5 patients with activated Hh had either stable disease (n = 3) or progressive disease (n = 2). No patient with an Hh-negative signature (n = 50) responded. The safety profile for pediatric patients was generally consistent with the one established for adult patients; however, growth plate changes were observed in prepubertal pediatric patients. CONCLUSIONS: Sonidegib was well tolerated and the RP2D in pediatric patients was 680 mg/m2 once daily. Five of the 10 MB patients with activated Hh pathway demonstrated complete or partial responses..
Clement, S.C.
Schoot, R.A.
Slater, O.
Chisholm, J.C.
Abela, C.
Balm, A.J.
van den Brekel, M.W.
Breunis, W.B.
Chang, Y.C.
Davila Fajardo, R.
Dunaway, D.
Gajdosova, E.
Gaze, M.N.
Gupta, S.
Hartley, B.
Kremer, L.C.
van Lennep, M.
Levitt, G.A.
Mandeville, H.C.
Pieters, B.R.
Saeed, P.
Smeele, L.E.
Strackee, S.D.
Ronckers, C.M.
Caron, H.N.
van Santen, H.M.
Merks, J.H.
(2016). Endocrine disorders among long-term survivors of childhood head and neck rhabdomyosarcoma. Eur j cancer,
Vol.54,
pp. 1-10.
show abstract
PURPOSE: Head and neck rhabdomyosarcoma (HNRMS) survivors are at increased risk of developing pituitary dysfunction as an adverse event of radiotherapy. Our aim was to investigate the frequency and risk factors for pituitary dysfunction in these survivors. Secondly, we aimed to compare the prevalence of pituitary dysfunction between survivors treated with external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) and survivors treated with the ablative surgery, moulage technique after loading brachytherapy, and surgical reconstruction (AMORE) procedure. METHODS: Eighty HNRMS survivors treated in London (EBRT based) and Amsterdam (AMORE based: AMORE if feasible, otherwise EBRT) in the period 1990-2010 and alive ≥ 2 years post-treatment were evaluated. Survivors were evaluated in multidisciplinary late-effects clinics, with measurement of linear growth, determination of thyroid function, and growth hormone parameters. Additional data, such as baseline characteristics, anthropometrics, pubertal stage, and the results of additional laboratory investigations, were retrieved from patient charts. RESULTS: Pituitary dysfunction was diagnosed in 24 in 80 (30%) survivors, after a median follow-up time of 11 years. Median time to develop pituitary dysfunction after HNRMS diagnosis was 3.0 years. Risk factors were EBRT-based therapy (odds ratio [OR] 2.06; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.79-2.46), parameningeal tumour site (OR 1.83; 95% CI 1.60-2.17) and embryonal RMS histology (OR 1.49; 95% CI 1.19-1.90). CONCLUSIONS: Radiotherapy used for the treatment of HNRMS confers a significant risk of the development of pituitary dysfunction. AMORE-based treatment in children with HNRMS resulted in less pituitary dysfunction than treatment with conventional EBRT. Our findings underscore the importance of routine early endocrine follow-up in this specific population..
Veal, G.J.
Errington, J.
Sastry, J.
Chisholm, J.
Brock, P.
Morgenstern, D.
Pritchard-Jones, K.
Chowdhury, T.
(2016). Adaptive dosing of anticancer drugs in neonates: facilitating evidence-based dosing regimens. Cancer chemother pharmacol,
Vol.77
(4),
pp. 685-692.
show abstract
PURPOSE: Selection of the most appropriate chemotherapy dosing regimens for neonates treated within the first weeks of life represents a significant clinical dilemma. Due to a lack of information relating to the clinical pharmacology of anticancer drugs in these challenging patients, current dosing guidelines are based on limited scientific rationale. In the current study, we investigate the utilisation of therapeutic drug monitoring approaches in neonates with localised hepatoblastoma, Wilms' tumour and stage 4S neuroblastoma, being treated with widely used anticancer drugs. METHODS: Plasma concentrations of cisplatin, vincristine, etoposide and carboplatin were quantified in two neonates being treated within the first 3 weeks of life and in a 32-week preterm infant treated at a gestational age of 40 weeks. Therapeutic drug monitoring was carried out where appropriate, based on the pharmacokinetic data obtained in conjunction with clinical response and toxicity. RESULTS: Treatment of a child aged 2 weeks with a recommended cisplatin dose reduction for weight to 1.8 mg/kg resulted in achievement of unbound cisplatin plasma concentrations of 0.01-0.08 µg/mL, markedly lower than exposures previously reported in infants and older children. A dose increase to 2.7 mg/kg was implemented, leading to the achievement of levels more in-line with those previously reported. This increased dose level was well tolerated over six courses of treatment, resulting in a good response to cisplatin monotherapy and the patient remains in remission at 3.5 years. In contrast, a 50 % vincristine dose reduction for weight in a 3-week-old neonate resulted in plasma concentrations comparable to levels observed in older children, leading to successful treatment and continued remission at 2 years. In a third patient, etoposide and carboplatin clearance values normalised to body weight were comparable to those reported in older children, resulting in comparatively lower exposures following reduced dosing. CONCLUSIONS: The current report provides unique data on the pharmacokinetics of several widely used anticancer drugs in neonates treated within the first few weeks of life. The provision of these data acts as a useful reference point to support future dosing decisions to be made by clinicians in the treatment of these challenging patients..
Herd, F.
Bate, J.
Chisholm, J.
Johnson, E.
Phillips, B.
(2016). Variation in practice remains in the UK management of paediatric febrile neutropenia. Arch dis child,
Vol.101
(4),
pp. 410-411.
Carceller, F.
Bautista, F.J.
Fowkes, L.A.
Marshall, L.V.
Sirvent, S.I.
Chisholm, J.C.
Pearson, A.D.
Koh, D.-.
Moreno, L.
(2016). Response Assessment in Paediatric Phase I Trials According to RECIST Guidelines: Survival Outcomes, Patterns of Progression and Relevance of Changes in Tumour Measurements. Pediatr blood cancer,
Vol.63
(8),
pp. 1400-1406.
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INTRODUCTION: RECIST guidelines constitute the reference for radiological response assessment in most paediatric trials of anticancer agents. However, these criteria have not been validated in children. We evaluated the outcomes and patterns of progression of children/adolescents enrolled in phase I trials in two paediatric drug development units. METHODS: Patients aged ≤21 assessed with RECIST (v1.0 or v1.1) were eligible. Clinico-radiological data were analysed using Mann-Whitney U and log-rank tests to correlate response categories and sum of longest diameters (SLD) with time-to-event variables and overall survival (OS). RESULTS: Sixty-one patients (71 enrolments) were evaluated; median age: 12.7 years (range, 3.1-20.9). Overall, 7% achieved complete/partial response (n = 5) and 31% disease stabilisation (n = 22). Median (95% CI) OS (in months) was 29.1 (27.6-30.6) with complete/partial response, 8.9 (2.0-15.8) with stable disease and 2.8 (2.3-3.3) with disease progression (P < 0.001); 32.6% patients with measurable disease presented exclusive progression of existing non-target lesions and/or new lesions. The change in SLD at best response showed a linear correlation with duration of response (r = -0.605; P = 0.004) and time on trial (r = -0.61; P = 0.003), but the change in SLD at progression did not correlate with time to progression (r = -0.219; P = 0.206). CONCLUSIONS: Response assessment according to RECIST correlated with OS in children/adolescents treated on phase I trials. The reduction in SLD at best response correlated with more prolonged responses. Tumour size did not constitute an optimal method to assess disease progression in one third of patients with measurable disease. Further refinement of current response assessment guidelines will enable the development of paediatric-specific radiological criteria..
Phillips, R.S.
Bhuller, K.
Sung, L.
Ammann, R.A.
Tissing, W.J.
Lehrnbecher, T.
Stewart, L.A.
PICNICC Collaboration,
(2016). Risk stratification in febrile neutropenic episodes in adolescent/young adult patients with cancer. Eur j cancer,
Vol.64,
pp. 101-106.
show abstract
BACKGROUND: Risk-stratified management of febrile neutropenia (FN) allows intensive management of high-risk cases and early discharge of low-risk cases. Most risk stratification systems predicting severe infection from admission variables have been derived from childhood or adult populations and consequently their value in adolescents/young adults (AYA) may vary. Our objective was to determine their value in this population. METHODS: Data from the 'predicting infectious complications in children with cancer' (PICNICC) individual participant data collaboration were used to evaluate six previously described risk stratification schema in the AYA population. Complete case analyses were undertaken for five 'paediatric' rules, with imputation for specific missing variables of the 'adult' rule. The predictive performance of the rules or the outcome microbiologically defined infection (sensitivity, specificity and predictive values) were compared. RESULTS: Among the 5,127 episodes of FN in 3,504 patients in the PICNICC collaboration data set, 603 episodes of FN from 478 patients in 20 studies were of patients 16-25 years old. The six rules demonstrated variable sensitivity (33-96%) and specificity (13-83%). Their overall discriminatory ability was poor (area under the receiver operator curve estimates 0.514-0.593). CONCLUSIONS: Both paediatric and adult FN risk stratification schema perform poorly in AYA with cancer. An alternative rule or clinical recognition of their limitations is required..
Phillips, R.S.
Sung, L.
Ammann, R.A.
Riley, R.D.
Castagnola, E.
Haeusler, G.M.
Klaassen, R.
Tissing, W.J.
Lehrnbecher, T.
