Bone marrow (BM) status is a critical matter when intensified chemotherapy with bone marrow rescue is proposed to improve the survival of patients with poor prognosis Ewing's sarcoma (ES): metastatic ...or relapsing disease. A systematic bone marrow investigation was performed in all the patients with newly diagnosed ES or relapsing ES to assess their BM status.
From January 1985 to February 1989, 59 untreated patients and five patients at the time of relapse had a bone marrow investigation under general anesthesia: two BM biopsies and two BM aspirates until May 1986, then two BM biopsies and 10 BM aspirates. The classical method of smearing each BM aspirate was compared to cytocentrifugation of the pool of BM samples after gradient density separation.
The BM was involved in 13 of 59 untreated patients. BM was the single site of metastatic spread in only one patient but was involved in 52% of the patients with metastatic disease at other sites. This involvement was focal in several patients and frequent discrepancies were noted between the aspirates and biopsies at the various sites explored. The number of positive cases of BM involvement discovered by the two methods is somewhat limited. However preliminary results indicate a superior rate of positive smears with the pool technique which did however fail to detect involvement in some cases.
The present study indicates that 1) BM involvement is a frequent event in metastatic ES (52%); 2) is often multifocal and therefore requires extensive BM investigation; and 3) further investigation of the pool technique to facilitate the BM screening is warranted.
The risk of second malignant neoplasm (SMN) was evaluated in 979 children with Hodgkin's disease. This cohort was diagnosed between 1955 and 1979 at one of the institutions of the Late Effects Study ...Group. Solid tumors, non-lymphocytic leukemia, and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) developed in 18, 17, and 3 patients, respectively. The estimated cumulative probability of developing any SMN was 2% at 5 years from diagnosis, 5% at 10 years, and 9% at 15 years. The incidence is ninefold greater than the risk of acquiring cancer in 19 year-olds, the median age at which the diagnosis of SMN was made in this study population. For leukemia and NHL the corresponding probabilities were 1%, 3%, and 4% for the group as a whole but were increased (2%, 6%, and 8%) in patients who had suffered one or more recurrences. In order to analyze the risk of leukemia and NHL associated with alkylating agent chemotherapy, each patient was assigned a score of one for each alkylating agent administered for a 6-month period. Scores of 2, 4, 6, and 8 were associated with probabilities of leukemia or NHL of 2%, 3%, 6%, and 10%, respectively. In a multivariate analysis for leukemia/lymphoma that included AAD score, stage, and splenectomy, the effect of AAD score and splenectomy did not change substantially compared to the univariate results. AAD score remained statistically significant (P = .0001), and splenectomy was of borderline significance (P = .09). Of the 18 solid tumor SMNs, 15 developed within the field of radiation, and one other developed in tissue irradiated 34 years earlier for hemangioma. This study of a large and unselected group of children with Hodgkin's disease who received a variety of therapies demonstrates that children are as likely as adults to develop acute leukemia after alkylating agents and solid tumors in the field of radiation therapy.
Ninety-five children with localized Ewing's sarcoma were included in a prospective cooperative study. All patients received initial chemotherapy with the purpose of early prevention of metastases and ...improvement of the conditions of the subsequent local therapy, radiotherapy in all cases, surgical resection in selected cases. Clinical response to initial chemotherapy was evaluated in 67 patients who had measurable soft tissue mass or functional symptoms. This response appeared highly correlated with outcome as the disease-free survival was 57.3% for the 41 good responders and 9% for the 26 bad responders (P less than 0.00001), though 23 of these bad responders reached complete remission with radiotherapy. This study also confirms the prognostic significance for survival of the site of the primary tumor on axial skeleton or on limbs. Nevertheless, this factor had no predictive value for response to chemotherapy, which thus appears to be an independent factor.