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Article

Long-Term Clinical Outcome and Prognostic Factors of Children and Adolescents with Localized Rhabdomyosarcoma Treated on the CWS-2002P Protocol

1
Pediatrics 5 (Oncology, Hematology, Immunology), Klinikum Stuttgart-Olgahospital, 70174 Stuttgart, Germany
2
Faculty of medicine, University of Tübingen, 72016 Tübingen, Germany
3
Section of Pediatric Pathology, Department of Pathology, University Bonn, 53127 Bonn, Germany
4
Department of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology and BMT, University of Wroclaw, 50556 Wroclaw, Poland
5
Pediatric Oncology, St. Anna Kinderspital, 1090 Vienna, Austria
6
Department of Pediatric Oncology, University of Zürich, 8032 Zurich, Switzerland
7
Department of Women’s and Children’s Health, Pediatric Oncology, Uppsala University, 75185 Uppsala, Sweden
8
Department of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology, University of Tübingen, Hospital for Children and Adolescents, 72076 Tuebingen, Germany
9
Department of Pediatric Surgery, University Children’s Hospital Marburg, 35043 Marburg, Germany
10
Department of Pediatric Surgery and Urology, Hospital for Children and Adolescents, University Tuebingen, 72076 Tübingen, Germany
11
Department of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology, University Hospital Münster, 48149 Muenster, Germany
12
Department of Pediatric Oncology and Hematology, Charité-Universitätsmedizin, 13353 Berlin, Germany
13
Department of Pediatric Oncology, Medical Faculty, Heinrich Heine University, Hematologyand Clinical Immunology, 40225 Duesseldorf, Germany
14
Department of Pediatrics, Division of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology, Dr. von Hauner Children’s Hospital, University Hospital Munich, LMU Munich, 80337 Munich, Germany
15
Department for Children and Adolescents, University Hospital Frankfurt, Goethe University, 60590 Frankfurt, Germany
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
These authors contributed equally to this work.
Cancers 2022, 14(4), 899; https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14040899
Submission received: 17 January 2022 / Revised: 7 February 2022 / Accepted: 8 February 2022 / Published: 11 February 2022
(This article belongs to the Section Pediatric Oncology)

Abstract

:

Simple Summary

The major challenge in pediatric oncology is the optimal adaptation of therapy burden to risk profile, aiming to achieve the best outcome with minimum toxicities. The CWS-2002P study in patients ≤ 21 years with localized rhabdomyosarcoma was developed with this goal by reducing or intensifying the chemotherapy depending on the risk group. An important additional aim was to investigate the use of low-dose maintenance chemotherapy. The risk stratification system was effective in predicting outcomes in the four risk groups with very good long-term results. Neither the reduction nor the intensification of chemotherapy influenced the outcome in comparison to previous studies showing that further de-escalation of chemotherapy should be investigated. The weighting of risk factors used for therapy stratification needs to be reevaluated. Maintenance therapy seemed to have an impact on prognosis.

Abstract

We report here the results of the prospective, non-randomized, historically controlled CWS-2002P study in patients ≤ 21 years with localized RMS developed with the aim to improve the long-term outcome by adapting the burden of therapy to risk profile and to investigate the feasibility and relation to the outcome of maintenance therapy (MT) in the high-risk groups. Patients were allocated into low-risk (LR), standard-risk (SR), high-risk (HR), and very high-risk (VHR) groups. Chemotherapy consisted of vincristine (VCR) and dactinomycin (ACTO-D) for all patients with the addition of ifosfamide (IFO) in the SR, HR, and VHR and doxorubicin (DOX) in the HR and VHR groups. Low-dose cyclophosphamide and vinblastine maintenance therapy (MT) over 6 months was recommended in the HR and VHR groups. A total of 444 patients have been included in this analysis. With a median follow-up of 9·6 years (IQR 7·6–10·9) for patients alive, the 5-year EFS and OS for the whole group was 73% (95% CI 69–77) and 80% (95% CI 76–84), respectively. The 5-year EFS by risk group was 100% in the LR, 79% (95% CI 72–84) in the SR, 69% (95% CI 63–75) in the HR, and 42% (95% CI 23–61) in the VHR (log-rank p = 0.000). The 5-year EFS was 77% (95% CI 70–84) for 155 patients in the HR group who received MT as compared to 63% (95% CI 50–76) for 49 patients who did not (log-rank p = 0.015). Neither the reduction in the IFO dose in the SR nor the increased dose intensity of DOX in HR groups influenced the outcome when compared to the previous CWS and other European studies. MT was feasible, seemed to have an impact on prognosis, and should be studied in a well-controlled prospective trial in this patient population. The weighting of risk factors used for therapy stratification needs to be reevaluated.