Chisholm, J.
Hakim, H.
Ranasinghe, N.
Paesmans, M.
Hann, I.M.
Stewart, L.A.
PICNICC Collaboration,
(2016). Predicting microbiologically defined infection in febrile neutropenic episodes in children: global individual participant data multivariable meta-analysis. Br j cancer,
Vol.114
(6),
pp. 623-630.
show abstract
BACKGROUND: Risk-stratified management of fever with neutropenia (FN), allows intensive management of high-risk cases and early discharge of low-risk cases. No single, internationally validated, prediction model of the risk of adverse outcomes exists for children and young people. An individual patient data (IPD) meta-analysis was undertaken to devise one. METHODS: The 'Predicting Infectious Complications in Children with Cancer' (PICNICC) collaboration was formed by parent representatives, international clinical and methodological experts. Univariable and multivariable analyses, using random effects logistic regression, were undertaken to derive and internally validate a risk-prediction model for outcomes of episodes of FN based on clinical and laboratory data at presentation. RESULTS: Data came from 22 different study groups from 15 countries, of 5127 episodes of FN in 3504 patients. There were 1070 episodes in 616 patients from seven studies available for multivariable analysis. Univariable analyses showed associations with microbiologically defined infection (MDI) in many items, including higher temperature, lower white cell counts and acute myeloid leukaemia, but not age. Patients with osteosarcoma/Ewings sarcoma and those with more severe mucositis were associated with a decreased risk of MDI. The predictive model included: malignancy type, temperature, clinically 'severely unwell', haemoglobin, white cell count and absolute monocyte count. It showed moderate discrimination (AUROC 0.723, 95% confidence interval 0.711-0.759) and good calibration (calibration slope 0.95). The model was robust to bootstrap and cross-validation sensitivity analyses. CONCLUSIONS: This new prediction model for risk of MDI appears accurate. It requires prospective studies assessing implementation to assist clinicians and parents/patients in individualised decision making..
Thway, K.
Chisholm, J.
Hayes, A.
Swansbury, J.
Fisher, C.
(2015). Pediatric low-grade fibromyxoid sarcoma mimicking ossifying fibromyxoid tumor: adding to the diagnostic spectrum of soft tissue tumors with a bony shell. Hum pathol,
Vol.46
(3),
pp. 461-466.
show abstract
We describe a case of superficial low-grade fibromyxoid sarcoma (LGFMS) in a 12-year-old boy, confirmed by the detection of FUS-CREB3L2 fusion transcripts by reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction and FUS rearrangement with fluorescence in situ hybridization, which had morphological features similar to ossifying fibromyxoid tumor (OFMT), including an almost complete rim of mature, metaplastic bone. LGFMS and OFMT can appear morphologically similar, with bland ovoid cells within a fibrous to myxoid matrix. Both can occur superficially; and whereas MUC4 immunoreactivity is characteristic of LGFMS, this can also be seen in some OFMTs. As the morphological spectrum of LGFMS is wide, we highlight the potential for diagnostic confusion with OFMT, which is clinically pertinent as most OFMTs behave in a benign manner whereas LGFMS is a malignant neoplasm with a propensity for local recurrence and a significant metastatic rate..
Schoot, R.A.
Slater, O.
Ronckers, C.M.
Zwinderman, A.H.
Balm, A.J.
Hartley, B.
van den Brekel, M.W.
Gupta, S.
Saeed, P.
Gajdosova, E.
Pieters, B.R.
Gaze, M.N.
Mandeville, H.C.
Fajardo, R.D.
Chang, Y.C.
Gains, J.E.
Strackee, S.D.
Dunaway, D.
Abela, C.
Mason, C.
Smeele, L.E.
Chisholm, J.C.
Levitt, G.A.
Kremer, L.C.
Grootenhuis, M.A.
Maurice-Stam, H.
Stiller, C.A.
Hammond, P.
Caron, H.N.
Merks, J.H.
(2015). Adverse events of local treatment in long-term head and neck rhabdomyosarcoma survivors after external beam radiotherapy or AMORE treatment. European journal of cancer,
Vol.51
(11),
pp. 1424-1434.
Norman, G.
Fayter, D.
Lewis-Light, K.
Chisholm, J.
McHugh, K.
Levine, D.
Jenney, M.
Mandeville, H.
Gatz, S.
Phillips, B.
(2015). An emerging evidence base for PET-CT in the management of childhood rhabdomyosarcoma: systematic review. Bmj open,
Vol.5
(1),
p. e006030.
show abstract
INTRODUCTION: Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) management depends on risk stratification at diagnosis and treatment response. Assessment methods include CT, MRI, bone scintigraphy, histological analysis and bone marrow biopsy. Advanced functional imaging (FI) has potential to improve staging accuracy and management strategies. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: We conducted a systematic review (PROSPERO 2013:CRD42013006128) of diagnostic accuracy and clinical effectiveness of FI in histologically proven paediatric RMS. PRISMA guidance was followed. We searched 10 databases to November 2013. Studies with ≥10 patients with RMS which compared positron emission tomography (PET), PET-CT or diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) MRI to conventional imaging at any treatment stage were included. Study quality was assessed. Limited, heterogeneous effectiveness data required narrative synthesis, illustrated by plotting sensitivity and specificity in receiver operating curve (ROC) space. RESULTS: Eight studies (six PET-CT, two PET) with 272 RMS patients in total were included. No DWI-MRI studies met inclusion criteria. Pooled estimates were not calculated due to sparseness of data. Limited evidence indicated initial PET-CT results were predictive of survival. PET-CT changed management of 7/40 patients. Nodal involvement PET-CT: sensitivity ranged from 80% to 100%; specificity from 89% to 100%. Distant metastatic involvement: PET-CT sensitivity ranged from 95% to 100%; specificity from 80% to100%. Data on metastases in different sites were sparse. Limited data were found on outcome prediction by PET-CT response. DISSEMINATION AND ETHICS: PET/PET-CT may increase initial staging accuracy in paediatric RMS, specifically in the detection of nodal involvement and distant metastatic spread. There is a need to further assess PET-CT for this population, ideally in a representative, unbiased and transparently selected cohort of patients..
Gatz, S.A.
Thway, K.
Mandeville, H.
Kerawala, C.
MacVicar, D.
Chisholm, J.
(2015). Chemotherapy responsiveness in a patient with multiply relapsed ameloblastic fibro-odontosarcoma of the maxilla. Pediatr blood cancer,
Vol.62
(11),
pp. 2029-2032.
show abstract
full text
Ameloblastic fibro-odontosarcoma (AFOS) is an extremely rare malignant odontogenic tumor. Complete surgical excision is the treatment of choice. Deaths due to disease recurrence and/or progression are documented. Here, we report the case of a 15-year-old female with multiple recurrent AFOS. She responded to chemotherapy with ifosfamide and doxorubicin consolidated by stereotactic reirradiation using cyberknife and remained in complete remission 14 months from the end of reirradiation therapy. Chemotherapy with ifosfamide and doxorubicin should be considered in advanced cases of AFOS..
Morgenstern, D.A.
Hargrave, D.
Marshall, L.V.
Gatz, S.A.
Barone, G.
Crowe, T.
Pritchard-Jones, K.
Zacharoulis, S.
Lancaster, D.L.
Vaidya, S.J.
Chisholm, J.C.
Pearson, A.D.
Moreno, L.
(2014). Toxicity and outcome of children and adolescents participating in phase I/II trials of novel anticancer drugs: the Royal Marsden experience. J pediatr hematol oncol,
Vol.36
(3),
pp. 218-223.
show abstract
Early phase trials are crucial in developing new therapies for poor prognosis childhood malignancies. Outcomes and toxicities of children treated on phase I/II trials at the Royal Marsden, one of the largest pediatric oncology early phase trial units in Europe, were examined to provide a baseline dataset and generate hypotheses. All patients recruited over a 10-year period to December 2011 were included. Variables including baseline characteristics, time on study, survival, toxicities, and admissions were collected. Seventy-two patients were recruited to 21 trials (5 phase I, 16 phase II; overall 12 involved molecularly targeted agents). Median age at consent was 12.4 years. Dose-limiting toxicities were rare in phase I trial participants (2 of 15 evaluable patients, 13%); the most common reason for leaving trials was disease progression (76%), rather than drug toxicity (1.7%). Median time on trial was 1.3 months (phase I patients) and 3.3 months (phase II). Early phase trials in children are safe and unexpected toxic side effects are infrequent. Patients and their families are willing to travel to access novel therapies, although the overall prognosis for these individuals is poor. Continued expansion of the portfolio is needed ultimately to improve the outcomes for those with resistant disease..
Calton, E.A.
Le Doare, K.
Appleby, G.
Chisholm, J.C.
Sharland, M.
Ladhani, S.N.
Participants, C.A.
(2014). Invasive Bacterial and Fungal Infections in Paediatric Patients with Cancer: Incidence, Risk Factors, Aetiology and Outcomes in aUK Regional Cohort 2009-2011. Pediatric blood & cancer,
Vol.61
(7),
pp. 1239-1245.
Schoot, R.A.
Slater, O.
Ronckers, C.M.
Zwinderman, A.H.
Balm, A.J.
Hartley, B.
van de Brekel, M.
Gupta, S.
Saeed, P.
Gajdosova, E.
Pieters, B.R.
Gaze, M.N.
Mandeville, H.C.
Fajardo, R.D.
Chang, Y.-.
Strackee, S.D.
Dunaway, D.
Abela, C.
Mason, C.
Smeele, L.E.
Chisholm, J.C.
Levitt, G.
Kremer, L.C.
Grootenhuis, M.A.
Maurice-Stam, H.
Stiller, C.A.
Hammond, P.
Caron, H.N.
Merks, J.H.
(2014). ADVERSE EVENTS OF LOCAL TREATMENT IN HEAD AND NECK RHABDOMYOSARCOMA SURVIVORS AFTER EXTERNAL BEAM RADIOTHERAPY OR AMORE TREATMENT. Pediatric blood & cancer,
Vol.61,
pp. S311-S311.
Norman, G.
Fayter, D.
Light-Lewis, K.
Chisholm, J.
Mandeville, H.
Gatz, S.
Levine, D.
Jenney, M.
McHugh, K.
Phillips, B.
(2014). THE ROLE OF PET-CT IN THE MANAGEMENT OF CHILDHOOD RHABDOMYOSARCOMA: SYSTEMATIC REVIEW. Pediatric blood & cancer,
Vol.61,
pp. S133-S133.
Bisogno, G.
De Salvo, G.L.
Bergeron, C.
Carli, M.
Ferrari, A.
Jenney, M.
Mercks, H.
Kelsey, A.
Gallego, S.
Chisholm, J.
Orbach, D.
Martelli, H.
Oberlin, O.
Stevens, M.
(2014). THE ROLE OF DOXORUBICIN IN THE TREATMENT OF RHABDOMYOSARCOMA: PRELIMINARY RESULTS FROM THE EPSSG RMS2005 RANDOMIZED TRIAL. Pediatric blood & cancer,
Vol.61,
pp. S133-S134.
Dommett, R.
Chisholm, J.
Turner, M.
Bajaj-Elliott, M.
Klein, N.J.
(2013). Mannose-binding lectin genotype influences frequency and duration of infectious complications in children with malignancy. J pediatr hematol oncol,
Vol.35
(1),
pp. 69-75.
show abstract
Children with cancer receiving identical treatment differ in their experience of infection, suggesting that variations in immunity may influence susceptibility to infection. Studies of the influence of mannose-binding lectin (MBL), an important component of the innate immune system, in children with febrile neutropenia (FN) have yielded conflicting results. We examined the role of MBL in infection susceptibility in the largest cohort of children with cancer reported to date. MBL levels were measured and genotyping performed on children (≤16 y) receiving chemotherapy for cancer in London, UK. Clinical data from FN episodes were recorded prospectively. MBL status was assessed in 269 children; 513 episodes of FN were captured from 211 patients. Patients with MBL2 polymorphisms experienced more FN episodes than wildtype genotype (median 2 vs. 1, respectively; P = 0.074) and more episodes with documented infection (P = 0.045). Patients experiencing multiple FN episodes had lower MBL levels (P = 0.036). MBL genotype influenced duration of episode in some groups: high-risk MBL-deficient patients spent up to 5 nights longer/episode in hospital than equivalent wildtypes. These results indicate that MBL deficiency influences both susceptibility to and outcome of FN episodes and may be most important in those patients at higher risk of complications of FN..
Bate, J.
Gibson, F.
Selwood, K.
Skinner, R.
Phillips, B.
Chisholm, J.C.
(2013). A reaudit of current febrile neutropenia practice in UK paediatric oncology centres prior to implementation of NICE guidance. Archives of disease in childhood,
Vol.98
(4),
pp. 315-316.
Bate, J.
Gibson, F.
Johnson, E.
Selwood, K.
Skinner, R.
Chisholm, J.
(2013). Neutropenic sepsis: prevention and management of neutropenic sepsis in cancer patients (NICE Clinical Guideline CG151). Archives of disease in childhood-education and practice edition,
Vol.98
(2),
pp. 73-75.
Gibson, F.
Chisholm, J.
Blandford, E.
Donachie, P.
Hartley, J.
Lane, S.
Selwood, K.
Skinner, R.
Phillips, R.
CCLG Supportive Care Group,
(2013). Developing a national 'low risk' febrile neutropenia framework for use in children and young people's cancer care. Support care cancer,
Vol.21
(5),
pp. 1241-1251.
show abstract
PURPOSE: A Delphi study was undertaken to develop a framework guidance that would rationalise and standardise the care of children with febrile neutropenia (FNP) across the UK. METHODS: A mailed Delphi survey was undertaken with health professionals working in children's cancer units. The survey employed two rounds of feedback on 22 practice statements drawn from a systematic review of clinical evidence. Consensus was assumed for any statement where 80+ % of respondents indicated that they "agreed" or "strongly agreed". RESULTS: Consensus was reached on 21 of the 22 practice statements in round 1 that were categorised into six areas: definition of fever and neutropenia, initial management and choice of antibiotic, defining low-risk patients, strategy in low-risk patients and alternative approaches. Consensus could not be reached on whether patients needed to be afebrile to be suitable for discharge and the required length of outpatient antibiotic treatment. CONCLUSIONS: A Delphi survey allowed the successful development of a national framework for identification and management of children with FNP. The use of an existing well-functioning professional network was key in this project's success..
Rousseau, R.
Geoerger, B.
Chisholm, J.
Casanova, M.
Merks, J.
Monnet, A.
Dhalluin, C.
Oberlin, O.
(2013). THE BERNIE STUDY: A PHASE II STUDY EVALUATING ADDITION OF BEVACIZUMAB TO CHEMOTHERAPY IN CHILDREN AND ADOLESCENTS WITH METASTATIC RHABDOMYOSARCOMA AND NON-RHABDOMYOSARCOMA SOFT TISSUE SARCOMA. Pediatric blood & cancer,
Vol.60,
pp. 92-92.
Orbach, D.
Mosseri, V.
Stevens, M.
Rey, A.
Gallelo, S.
Kelsey, A.
Christine, D.
Brenann, B.
Van Noesel, M.
Gaze, M.
Minard-Collin, V.
Merks, H.
Bergeron, C.
Rechnitzer, C.
Jenney, M.
Chisholm, J.
Scopinaro, M.
Martelli, H.
Oberlin, O.
(2013). NON PARAMENINGEAL HEAD-AND-NECK RHABDOMYOSARCOMA IN CHILDREN AND ADOLESCENT: A VERY LONG TERM EXPERIENCE OF THE INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY OF PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY MALIGNANT MESENCHYMAL TUMOR (SIOP-MMT) COMMITTEE. Pediatric blood & cancer,
Vol.60,
pp. 36-36.
Schoot, R.A.
McHugh, K.
van Rijn, R.R.
Kremer, L.C.
Chisholm, J.C.
Caron, H.N.
Merks, J.H.
(2013). Response assessment in pediatric rhabdomyosarcoma: can response evaluation criteria in solid tumors replace three-dimensional volume assessments?. Radiology,
Vol.269
(3),
pp. 870-878.
show abstract
PURPOSE: To investigate (a) interobserver variability for three-dimensional (3D) (based on European Pediatric Soft-Tissue Sarcoma Study Group [EpSSG] guidelines) and one-dimensional (1D) (based on Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors [RECIST]) response assessments, (b) intermethod variability between EpSSG guidelines and RECIST, and (c) clinically relevant consequences of interobserver and intermethod variability in pediatric patients with rhabdomyosarcoma. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The study was approved by the Academic Medical Center Ethics Committee and the Great Ormond Street Hospital Ethics Committee; both committees waived the requirement for informed consent because of the retrospective nature of the study. Data were analyzed from 124 consecutive male and female children and young adults (age range, 1-18 years) with rhabdomyosarcoma at two institutions (1999-2009) with relevant imaging studies. Tumors were measured by two radiologists (1D and 3D measurements) at diagnosis and after induction chemotherapy. Interobserver variability was analyzed by using three different tests, and the intermethod variation was calculated. RESULTS: Sixty-four eligible patients were included (median age, 4.6 years). Agreement between observers for EpSSG guidelines and RECIST was moderate (κ = 0.565 and 0.592, respectively); interobserver variation led to different potential treatment decisions in nine (14%) and 11 (17%) of the 64 patients, respectively. Comparison of EpSSG guidelines and RECIST resulted in 13 discrepant response classifications (20%), which were equally distributed (under- and overestimation of response) and led to consequences for treatment choice in five patients (8%). CONCLUSION: EpSSG guidelines and RECIST are not interchangeable; neither technique demonstrated superiority in this study. These findings should be taken into account in future study protocol design. Online supplemental material is available for this article..
Williamson, D.
Missiaglia, E.
Chisholm, J.
Shipley, J.
(2012). Inconvenience of convenience cohorts--letter. Cancer epidemiol biomarkers prev,
Vol.21
(8),
p. 1388.
Chisholm, J.
Phillips, P.
Sutton, A.
Riley, R.
Picton, S.
Stewart, L.
(2012). Predicting Infectious Complications in Neutropenic Children and young people with Cancer Optimizing risk predictive strategies in febrile neutropenic episodes in children and young people undergoing treatment for malignant disease. Systematic reviews in pharmacy,
.
Bate, J.
Chisholm, J.
Skinner, R.
Breuer, J.
Ramsay, M.
Wheatley, K.
Hambleton, S.
Heath, P.T.
(2012). Varicella post-exposure prophylaxis in children with cancer: urgent need for a randomised controlled trial. Archives of disease in childhood,
Vol.97
(9),
pp. 853-854.