1. Introduction

Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is the most common soft tissue sarcoma in the first two decades of life. The major progress in survival has been achieved by multicenter international cooperative studies, which showed the efficacy of multimodal therapy [1]. Survival has improved steadily over the last three decades for patients with localized disease and now exceeds 70%. Many outcome-related factors such as histologic subtype, site, age, and size have been defined and included in risk-adapted stratification systems [2,3,4]. In the first CWS studies, the concept of therapy intensification was followed, and all patients with RMS received four drugs cycles: cyclophosphamide (CYC) or IFO, ACTO-D, VCR, and DOX (VACA or VAIA) [5,6,7]. In the following studies, the risk grouping was optimized, adding additional outcome-related factors (Supplementary Table S1), and the therapy intensity and the cumulative doses were reduced for the groups with a low and standard risk of recurrence without deterioration of prognosis [8]. The tumor volume reduction after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, which has been shown to be related to prognosis, was included for the secondary risk stratification [6,7].
CWS-2002P was the fifth study of the Cooperative Weichteilsarkomstudie (CWS) Group for children and adolescents with soft tissue sarcoma (STS). It was an overarching study for patients with localized RMS, “RMS-like” soft tissue sarcoma (which included extraskeletal Ewing sarcoma, synovial sarcoma, and undifferentiated sarcoma), and all types of non-rhabdomyosarcoma soft tissue sarcoma (NRSTS). The CWS-2002P concept for the treatment of RMS patients was essentially based on the results of the previous CWS and other European studies, in particular, on the findings from the CWS-96, RMS-96 of the Italian Soft Tissue Sarcoma Committee (STSC), and MMT-95 study, which were conducted as European cooperative projects with complementary objectives [1,7,8,9].
Further risk adaptation of therapy was realized with a reduction in the cumulative IFO dose in the part of the SR group and an increase in the cumulative dose and dose intensity of DOX in the HR and VHR groups in the first 16 weeks of therapy.