Phillips, R.S.
Sutton, A.J.
Riley, R.D.
Chisholm, J.C.
Picton, S.V.
Stewart, L.A.
PICNICC Collaboration,
(2012). Predicting infectious complications in neutropenic children and young people with cancer (IPD protocol). Syst rev,
Vol.1,
p. 8.
show abstract
BACKGROUND: A common and potentially life-threatening complication of the treatment of childhood cancer is infection, which frequently presents as fever with neutropenia. The standard management of such episodes is the extensive use of intravenous antibiotics, and though it produces excellent survival rates of over 95%, it greatly inconveniences the three-fourths of patients who do not require such aggressive treatment. There have been a number of studies which have aimed to develop risk prediction models to stratify treatment. Individual participant data (IPD) meta-analysis in therapeutic studies has been developed to improve the precision and reliability of answers to questions of treatment effect and recently have been suggested to be used to answer questions regarding prognosis and diagnosis to gain greater power from the frequently small individual studies. DESIGN: In the IPD protocol, we will collect and synthesise IPD from multiple studies and examine the outcomes of episodes of febrile neutropenia as a consequence of their treatment for malignant disease. We will develop and evaluate a risk stratification model using hierarchical regression models to stratify patients by their risk of experiencing adverse outcomes during an episode. We will also explore specific practical and methodological issues regarding adaptation of established techniques of IPD meta-analysis of interventions for use in synthesising evidence derived from IPD from multiple studies for use in predictive modelling contexts. DISCUSSION: Our aim in using this model is to define a group of individuals at low risk for febrile neutropenia who might be treated with reduced intensity or duration of antibiotic therapy and so reduce the inconvenience and cost of these episodes, as well as to define a group of patients at very high risk of complications who could be subject to more intensive therapies. The project will also help develop methods of IPD predictive modelling for use in future studies of risk prediction..
Missiaglia, E.
Williamson, D.
Chisholm, J.
Wirapati, P.
Pierron, G.
Petel, F.
Concordet, J.-.
Thway, K.
Oberlin, O.
Pritchard-Jones, K.
Delattre, O.
Delorenzi, M.
Shipley, J.
(2012). PAX3/FOXO1 fusion gene status is the key prognostic molecular marker in rhabdomyosarcoma and significantly improves current risk stratification. J clin oncol,
Vol.30
(14),
pp. 1670-1677.
show abstract
PURPOSE: To improve the risk stratification of patients with rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) through the use of clinical and molecular biologic data. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Two independent data sets of gene-expression profiling for 124 and 101 patients with RMS were used to derive prognostic gene signatures by using a meta-analysis. These and a previously published metagene signature were evaluated by using cross validation analyses. A combined clinical and molecular risk-stratification scheme that incorporated the PAX3/FOXO1 fusion gene status was derived from 287 patients with RMS and evaluated. RESULTS: We showed that our prognostic gene-expression signature and the one previously published performed well with reproducible and significant effects. However, their effect was reduced when cross validated or tested in independent data and did not add new prognostic information over the fusion gene status, which is simpler to assay. Among nonmetastatic patients, patients who were PAX3/FOXO1 positive had a significantly poorer outcome compared with both alveolar-negative and PAX7/FOXO1-positive patients. Furthermore, a new clinicomolecular risk score that incorporated fusion gene status (negative and PAX3/FOXO1 and PAX7/FOXO1 positive), Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study TNM stage, and age showed a significant increase in performance over the current risk-stratification scheme. CONCLUSION: Gene signatures can improve current stratification of patients with RMS but will require complex assays to be developed and extensive validation before clinical application. A significant majority of their prognostic value was encapsulated by the fusion gene status. A continuous risk score derived from the combination of clinical parameters with the presence or absence of PAX3/FOXO1 represents a robust approach to improving current risk-adapted therapy for RMS..
Missiaglia, E.
Williamson, D.
Chisholm, J.
Wirapati, P.
Pierron, G.
Petel, F.
Concordet, J.-.
Thway, K.
Oberlin, O.
Pritchard-Jones, K.
Delattre, O.
Delorenzi, M.
Shipley, J.
(2012). Questionable Universal Validity of PAX3/FOXO1 Fusion Gene Status As Molecular Marker for Improvement of Risk Stratification in Rhabdomyosarcoma Therapy Reply. Journal of clinical oncology,
Vol.30
(32),
pp. 4040-4041.
George, S.L.
Broster, S.
Chisholm, J.C.
Brock, P.
(2012). Docetaxel in the treatment of children with refractory or relapsed hepatoblastoma. J pediatr hematol oncol,
Vol.34
(7),
pp. e295-e297.
show abstract
We report on the use of single-agent docetaxel (100 mg/m(2) in children >10 kg, 3.3 mg/kg in children <10 kg), given as a 1-hour infusion at 21-day intervals in 5 children with relapsed or refractory hepatoblastoma. One patient achieved complete remission of pulmonary metastases after 2 courses of docetaxel and remains well 10 years later, after completion of 13 courses of docetaxel and whole-lung radiotherapy. One patient showed a partial response to docetaxel based on α-fetoprotein measurements. Docetaxel shows some activity in progressive hepatoblastoma in this small case series and is a potential drug for future study in this disease..
Lehrnbecher, T.
Aplenc, R.
Rivas Pereira, F.
Lassaletta, A.
Caselli, D.
Kowalczyk, J.
Chisholm, J.
Sung, L.
Grp, S.I.
(2012). Variations in non-pharmacological anti-infective measures in childhood leukemia - results of an international survey. Haematologica-the hematology journal,
Vol.97
(10),
pp. 1548-1552.
Morgenstern, D.
Hargrave, D.
Marshall, L.V.
Gatz, S.A.
Barone, G.
Crowe, T.
Pritchard-Jones, K.
Zacharoulis, S.
Lancaster, D.L.
Vaidya, S.J.
Chisholm, J.C.
Pearson, A.
Moreno, L.
(2012). EARLY PHASE CLINICAL TRIALS IN PAEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY THE ROYAL MARSDEN EXPERIENCE. Pediatric blood & cancer,
Vol.59
(6),
pp. 1091-1091.
Geoerger, B.
Aerts, I.
Casanova, M.
Chisholm, J.
Hargrave, D.
Leary, S.E.
Ashley, D.
Bouffet, E.
MacDonald, T.
Di Giannatale, A.
Hurh, E.
Dey, J.
Kalambakas, S.
Teasdale, T.
Kieran, M.
(2012). UPDATED RESULTS FROM A PHASE I STUDY OF LDE225, A SMOOTHENED ANTAGONIST, IN PEDIATRIC PATIENTS WITH RECURRENT MEDULLOBLASTOMA OR OTHER SOLID TUMORS. Pediatric blood & cancer,
Vol.59
(6),
pp. 980-980.
Patel, S.R.
Bate, J.
Mathews, R.
Chisholm, J.
Heath, P.T.
(2012). VACCINATION STATUS OF CHILDREN WITH CANCER AFTER COMPLETION OF STANDARD-DOSE CHEMOTHERAPY AND AFTER HAEMATOPOIETIC STEM CELL TRANSPLANT. Pediatric blood & cancer,
Vol.59
(6),
pp. 1116-1116.
Chisholm, J.C.
Marandet, J.
Rey, A.
Scopinaro, M.
de Toledo, J.S.
Merks, J.H.
O'Meara, A.
Stevens, M.C.
Oberlin, O.
(2011). Prognostic factors after relapse in nonmetastatic rhabdomyosarcoma: a nomogram to better define patients who can be salvaged with further therapy. J clin oncol,
Vol.29
(10),
pp. 1319-1325.
show abstract
PURPOSE: Previous studies suggest poor outcome in children with relapsed rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS). A better understanding is needed of which patients can be salvaged after first relapse. PATIENTS AND METHODS: The analysis included children with nonmetastatic RMS and embryonal sarcoma enrolled onto the International Society of Paediatric Oncology (SIOP) Malignant Mesenchymal Tumor (MMT) 84, 89, and 95 studies who relapsed after achieving complete local control with primary therapy. All patients included in the analysis had follow-up for ≥ 3.0 years after the last event. The clinical features, initial treatment characteristics, and features of the relapse were correlated with survival in univariate and multivariate analyses. RESULTS: In all, 474 eligible patients were identified for the study. At ≥ 3.0 years from the last event, 176 (37%) were alive ("cured"). In a full-model multivariate analysis, the factors identified at first relapse that most strongly associated with poor outcome were metastatic relapse (odds ratio [OR], 4.19; 95% CI, 2.0 to 8.5), prior radiotherapy treatment (OR, 3.64; 95% CI, 2.1 to 6.4), initial tumor size > 5 cm (OR, 2.53; 95% CI, 1.5 to 4.1), and time of relapse < 18 months from diagnosis (OR, 2.20; 95% CI, 1.3 to 3.6). Unfavorable primary disease site, nodal involvement at diagnosis, alveolar histology, and previous three- or six-drug chemotherapy were also independently associated with poor outcome. To estimate chance of cure for individual patients, a nomogram was developed, which allowed for weighting of these significant factors. CONCLUSION: Some children with relapsed RMS remain curable. It is now possible to estimate the chance of salvage for individual children to direct therapy appropriately toward cure, use of experimental therapies, and/or palliation..
Geoerger, B.
Chisholm, J.
Le Deley, M.-.
Gentet, J.-.
Zwaan, C.M.
Dias, N.