2. Material and Methods

The CWS-2002P study included prospective, non-randomized, historically controlled trials on localized RMS, “RMS-like” and NRSTS conducted between 17 January 2003 and 31 December 2010 in Austria, Germany, Poland, Sweden, and Switzerland. This analysis included patients with RMS.
The risk grouping based on the common retrospective analysis of European protocols, included additionally to histology, tumor site, IRS group, lymph nodes (LN) involvement also age and tumor size (Table 1), was introduced in the CWS-2002P and in the EpSSG RMS 2005 study [10,11] which were conducted almost contemporarily. The inclusion of tumor size and patient’s age allowed for the selection of patients ≤ 10 years and small tumors (≤5 cm) treated in the previous studies as HR group, who had similar outcomes to the SR group and have been shifted into the SR group in the CWS-2002P.
Patients aged up to 21 years with a diagnosis of localized RMS were eligible provided they had no prior treatment except surgery and started chemotherapy within 8 weeks of the date of biopsy or resection. All diagnoses were confirmed by central pathology review and classified according to the International Rhabdomyosarcoma Classification [12]. Molecular confirmation by FISH (FOXO 1 break) or/and RT-PCR (Foxo1-Pax3/7, Pax3-NCOA1/2) was recommended to diagnose the tumor as alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma (aRMS). If the testing was not performed, the tumor was diagnosed based on morphological criteria. The overall scheme for treatment schedules used and the details of the chemotherapy doses is shown in Figure 1. Patients in the SR group were stratified after four I2VA cycles depending on the remission status and primary site in two subgroups, A and B (definitions Figure 1). Subgroup A received subsequently only three VA cycles and subgroup B five I2VA cycles. The therapy duration was the same in both arms. In the HR and VHR group, the MT with cyclophosphamide and vinblastine (CYC/VBL) was recommended as an option at the end of the multimodal intensive therapy for patients in complete remission (CR). The dosage of MT should be adapted to the leukocyte count, which should not be below 1500/µL during MT since the continuous administration of MT was the main objective. Chemotherapy dosage was reduced for infants: <6 months: 1/3 reduction in the dose calculated by body weight, ≥6 months ≤12 months (or ≤10 kg body weight): 1/3 reduction in the dose calculated per m2.
Legend: V vincristine 1.5 mg/m2/d; maximum, 2 mg/day, I2Ifosfamide 3 g/m2/d, on two consecutive days, a dactinomycin 1.5 mg/m2/d maximum, 1.5 mg/day, ad doxorubicin 40 mg/m2/day, on two consecutive days, MT, maintenance therapy, (optionally for patients who achieved CR at the end of multimodal standard therapy): Cyclophosphamide/Vinblastine: seven 3-weeks cycles of intravenous vinblastine 3 mg/m2 on days 1, 8, and 15 and oral cyclophosphamide 2 × 25 mg/m2/day days 1–21, with one week pause between the cycles. The dosage of MT should be adapted to the leukocyte count, which should not be below 1500/µL.
Staging procedures included magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the primary site and, if indicated, computed tomography (CT) and ultrasound. Metastatic disease was assessed by chest CT, optionally whole-body MRI, cerebral MRI or CT, technetium bone scan, and bone marrow aspiration (2–4 sites). Routine biopsy or lymph node sampling was not required but was recommended for clinically and radiologically suspicious regional lymph nodes. CSF examination was required for all parameningeal head and neck tumors and paravertebral tumors adjacent to the meninges.
The TNM classification was applied to differentiate pre-treatment and postsurgical stages [13]. The clinical staging system (IRS I, II, III) adapted from the Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study (IRS) postsurgical grouping system was used to categorize patients according to primary surgery [14]. Resection was classified as R0 (free resection margins), R1 (microscopically incomplete), or R2 (macroscopically incomplete).
Tumor volume at diagnosis and after three chemotherapy cycles (7–10 weeks), in patients with measurable disease (IRS group III), was estimated by measuring the maximum diameter of the primary tumor in three dimensions (X, Y, and Z) according to the formula V = 1/6 × π × X × Y × Z and used for tumor response evaluation defined as complete remission (CR complete disappearance of the tumor), good response (GR) ≥ 2/3, poor response (PR) < 2/3 and ≥1/3, objective response (OR) < 1/3 tumor volume reduction progressive disease (PD), any increase in tumor volume, or stable disease.
These response categories were used for stratification of the radiotherapy dose based on the results of previous CWS studies, showing that the tumor volume reduction after neoadjuvant chemotherapy impacts outcome [6,7,15].
A cut-off at 50% tumor volume reduction after three cycles of chemotherapy (7–10 weeks) was used to direct decisions about subsequent chemotherapy. For patients with response < 50% volume reduction, the protocol recommended switching to second-line chemotherapy regimens, including DOX (for patients in the SR group) or topotecan, carboplatin, CYC, and VP-16 for patients in the HR and VHR groups.
Local therapy consisted of primary or secondary resection and radiotherapy (RT). RT was recommended for all patients except for those with embryonal RMS (eRMS) and primary or secondary complete resection (IRSI, R0). A primary attempt at surgical resection was recommended only if it was considered possible without residuals (R0) and with avoidance of severe functional or cosmetic effects. Patients with primary or secondary R1 resection received adjuvant RT with 44.8 Gy. For patients in IRS group III, the decision on local therapy was made after three cycles of chemotherapy and assessment of response at weeks 7–10. For patients whose tumors were not amenable to an R0 resection, preoperative RT was recommended. RT dose was stratified according to histology and tumor response at week 7–10 and implemented at week 13–17. A total of 32 Gy were given to patients with eRMS and CR or GR; patients with eRMS and PR or aRMS and CR or GR received 44.8 Gy. Fractionation 2 × 1.6 Gy/day given at least 6 h apart (accelerated, hyperfractionated) was recommended for all RT fields except whole abdomen, neuroaxis, heart, liver, lung, and optic chiasma. The same principle was applied for decisions concerning the irradiation of the involved regional lymph nodes. For patients with OR and PD, the local therapy was modified and decided on an individual basis. DOX and ACTO-D were omitted during radiotherapy. The mandated cumulative DOX dose should, however, be completed after RT. Alternative techniques such as brachytherapy and proton therapy were permitted if clinically indicated. Supportive care recommendations were outlined in the protocol. Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor was not recommended prophylactically.

Statistical Considerations

The primary outcomes were event-free survival (EFS) and overall survival (OS). EFS was defined as the time elapsed between the date of diagnosis and either the occurrence of an event or the date of the last patient contact. Event was defined as relapse of disease (local, metastatic, or combined) in patients who achieved complete remission, disease progression (defined as growth of tumor in patients who did not achieve complete remission), or death. Second malignancy was not defined as an event as described in the protocol. Overall survival (OS) was defined as the time from diagnosis to death or last follow-up for surviving patients.
Secondary objectives were to evaluate the modified risk stratification system; to assess the impact of reducing the cumulative dose of IFO in the subgroup A of the SR group (54 g/m2 to 24 g/m2); to assess the impact of an increase in DOX dose intensity, i.e., cumulative dose of 320 mg/m2 given in the first 16 weeks of chemotherapy; to examine the feasibility and impact on the prognosis of 25 weeks of maintenance therapy (MT) with CYC/VBL in patients in the HR and VHR groups who achieved CR (by any means) at the end of intensive systemic and local therapy.
The results obtained within the framework of this study were compared with the previous CWS studies and the EpSSG RMS 2005, conducted almost contemporarily since the risk stratification system was identical in both studies.
Data were prospectively collected and analyzed in the CWS international study center in Stuttgart. Data on adverse events were collected using the Word Health Organization coding system. EFS and OS were calculated using the Kaplan–Meier method. No formal interim monitoring of EFS and OS was planned, but the outcome was analyzed and presented at the annual study committee meetings. Univariate and multivariate hazard ratios and their 95% confidence intervals for the categories considered as potential prognostic were calculated with the corresponding Cox regression model, and significance testing was performed by the Wald-test. In addition, the 5 years EFS and OS were calculated for these categories extended by the individual primary sites and the fusion status. Differences between the corresponding EFS/OS-survival curves were evaluated by the log-rank test. The study protocol specified that factors used in the risk grouping would be assessed for their effect on EFS and OS. Statistical analyses were performed using SPSS statistics 22–25.0.0 (IBM Corporation, Armonk, NY, USA) and R 3.02 (Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, NJ, USA) software packages.

3. Results

3.1. Patients Characteristics

Between 17.1.2003 and 31.12.2010, 498 patients were enrolled, 54 ineligible patients were excluded from this analysis (Figure 2), leaving 444 patients allocated to LR (23), SR (177), HR (219), or VHR (25) groups in the analytic cohort.
The patients’ characteristics are shown in Table 2. Twenty-eight patients with non-documented LN status in the institutional data sheets, who were allocated by their treating physician into SR and HR groups as N0, were regarded as N0 in the survival analysis. In 61 out of 81 aRMS, the fusion status was examined and found positive in 53 tumors (86% of the examined samples).