Jaspan, T.
Mc Hugh, K.
Couanet, D.
Hain, S.
Devos, A.
Riccardi, R.
Cesare, C.
Boos, J.
Frappaz, D.
Leblond, P.
Aerts, I.
Vassal, G.
European Consortium Innovative Therapies for Children with Cancer (ITCC),
(2011). Phase II study of gemcitabine combined with oxaliplatin in relapsed or refractory paediatric solid malignancies: An innovative therapy for children with Cancer European Consortium Study. Eur j cancer,
Vol.47
(2),
pp. 230-238.
show abstract
AIM: To assess objective response rates after 4 cycles of gemcitabine in combination with oxaliplatin in children and adolescents with relapsed or refractory solid tumours. METHODS: This multicentre, non-randomised Phase II study included five strata: neuroblastoma, osteosarcoma, medulloblastoma and other CNS tumours strata with two-stage Simon designs and a miscellaneous, extra-cranial solid tumour stratum with descriptive design. Eligibility criteria included: age 6 months to 21 years; measurable, relapsed or refractory solid malignancy; no more than one previous salvage therapy. Gemcitabine was administered intravenously at 1000 mg/m(2) over 100 min followed by oxaliplatin at 100mg/m(2) over 120 min on Day 1 of a 14-d cycle. Tumour response was assessed every 4 cycles according to WHO criteria. RESULTS: Ninety-three out of 95 patients enrolled in 25 centres received treatment: 12 neuroblastoma; 12 osteosarcoma; 14 medulloblastoma; 13 other CNS tumours and 42 miscellaneous non-CNS solid tumours. Median age was 11.7 years (range, 1.3-20.8 years). Tumour control (CR+PR+SD) at 4 cycles was obtained in 30/93 evaluable patients (32.3%; 95% confidence interval (CI), 22.9-42.7%), including four PR: 1/12 patients with osteosarcoma, 1/12 with medulloblastoma, 1/12 with rhabdomyosarcoma and 1/4 with other sarcoma. Five out of 12 eligible patients with neuroblastoma experienced stable disease. During a total of 481 treatment cycles (median 4, range 1-24 per patient), the most common treatment-related toxicities were haematologic (leukopenia, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia) and neurological (dysesthesia, paresthesia). CONCLUDING STATEMENT: The gemcitabine-oxaliplatin combination administered in a bi-weekly schedule has acceptable safety profile with limited activity in children with relapsed or refractory solid tumours..
Slade, I.
Bacchelli, C.
Davies, H.
Murray, A.
Abbaszadeh, F.
Hanks, S.
Barfoot, R.
Burke, A.
Chisholm, J.
Hewitt, M.
Jenkinson, H.
King, D.
Morland, B.
Pizer, B.
Prescott, K.
Saggar, A.
Side, L.
Traunecker, H.
Vaidya, S.
Ward, P.
Futreal, P.A.
Vujanic, G.
Nicholson, A.G.
Sebire, N.
Turnbull, C.
Priest, J.R.
Pritchard-Jones, K.
Houlston, R.
Stiller, C.
Stratton, M.R.
Douglas, J.
Rahman, N.
(2011). DICER1 syndrome: clarifying the diagnosis, clinical features and management implications of a pleiotropic tumour predisposition syndrome. J med genet,
Vol.48
(4),
pp. 273-278.
show abstract
BACKGROUND: Constitutional DICER1 mutations were recently reported to cause familial pleuropulmonary blastoma (PPB). AIM: To investigate the contribution and phenotypic spectrum of constitutional and somatic DICER1 mutations to cancer. METHODS AND RESULTS: The authors sequenced DICER1 in constitutional DNA from 823 unrelated patients with a variety of tumours and in 781 cancer cell lines. Constitutional DICER1 mutations were identified in 19 families including 11/14 with PPB, 2/3 with cystic nephroma, 4/7 with ovarian Sertoli-Leydig-type tumours, 1/243 with Wilms tumour (this patient also had a Sertoli-Leydig tumour), 1/1 with intraocular medulloepithelioma (this patient also had PPB), 1/86 with medulloblastoma/infratentorial primitive neuroectodermal tumour, and 1/172 with germ cell tumour. The inheritance was investigated in 17 families. DICER1 mutations were identified in 25 relatives: 17 were unaffected, one mother had ovarian Sertoli-Leydig tumour, one half-sibling had cystic nephroma, and six relatives had non-toxic thyroid cysts/goitre. Analysis of eight tumours from DICER1 mutation-positive patients showed universal retention of the wild-type allele. DICER1 truncating mutations were identified in 4/781 cancer cell lines; all were in microsatellite unstable lines and therefore unlikely to be driver mutations. CONCLUSION: Constitutional DICER1 haploinsufficiency predisposes to a broad range of tumours, making a substantial contribution to PPB, cystic nephroma and ovarian Sertoli-Leydig tumours, but a smaller contribution to other tumours. Most mutation carriers are unaffected, indicating that tumour risk is modest. The authors define the clinical contexts in which DICER1 mutation testing should be considered, the associated tumour risks, and the implications for at-risk individuals. They have termed this condition 'DICER1 syndrome'. ACCESSION NUMBERS: The cDNA Genbank accession number for the DICER1 sequence reported in this paper is NM_030621.2..
Bate, J.
Chisholm, J.
Heath, P.T.
Breuer, J.
Skinner, R.
Manley, S.
Patel, S.
Wheatley, K.
Ramsay, M.
Kearns, P.R.
Hambleton, S.
(2011). PEPtalk: postexposure prophylaxis against varicella in children with cancer. Archives of disease in childhood,
Vol.96
(9),
pp. 841-845.
Lehrnbecher, T.
Aplenc, R.
Pereira, F.R.
Lassaletta, A.
Caselli, D.
Kowalczyk, J.
Chisholm, J.
Sung, L.
(2011). INSTITUTIONAL VARIATIONS IN NON-PHARMACOLOGICAL ANTI-INFECTIVE MEASURES - RESULTS OF AN INTERNATIONAL SURVEY. Pediatric blood & cancer,
Vol.57
(5),
pp. 847-847.
Bate, J.
Patel, S.R.
Chisholm, J.
Heath, P.T.
CCLG,
(2010). Immunisation Practices of Paediatric Oncology and Shared Care Oncology Consultants: A United Kingdom Survey. Pediatric blood & cancer,
Vol.54
(7),
pp. 941-946.
Jorgensen, M.
Bate, J.
Gatscher, S.
Chisholm, J.C.
(2010). Invasive pneumococcal disease following treatment for choroid plexus carcinoma. Support care cancer,
Vol.18
(5),
pp. 647-650.
show abstract
INTRODUCTION: A 13-month-old child was treated for choroid plexus carcinoma with partial embolisation, complete surgical excision and chemotherapy. The patient's course was complicated by the presence of chronic bilateral subdural collections. CASE REPORT: Four months from completing treatment, the child presented with an empyema in the subdural space caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae subtype 6A. DISCUSSION: The case highlights a number of questions about pneumococcal immunisation after standard chemotherapy. Evidence-based guidelines are required urgently to direct best practice..
Rees, H.
Andrews, M.
Broster, S.
Nicholson, J.
Skinner, R.
Chisholm, J.
Canc, S.C.
(2010). Influenza vaccination during cancer therapy. Archives of disease in childhood,
Vol.95
(7).
Chisholm, J.
Marandet, J.
Rey, A.
Oberlin, O.
(2010). PROGNOSTIC FACTORS AFTER RELAPSE IN NON-METASTATIC RHABDOMYOSARCOMA: WHO CAN BE SALVAGED?. Pediatric blood & cancer,
Vol.55
(5),
pp. 836-836.
Schoot, R.
McHugh, K.
van Rijn, R.
Chisholm, J.
Merks, J.
(2010). ARE THE RECIST CRITERIA USEFUL IN ASSESSING RESPONSE IN PAEDIATRIC RHABDOMYOSARCOMA?. Pediatric blood & cancer,
Vol.55
(5),
pp. 901-902.
Chisholm, J.C.
Casanova, M.
Geoerger, B.
Merks, J.H.
Massimini, G.
Moore, N.
Rooney, I.A.
Viviers, L.
Oberlin, O.
(2010). A phase II study evaluating addition of bevacizumab to chemotherapy in childhood and adolescent patients presenting with metastatic rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) and non-rhabdomyosarcoma soft tissue sarcoma (NRSTS). Journal of clinical oncology,
Vol.28
(15).
Gibson, F.
Hartley, J.
Lane, S.
Phillips, R.
Selwood, K.
Skinner, R.
Chisholm, J.
(2009). Reaching A National Consensus On An Approach To Low Risk Febrile Neutropenia: The Challenges of A Delphi Survey. European journal of oncology nursing,
Vol.13
(1),
pp. 63-63.
Thomas, L.
Baggen, L.
Chisholm, J.
Sharland, M.
(2009). Diagnosis and treatment of aspergillosis in children. Expert review of anti-infective therapy,
Vol.7
(4),
pp. 461-472.
Bate, J.
Ladhani, S.
Sharland, M.
Chisholm, J.
Lamagni, T.
Ramsay, M.
Johnson, A.
Pebody, R.
(2009). Infection-Related Mortality in Children With Malignancy in England and Wales, 2003-2005. Pediatric blood & cancer,
Vol.53
(3),
pp. 371-374.
Dommett, R.
Geary, J.
Freeman, S.
Hartley, J.
Sharland, M.
Davidson, A.
Tulloh, R.
Taj, M.
Stoneham, S.
Chisholm, J.C.
(2009). Successful introduction and audit of a step-down oral antibiotic strategy for low risk paediatric febrile neutropaenia in a UK, multicentre, shared care setting. European journal of cancer,
Vol.45
(16),
pp. 2843-2849.
Patel, S.R.
Chisholm, J.C.
Heath, P.T.
(2008). Vaccinations in children treated with standard-dose cancer therapy or hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Pediatric clinics of north america,
Vol.55
(1),
pp. 169-+.
Laddie, J.
Chisholm, J.
(2007). A survey of parent and staff views on management by risk stratification in children with febrile neutropenia (FN). Pediatric blood & cancer,
Vol.49
(4),
pp. 508-509.
Phillips, R.
Skinner, R.
Chisholm, J.C.
(2007). Treating low-risk febrile neutropenia: Jenny's story. Archives of disease in childhood,
Vol.92
(1),
pp. 7-8.
full text
Chisholm, J.C.
(2007). Reimmunization after therapy for childhood cancer. Clinical infectious diseases,
Vol.44
(5),
pp. 643-645.
Andrews, M.
Chisholm, J.
Nicholson, J.
Broster, S.
Rees, H.
(2007). Cross-sectional survey of influenza vaccination uptake in children with cancer. Pediatric blood & cancer,
Vol.49
(4),
pp. 509-509.
Phillips, B.
Selwood, K.
Lane, S.M.
Skinner, R.
Gibson, F.
Chisholm, J.C.
(2007). Variation in policies for the management of febrile neutropenia in United Kingdom Children's Cancer Study Group centres. Archives of disease in childhood,
Vol.92
(6),
pp. 495-498.
full text
Chisholm, J.C.
Machin, D.
McDowell, H.
McHugh, K.
Ellershaw, C.
Jenney, M.
Foot, A.B.
Children's Cancer and Leukaemia Group (CCLG; formerly United Kingdom Children's Cancer Study Group),
(2007). Efficacy of carboplatin given in a phase II window study to children and adolescents with newly diagnosed metastatic soft tissue sarcoma. Eur j cancer,
Vol.43
(17),
pp. 2537-2544.
show abstract
AIM: The activity of carboplatin was evaluated in a phase II window study in previously untreated children with metastatic soft tissue sarcoma. METHODS: Children with poor-risk metastatic disease (over 10 years and/or with bone/bone marrow involvement) treated in the SIOP MMT 98 study were scheduled to receive two courses of intravenous carboplatin (area under curve [AUC] of 10), 21 days apart. RESULTS: Sixteen eligible patients were entered into the rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) group. Response (complete remission or partial remission) was seen in five children (31%, 95% confidence interval (CI) 14-56%). Ten eligible patients with other soft tissue sarcomas were recruited into the non-RMS group. Two responses (20%, 95% CI 6-51%) were seen. Toxicity in both groups was predictable nausea, vomiting and marrow suppression and there were no toxic deaths. CONCLUSION: Single-agent carboplatin at AUC of 10 has an acceptable toxicity profile but only moderate efficacy in poor-risk metastatic soft tissue sarcoma..
Duncan, C.
Chisholm, J.C.
Freeman, S.
Riley, U.
Sharland, M.
Pritchard-Jones, K.
(2007). A prospective study of admissions for febrile neutropenia in secondary paediatric units in South East England. Pediatr blood cancer,
Vol.49
(5),
pp. 678-681.
show abstract
BACKGROUND: The Paediatric Oncology Centres (POCs) treating childhood cancer in South East England produce unified supportive care guidelines for use in the secondary pediatric (shared care) units. This study evaluated the adherence to current guidelines for febrile neutropenia (FN) and documented outcome in terms of bacterial isolates, antibiotic resistance patterns, length of hospital stay, and mortality. PROCEDURE: Prospective study of pediatric FN admissions between July 2001 and December 2002. RESULTS: Data were received on 433 eligible FN episodes in 212 patients. The recommended empirical antibiotics (piptazobactam + gentamicin) were used in 354 (82%) admissions. Blood cultures were positive in 129 episodes (30%). Gram-positive organisms predominated (120/149 organisms isolated) and the majority were coagulase-negative Staphylococci (95/120). There were 27 Gram-negative isolates and 1 fungal isolate. No Gram-negative isolate was resistant to both first-line antibiotics. Only one death was recorded in the study group. The median length of hospital stay was 5 days. CONCLUSIONS: We obtained data on a large number of shared care episodes of FN. The antibiotic guidelines were followed in most episodes. Bacteremia was common, but little resistance to first-line antibiotics was documented among Gram-negative isolates, confirming the safety of the strategy in our population..
Chisholm, J.C.
Dommett, R.
(2006). The evolution towards ambulatory and day-case management of febrile neutropenia. Br j haematol,
Vol.135
(1),
pp. 3-16.
show abstract
Febrile neutropenia (FN) is only second to chemotherapy administration as a cause of hospital admission during treatment for cancer. As FN may signify serious or life-threatening infection, management protocols have focussed on trying to prevent adverse outcomes in these patients. However, it is now possible to identify a subset of patients with FN at low risk of life-threatening complications in whom duration of hospitalisation and intensity of therapy can be reduced safely. This review discusses how the management of FN has evolved to enable patients identified as low risk to be treated on specific low risk management strategies, with an emphasis on some of the practical considerations for the implementation of such strategies..
Chisholm, J.
Rubie, H.
Desfachalles, S.
Morland, B.
Munzer, C.
Valteau-Couanet, D.
Mosseri, V.
Bergeron, C.
Weston, C.
Coze, C.
Auvrignon, A.
Djafari, L.
Hobson, R.
Baunin, C.
Dickinson, F.
Brisse, H.
McHugh, K.
Biassoni, L.
Giammarile, F.
Vassal, G.
Societe Francaise des cancers de l'enfant,
United Kingdom Childrens Cancer Study Group - New Agents Group Study,
(2006). A Phase II study of Temozolomide in relapsed or refractory high-risk Neuroblastoma. Journal of clinical oncology,
(24(33)),
pp. 5259-5264.
Fowler, D.J.
Malone, M.
Chisholm, J.
Roebuck, D.
Sebire, N.J.
(2006). Primary thoracic myxoid variant of extrarenal rhabdoid tumor in childhood. Fetal pediatr pathol,
Vol.25
(3),
pp. 159-168.
show abstract
Primary extrarenal rhabdoid tumors (RT) are now recognized as a specific entity in pediatric oncological pathology practice. We present an unusual case of a small cell myxoid variant of a thoracic RT in an infant and highlight the importance of recent molecular developments in the diagnosis of these tumors. An 8-month-old child presented with a short history of cough and shortness of breath. Imaging demonstrated a large mass occupying the majority of the thoracic cavity on the right side. A percutaneous needle biopsy of the mass showed fragments of tissue composed of malignant tumor with a predominant "small ovoid cell" phenotype and extensive myxoid change, with small nests and islands of tumor cells; occasional cells demonstrated open vesicular nuclei, prominent nucleoli, and eosinophilic cytoplasmic inclusions. Immunohistochemical staining revealed focal strong cytoplasmic positivity for cytokeratin, focal strong paranuclear cytoplasmic vimentin positivity, and INI1 staining showed normal nuclear positivity in control tissues but was negative in tumor cell nuclei. Electron microscopy demonstrated characteristic paranuclear whorls of intermediate filaments confirming the diagnosis of extrarenal malignant RT. The diagnosis of malignant rhabdoid tumor may be difficult, particularly in cases, such as the present, with a predominant small-cell myxoid phenotype. The characteristic expression patterns of cytokeratin and vimentin provide strong clues to the diagnosis, and the use of INI1 antibody now makes definitive diagnosis possible even on needle core biopsies..
Fowler, D.J.
Chisholm, J.
Roebuck, D.
Newman, L.
Malone, M.
Sebire, N.J.
(2006). Melanotic neuroectodermal tumor of infancy: clinical, radiological, and pathological features. Fetal pediatr pathol,
Vol.25
(2),
pp. 59-72.
show abstract
We present a case of a 4-month-old female infant with a maxillary melanotic neuroectodermal tumor of infancy (MNTI) and review the pooled data from previous publications on this entity. The literature to date comprises 378 reported cases from 1918 to the present, from which data on the presence or absence of metastatic disease was available in 311, and on the presence or absence of local recurrence in 165. These pooled data suggest a local recurrence rate of 36% with metastasis occurring in 7% of cases. At present, the optimal management includes complete surgical excision with clear margins, but there are no reliable histopathological or molecular features to predict the biological behavior in individual cases..
Chisholm, J.
Howe, K.
Taj, M.
Zambon, M.
(2005). Influenza immunisation in children with solid tumours. European journal of cancer,
Vol.41
(15),
pp. 2280-2287.
Veal, G.J.
Cole, M.
Errington, J.
Parry, A.
Hale, J.
Pearson, A.D.
Howe, K.
Chisholm, J.C.
Beane, C.
Brennan, B.
Waters, F.
Glaser, A.
Hemsworth, S.
McDowell, H.
Wright, Y.
Pritchard-Jones, K.
Pinkerton, R.
Jenner, G.
Nicholson, J.
Elsworth, A.M.
Boddy, A.V.