3.2. Outcome

An overview of the outcome is given in Table 3. A total of 94% of patients achieved complete remission, there were 120 treatment failures (27%), and the median follow-up was 9.6 years (IQR 7.6–10.9). The events were distributed as follows: isolated local failure 68 patients (15%), isolated distant failure 9 patients (2%), combined failure 8 patients (2%), primary progression (without achieving a CR) 31 patients (7%), unknown site of recurrence 4 patients (1%). The median time to relapse was 1.5 years (0.4–9). A total of 67% of relapses occurred within 2 years of diagnosis.
The tumor response, assessed after three cycles of chemotherapy in 212 cases with macroscopic tumors, was CR 6%, GR 58%, PR 22%, OR 12%, and PD 2%. Seven patients in the SR and 10 patients in the HR group with a tumor reduction < 50% switched to second-line treatment. The 5-year EFS and OS for the whole group were 73% (95% CI 69–77) and 80% (95% CI 76–84), respectively (Figure 3).
The 5-year EFS by risk group was 100% in the LR, 79% (95% CI 72–84) in the SR, 69% (95% CI 63–75) in the HR and 42% (95% CI 23–61) in the VHR (log-rank p = 0.000). The 5-year OS was 100%, 88% (95% CI 83–93), 76% (95% CI 70–82) and 42% (95% CI 23–61) respectively (log-rank p = 0.000), (Table 3, Figure 4). The 5-year EFS and OS in the SR-A vs. B subgroup was 81% (95% CI 72–90) vs. 77% (95% CI 69–85) (log-rank p = 0.34) and 96% (95% CI 92–100) vs. 83% (95% CI 76–90) (log-rank p = 0.04) respectively. In comparison, 10-year EFS and OS differ only minimally (Table 3) but single events occurred also after 5 years.
A total of 155 patients in the HR group, out of 204 who achieved CR, received MT at the end of intensive multimodal therapy, while 49 did not, based on the decision of the treating physician. The distribution of clinical variables in both groups did not differ, as shown (Supplementary Table S2). The 5-year EFS was 77% (95% CI 70–84%) for patients who received MT versus 63% (95% CI 50–76) for patients who did not (log-rank p = 0.015) and the 5-year OS was 84% (95% CI 78–90) versus 73% (95% CI 61–85) (log-rank p = 0.099) (Figure 5). In the VHR group, 16 patients out of 18 who achieved CR received MT (10 of whom were alive), and 2 did not (one was alive).
Radiotherapy was given to 82 (46%) patients in SR, 147 (67%) in HR, and 22 (88%) in the VHR group. A total of 90 patients died, 85 deaths were related to tumor relapse or progression.
There was one death from a toxic event (septic shock after surgery) during protocol therapy. Two patients died of non-protocol treatment-related toxicity, one from kidney failure after salvage chemotherapy and another as a result of liver failure after surgery of the relapse tumor. One patient succumbed to a glioblastoma occurring as a second tumor and one due to underlying genetic disorders. There were 22 (5%) second malignancies (SMN), 3 hematological and 19 solid tumors reported, in the SR group 13 (7.3%) and in the HR group 9 (4.1%). Details concerning SM are shown (Supplementary Table S3). The median time to second malignancy was 6 years (0.2–12) from the start of therapy. One patient developed a neuroblastoma almost simultaneously with the RMS. Fourteen patients out of 251 who were irradiated during the first treatment developed SM (5.5%), and 8/193 who were not (4.1%).