Kingdom Children's Cancer Study Group Pharmacology Working Group,
(2005). Pharmacokinetics of dactinomycin in a pediatric patient population: a United Kingdom Children's Cancer Study Group Study. Clin cancer res,
Vol.11
(16),
pp. 5893-5899.
show abstract
PURPOSE: Dactinomycin (actinomycin D) is an antitumor antibiotic used routinely to treat certain pediatric and adult cancers. Despite concerns over the incidence of toxicity, little is known about the pharmacology of dactinomycin. A study was done to investigate dactinomycin pharmacokinetics in children. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Dactinomycin was administered to 31 patients by bolus i.v. infusion, at doses of 0.70 to 1.50 mg/m2. Plasma concentrations were determined by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry up to 24 hours after drug administration and National Cancer Institute Common Toxicity Criteria was assessed. RESULTS: Pharmacokinetic data analysis suggested that a three-compartment model most accurately reflected dactinomycin pharmacokinetics. However, there was insufficient data available to fully characterize this model. A median peak plasma concentration (Cmax) of 25.1 ng/mL (range, 3.2-99.2 ng/mL) was observed at 15 minutes after administration. The median exposure (AUC0-6), determined in 16 patients with sampling to 6 hours, was 2.67 mg/L.min (range, 1.12-4.90 mg/L.min). After adjusting for body size, AUC0-6 and Cmax were positively related to dose (P = 0.03 and P = 0.04, respectively). Patients who experienced any level of Common Toxicity Criteria grade had a 1.46-fold higher AUC0-6, 95% confidence interval (1.02-2.09). AUC0-6 was higher in patients <40 kg, possibly indicating a greater toxicity risk. CONCLUSIONS: Data presented suggest that dosing of dactinomycin based on surface area is not optimal, either in younger patients in whom the risk of toxicity is greater, or in older patients where doses are capped..
Tischkowitz, M.D.
Chisholm, J.
Gaze, M.
Michalski, A.
Rosser, E.M.
(2004). Medulloblastoma as a first presentation of fanconi anemia. J pediatr hematol oncol,
Vol.26
(1),
pp. 52-55.
show abstract
Fanconi anemia is a chromosomal instability syndrome associated with certain congenital abnormalities, defective hemopoiesis, and an increased risk of developing acute myeloid leukemia and some solid tumors. The diagnosis can be made at birth if congenital abnormalities are present but is often made in childhood when hematologic complications develop. The authors report a case of Fanconi anemia diagnosed in a child with no congenital abnormalities and normal bone marrow who first presented with a cerebellar medulloblastoma. The authors discuss diagnostic and therapeutic implications for such malignancies in Fanconi anemia..
Little, M.A.
Morland, B.
Chisholm, J.
Hole, A.
Shankar, A.
Devine, T.
Easlea, D.
Meyer, L.C.
Pinkerton, C.R.
(2002). A randomised study of prophylactic G-CSF following MRC UKALL XI intensification regimen in childhood ALL and T-NHL. Med pediatr oncol,
Vol.38
(2),
pp. 98-103.
show abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite the current widespread use of prophylactic G-CSF in children with solid tumours and leukaemia, its effectiveness has not been clearly demonstrated. This randomised study evaluates the role of G-CSF given after a 5-day intensification block in children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL). PROCEDURE: Forty-six children with ALL or T-Cell non-Hodgkins lymphoma (NHL) treated on MRC ALL 97, UKALL XI or UKCCSG 9504 NHL protocols were randomised to receive granulocyte colony-stimulating factor following either the first or the second block of intensive chemotherapy in a cross-over study to determine if the prophylactic administration of G-CSF could reduce the rate of readmission to hospital for management of febrile neutropenia. RESULTS: There was a statistically significant difference in the rate of hospital admission in the group receiving prophylaxis, with 34 of 46 being admitted, compared to 42 of 46 patients in the control arm (74 vs. 91%; P=0.0386). There were no differences found in duration of hospital admission, haematological toxicity, neutrophil recovery or duration of supportive care between the two groups. There was no demonstrable cost benefit derived from the prophylactic administration of G-CSF. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows that the prophylactic administration of G-CSF following intensification chemotherapy for childhood ALL and T-NHL produces a significant reduction in the rate of readmission to hospital for the management of febrile neutropenia..
Chisholm, J.C.
Devine, T.
Charlett, A.
Pinkerton, C.R.
Zambon, M.
(2001). Response to influenza immunisation during treatment for cancer. Arch dis child,
Vol.84
(6),
pp. 496-500.
show abstract
AIMS: To assess the annual risk of influenza infection in children with cancer and the immunogenicity of a trivalent split virus influenza vaccine in these children. METHODS: Eighty four children with cancer were tested for susceptibility to the circulating strains of influenza virus in autumn 1995 and 1996. Non-immunised children were reassessed the following spring for serological evidence of natural infection. Forty two patients received two doses of influenza vaccine. These children were receiving continuing chemotherapy for acute lymphoblastic leukaemia or were within six months of completing chemotherapy. RESULTS: Among the 84 children tested for influenza virus susceptibility only 8% of patients were fully protected (antibody titres >/= 40) against all three of the prevalent influenza virus strains; 33% were susceptible to all three viruses. Evidence of acquired natural infection was seen in 30% of unimmunised patients. Among immunised susceptible patients, 66% made some protective response to the vaccine and 55% showed protective antibody titres to all three viral strains following vaccination. Older age was associated with increased response to the H1N1 and H3N2 vaccine components, but total white cell count or neutrophil count at immunisation, type of cancer, or length of time on treatment for acute lymphoblastic leukaemia did not affect response. CONCLUSIONS: Most children with cancer studied were at risk of influenza infection. A significant response to immunisation was seen, supporting annual influenza vaccination for children being treated for cancer..
Chisholm, J.
Devine, T.
Dick, G.
Mycroft, J.
Pinkerton, C.R.
(2000). Safety and tolerability of Amphotericin B Lipid Complex (Abelcet). International journal of pediatric hematology/oncology,
Vol.6
(6),
pp. 393-402.
Chisholm, J.
Devine, T.
Mycroft, J.
Pinkerton, C.R.
(1999). Liposomal amphotericin B (AmBisome) in children with febrile neutropenia and renal dysfunction. International journal of pediatric hematology/oncology,
Vol.6
(3),
pp. 173-182.
Veys, P.A.
Meral, A.
Hassan, A.
Goulden, N.
Chisholm, J.
New, H.
Armstrong, J.
Bennett-Rees, N.
Webb, D.
Gerritsen, B.
(1998). Improved outcome for blood and marrow transplantation in immunodeficiency. Bone marrow transplantation,
Vol.21,
pp. S128-S128.
Chisholm, J.C.
Devine, T.
Mycroft, J.
Pinkerton, C.R.
(1998). Tolerability of amphotericin B lipid complex (ABELCET) in children with malignant disease. Bone marrow transplantation,
Vol.21,
pp. S145-S145.
Chisholm, J.C.
Darmady, J.M.
Kohler, J.A.
(1995). Dysgerminoma in mother and daughter: use of lactate dehydrogenase as a tumor marker in the child. Pediatr hematol oncol,
Vol.12
(3),
pp. 305-308.
show abstract
A 7-year-old girl presented with an extragonadal dysgerminoma arising from the pelvis. Her mother had been treated for a histologically identical pituitary tumor 3 years previously. The child's serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) level was markedly elevated at presentation and fell as the tumor responded to treatment. The potential use of LDH as a marker for gonadal dysgerminoma is well documented, but raised LDH in association with primary extragonadal dysgerminoma has not been described previously. In addition, this is the first report of extragonadal dysgerminoma occurring in female relatives..
Chisholm, J.C.
(1988). Analysis of the fifth cell cycle of mouse development. J reprod fertil,
Vol.84
(1),
pp. 29-36.
show abstract
The 5th cell cycle of mouse development was analyzed to determine the lengths of each cell cycle phase. The DNA content of Feulgen-stained blastomere nuclei was measured at various times throughout the cell cycle by microdensitometry. To achieve precise timing of the start of the 5th cell cycle, experiments utilized isolated 16-cell blastomeres and cell pairs obtained by in-vitro division of isolated 8-cell blastomeres. The following estimates were made for a mixed population of polar and apolar 16-cell blastomeres: G1, less than or equal to 2 h; S, 8-9 h; G2 + M, 2 h. No significant difference was found in the timing of DNA synthesis between polar and apolar cells or between cell pairs and whole embryos..
Garbutt, C.L.
Chisholm, J.C.
Johnson, M.H.
(1987). The establishment of the embryonic-abembryonic axis in the mouse embryo. Development,
Vol.100
(1),
pp. 125-134.
show abstract
The influence of cell division order on the establishment of the embryonic-abembryonic axis (EA axis) of the mouse embryo was investigated. Aggregate embryos were constructed in which a labelled cell (or pair of cells) was combined with a group of unlabelled cells all of which were up to one cell cycle earlier or later in their progress through development to the blastocyst stage. The aggregates were cultured first to the nascent blastocyst stage and then to the expanded blastocyst stage. The positions of the progeny of the labelled cells in relation to the nascent blastocoel and to the orientation of the embryonic-abembryonic axis were recorded. It was concluded that cell division order does influence the establishment of the EA axis, early dividing cells tending to be associated with the nascent blastocoel and the site of the nascent blastocoel tending to mark the site of the abembryonic pole. However, the influence of division order was diminished by a requirement for intercellular cooperation during blastocoel formation and by a counteracting influence of division order arising from its effects on the allocation of cells to the inner cell mass..