3.3. Toxicities

The most common grade 3–4 adverse events (using the World Health Organization coding system (WHO)), summarized across all courses of therapy were as follows in the four risk groups:
LR group leucopenia 4%, thrombocytopenia 4%;
SR group leucopenia 67%, thrombocytopenia 20%, anemia 3%, hepatopathy 4%, gastrointestinal toxicity 5%, clinically documented infection 10%, nephropathy 2%, peripheral neuropathy 1%;
HR group leucopenia 64%, thrombocytopenia 39%, anemia 7%, hepatopathy 1%, gastrointestinal toxicity 10%, clinically documented infection 16%, peripheral neuropathy 3%, central nervous toxicity 1%;
VHR group leucopenia 84%, thrombocytopenia 44%, anemia 4%, hepatopathy 4%, gastrointestinal toxicity 28%, clinically documented infection 12%, peripheral neuropathy 4%, central nervous toxicity 4%, skin toxicity 1%.
The organ dysfunction documented at the end of the multimodal therapy was: symptomatic cardiac dysfunction in the LR group 4%, SR group 2%, HR group 2%, and VHR group 4%. Renal dysfunction in the LR group 4%, SR group 16%, HR group 14%, and VHR group 8%. Endocrine disorders in the SR group 2%, HR group 3%, and VHR group 4%. Growth disorders in the SR group 3% and HR group 5%. Neuropathy in the SR group 6%, HR group 4%, and VHR group 8% (all of these were peripheral with the exception of 1 patient in the SR group who developed a central neuropathy).

3.4. Univariate and Multivariate Analysis

The following clinical variables used in the risk stratification were considered potential prognostic factors and included in the univariate and multivariate Cox regression analyses: age (≤10 vs. >10 years), size (≤5 vs. >5 cm), IRS stage, histology (unfavorable: aRMS vs. favorable: eRMS), primary site (favorable: GU-BP, HN-nPM, ORB vs. unfavorable: EXT, OTHER, HN-PM, GU-nBP), T-Status (T1 vs. T2) and N-Status (N0 vs. N1). Univariate hazard ratios for EFS and OS were significantly influenced by all variables except age (Supplementary Table S4). In the multivariate analysis significant negative prognostic factors for EFS were; IRS III vs. IRS I (HR 2.81, p = 0.02), T-Status T2 vs. T1 (HR 1.55 p = 0.02) and N-Status N1 vs. N0 (HR 1.57 p = 0.04) and for OS unfavorable histology (HR 1.79 p = 0.002), T-Status (HR 1.81 p = 0.02) and N-Status (HR 1.82 p = 0.02) (Supplementary Table S5). In addition, a univariate analysis was performed, which included not only primary sites by groups (favorable and unfavorable) but the seven single primary sites categories and fusion status in patients with aRMS (Supplementary Table S6). No clear grouping in the favorable and unfavorable groups has emerged, but the 5-year EFS rates of single primary sites decrease gradually from 84% for UG-nBP, 83% for ORB, 77% for UG-BP, 72% for HN-nPM, 70% EXT, 65% for HN-PM to 62% for OTH. aRMS histology, with or without fusion status, was highly associated with prognosis.