Chisholm, J.C.
Houliston, E.
(1987). Cytokeratin filament assembly in the preimplantation mouse embryo. Development,
Vol.101
(3),
pp. 565-582.
show abstract
The timing, spatial distribution and control of cytokeratin assembly during mouse early development has been studied using a monoclonal antibody, TROMA-1, which recognizes a 55,000 Mr trophectodermal cytokeratin (ENDO A). This protein was first detected in immunoblots at the 4-cell stage, and became more abundant at the 16-cell stage and later. Immunofluorescence analysis revealed assembled cytokeratin filaments in some 8-cell blastomeres, but not at earlier stages. At the 16-cell stage, filaments were found in both polarized (presumptive trophectoderm; TE) and apolar (presumptive inner cell mass; ICM) cells in similar proportions, although polarized cells possessed more filaments than apolar cells. By the late 32-cell, early blastocyst, stage, all polarized (TE) cells contained extensive filament networks whereas cells positioned inside the embryo tended to have lost their filaments. The presence of filaments in inside cells at the 16-cell stage and in ICM cells was confirmed by immunoelectron microscopy. Lineage tracing techniques demonstrated that those cells in the ICM of early blastocysts which did possess filaments were almost exclusively the progeny of polar 16-cell blastomeres, suggesting that these filaments were directly inherited from outside cells at the 16- to 32-cell transition. Inhibitor studies revealed that proximate protein synthesis but not mRNA synthesis is required for filament assembly at the 8-cell stage. These results demonstrate that there are quantitative rather than qualitative differences in the expression of cytokeratin filaments in the inner cell mass and trophectoderm cells of the mouse embryo..
Johnson, M.H.
Chisholm, J.C.
Fleming, T.P.
Houliston, E.
(1986). A role for cytoplasmic determinants in the development of the mouse early embryo?. J embryol exp morphol,
Vol.97 Suppl,
pp. 97-121.
Chisholm, J.C.
Johnson, M.H.
Warren, P.D.
Fleming, T.P.
Pickering, S.J.
(1985). Developmental variability within and between mouse expanding blastocysts and their ICMs. J embryol exp morphol,
Vol.86,
pp. 311-336.
show abstract
We have attempted to reduce the developmental heterogeneity amongst populations of mouse blastocysts by synchronizing embryos to the first visible signs of blastocoel formation. Using embryos timed in this way, we have examined the extent of variation of inside and outside cell number and of inside cell size, nuclear DNA content and developmental potential, between and within embryos of a similar age postcavitation. The overall impression gained is one of wide heterogeneity in inside:outside cell number ratios and in cell cycling and its relation to cavitation among embryos of similar age postcavitation. However, the simplest explanation of our results suggests that cavitation generally begins at a time when most outside cells are in their sixth developmental cell cycle and that outside cells, as a population, are a little ahead of inside cells in their cell cycling. Additionally we present evidence that, within at least some individual inner cell masses (ICM), there is intraembryo variation in the time at which inside cell developmental potential becomes restricted..
Fleming, T.P.
Warren, P.D.
Chisholm, J.C.
Johnson, M.H.
(1984). Trophectodermal processes regulate the expression of totipotency within the inner cell mass of the mouse expanding blastocyst. J embryol exp morphol,
Vol.84,
pp. 63-90.
show abstract
Mouse blastocysts, aged 0, 2, 6 and 12 h from the onset of cavitation, were examined by transmission (TEM) and scanning (SEM) electron microscopy. In TEM sections, trophectoderm cells (TE) differed morphologically from those of the inner cell mass (ICM) by their flattened shape, paler cytosol staining and polarized disposition of both junctional complexes (apicolateral) and intracellular secondary lysosomes (SL; basal). Throughout this period of development, cytoplasmic processes, characterized by abundant SLs, cover approximately 80% of the juxtacoelic face of the ICM. These processes are shown to be derived from the basal surface of TE cells intermediately placed between polar and mural regions. In SEM preparations of the juxtacoelic ICM surface, revealed by 'cracking open' blastocysts, the processes appear as tongue-shaped, centripetally oriented structures which terminate collectively at a central area on the ICM surface. The potential of cultured ICMs to generate TE was demonstrated following their immunosurgical isolation from blastocysts aged up to 12 h post cavitation and by examining the sequence of ultrastructural changes associated with TE generation by ICMs from 2 h blastocysts. In contrast, the juxtacoelic cells of similarly aged ICMs observed in situ in ultrasections of intact embryos showed little or no evidence of totipotency expression as judged by the absence of TE characteristics. Since TE expression within presumptive ICM cells is thought to be generated by an asymmetry of cell contacts (Johnson & Ziomek, 1983), we propose that the juxtacoelic TE processes, by providing a cellular cover to the ICM, function in suppressing the expression in situ of ICM totipotency..
Chisholm, J.
Randomized phase 2 trial of the Vincristine-Irinotecan combination with or without Temozolomide, in children and adults with relapsed or refractory rhabdomyosarcoma: an EpSSG/ITCC trial. Journal of clinical oncology,
.
full text
Corley, E.A.
Schmitt, A.M.
Furness, A.J.
Chisholm, J.C.
The role of systemic therapy in paediatric cutaneous melanoma: a review. Pediatric medicine,
Vol.6,
pp. 37-37.
full text
Chisholm, J.
A case report of long-term remission achieved with bronchoscopic debulking, radical external beam radiotherapy and pulse steroids, and NSAIDs. Journal of medical case reports,
.
Chisholm, J.
ALK-positive pulmonary inflammatory myofibroblastic tumour: A case report of long term remission achieved with bronchoscopic debulking, radical external beam radiotherapy and pulse steroids, and NSAIDs. Journal of medical case reports,
.
full text
Chisholm, J.C.
Selfe, J.L.
Alaggio, R.
Cheesman, E.
Zin, A.
Tombolan, L.
Parafioriti, A.
Milano, G.M.
Adams, M.
Popov, S.
Česen, M.
Tafjord, S.
Jenney, M.
Proszek, P.Z.
Schlecht, H.
Carlo, D.D.
Shipley, J.
Kelsey, A.
Clinicopathological Analysis of a European Cohort of MYOD1 Mutant Rhabdomyosarcomas in Children and Young Adults. Pediatric blood & cancer,
.
show abstract
full text
ABSTRACTBackgroundPatients with PAX3/7‐FOXO1 fusion‐negative rhabdomyosarcomas (fnRMS) harbouring the rare L122R MYOD1 mutation have significantly poorer prognosis than other fnRMS. We undertook a detailed clinicopathological evaluation of a cohort of patients with MYOD1 mutated fnRMS in order to improve risk stratification and treatment options.ProcedureHistological, mutational and clinical data from a cohort of patients with MYOD1 mutant RMS treated in Europe were analysed.ResultsThirty‐two cases with mutant MYOD1 RMS were identified from patients enrolled in sequential European rhabdomyosarcoma clinical trials from 1992 to 2022 (n = 22) and non‐trial cohorts (n = 10). Thirty cases had the recurrent L122R missense mutation, one case harboured a K124E mutation and one case had a truncating mutation (S63X). Increased MyoD1 and reduced MYF4 immunostaining were consistent features of MYOD1L122R‐mutated RMS. Applying the risk stratification of the European paediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) RMS2005 trial, among 20 localised RMS cases that could be assigned a risk category, one was Very High Risk, 13 were High Risk and six were Standard Risk. Eight patients had distant metastases at diagnosis. Of the 25 patients with adequate clinical follow‐up data, 15/25 (60%) patients had an event at a median time of 9 months (12/15 included failure of local control) and 13/25 (52%) died of disease.ConclusionThis MYOD1 mutant cohort demonstrates increased MYOD and reduced MYF4 immunostaining, high risk of local failure and poor survival in agreement with other studies. Increased treatment intensity and improved local control should be considered for these patients..
Schoot, R.A.
Taselaar, P.
Scarzello, G.
Kolb, F.
Coppadoro, B.
Horst, S.T.
Mandeville, H.
Ferrari, A.
Hladun, R.
Helfre, S.
Ferman, S.
Kelsey, A.
Hol, M.L.
Devalck, C.
Ben‐Arush, M.
Orbach, D.
Chisholm, J.
Jenney, M.
Minard‐Colin, V.
Bisogno, G.
Merks, J.H.
Parameningeal Rhabdomyosarcoma: Results of the European Pediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group RMS 2005 Study. Head & neck,
.
show abstract
full text
ABSTRACTBackgroundParameningeal (PM) site is an unfavorable characteristic in rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS). We described the treatment and outcome for patients with PM RMS and investigated the prognostic value of risk factors. We scored PM site by originating site and by highest risk extension.MethodsPatients with PM RMS were treated within the European pediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) RMS 2005 study with risk‐adapted, multi‐modal treatment.ResultsThree‐hundred‐eighty‐one patients with PM RMS were included. Radiotherapy was administered in 359 patients (77 with surgery). After a median follow‐up of 75 months, 5‐year event‐free survival was 60% (95% confidence interval (CI) 55%–65%), 5‐year overall survival was 65% (95% CI 60%–70%).ConclusionsThe outcome for patients with PM RMS has not improved in comparison to previous historical studies, despite the more rigorous application of radiotherapy (94% of patients). Signs of meningeal involvement, PM site, and age at diagnosis remained prognostic risk factors.Trial RegistrationEudraCT number 2005‐000217‐35.