4. Discussion

One of the most pertinent aims in the evolution of therapy concepts for children with malignancies is the precise risk adaptation of the known effective therapy modalities with the goal to achieve the best possible outcome with as little therapy as possible. Treating young patients with cancer aims not only at achieving cure but at avoiding late effects such as permanent disabilities, second malignancies, organ dysfunction, and infertility. The objectives of the CWS-2002P study pursued this strategy. The risk stratification systems of the CWS-2002P and RMS 2005 studies, which included tumor size and patient`s age additionally to the risk factors included in previous European studies, were identical since they were based on common analyses and agreements between the CWS, AIEOP-STSC, and MMT groups. By including tumor size and patient age into risk stratification, patients from the previous HR group (CWS-96) who were <10 years with eRMS in the IRS group II and III were classified in the SR group despite unfavorable tumor site. The risk-adapted chemotherapy in the CWS-2002P without DOX in the LR and SR and without IFO in the LR and dose-reduced in the SR subgroup A (from 54 to 24 g/m2, CYC equivalent dose approximately 13.5 g/m2 to 6 g/m2) did not impair EFS and OS as compared to previous CWS and other published results [1,7,8,10,11]. Some patients treated in our SR group were treated on the COG protocol ARST0331 in the LR group with a very low cumulative dose of CYC (4,8 g/m2) without a compromised outcome in subset 1 but with inferior EFS in subset 2, indicating an important role of CYC dose for prognosis [16,17]. Reduction in the CYC dose in the COG ARST0531 trial on the intermediate-risk group (to 8.4–16.8 g/m2 from 25.1 to 30.8 g/m2), which is partially comparable to the HR and VHR groups in this trial, was discussed as one of the reasons for the poorer outcome compared with the previous trial D9803 [18]. The cumulative dose of IFO in the HR and VHR group in the CWS-2002P was 54 g/m2 (CYC equivalent dose approximately 13.5 g/m2), which is similar to the CYC dose in the ARST0531 trial, without increased therapy failure rates. It is, therefore, still not clear what is the optimal dose of alkylating agent and whether the dose per cycle, dose intensity, or cumulative dose are crucial. The outcome analysis by single primary tumor sites demonstrated that the grouping into favorable and unfavorable sites, which was based on the common agreement of the CWS, AIEOP-STSC, and MMT study groups and used in the CWS-2002P study, the EpSSG RMS 2005 and the CWS-Guidance have to be reevaluated. In the multivariate analysis, they had no influence on EFS or OS. The GU-BP, which is regarded as an unfavorable site, had a very good outcome (EFS 78% (95% CI 67.3–90.4)) comparable to other favorable sites ORB, HN-nPM, and GU-nPB [19]. Similar to the RMS 2005 analysis of risk stratification, the GU-BP site had an EFS of 75.8% (65.6–83.4) and is regarded as a favorable site in the ongoing FaR-RMS EpSSG trial [11]. The distribution of histology in alveolar (n = 74) vs. non-alveolar (n = 355) compared to “fusion status positive (n = 50) or negative” did not yield a major difference in terms of prognostic significance since only six tumors with alveolar histology were “fusion negative”. Other features such as histological anaplasia (often associated with TP53 mutations) or spindle cell morphology (associated with MYOD1 mutation or VGLL2 fusions) have been shown to be relevant for prognosis but were not systematically recorded in the CWS-2002P database, so we could not analyze their impact on the outcome.
A further aim was to clarify the possible significance of DOX dose intensity. The role of DOX in the treatment of patients with RMS has been controversial for over 40 years [1,20] despite many trials both in North America and Europe investigating this question. The comparisons of results between groups were complicated due to differences in risk assignment. Two European studies investigated the role of therapy intensification in a randomized way, comparing three-drugs regimen IVA (MMT95, 1995–2003) and four-drugs regimen IVA plus DOX cumulative dose 240 mg/m2 (CWS/ICG-96, 1996–2003) with a six-drugs regimen CEVAIE (epirubicine instead of DOX, cumulative dose 450 mg/m2, plus etoposide and carboplatin) in the identical defined HR group showing no difference in outcome between therapy arms group [8,9]. The EpSSG RMS 2005 study, conducted between 2005 and 2013, randomized the IVA regimen vs. IVA plus DOX (given simultaneously with ACTO-D in the first four cycles, (11 weeks, cumulative dose 240 mg/m2)) and again showed no improvement in the outcome of patients with high-risk RMS10. The CWS-2002P study conducted almost contemporarily (2003–2010) pursued a similar question of the DOX dose intensity for the HR group but with an increased cumulative dose of 320 mg/m2 given in the first 16 weeks and achieved identical EFS as RMS 2005. Similarly, no improvement of prognosis for the HR group was achieved when compared to the CWS-96 study (standard arm: DOX cumulative dose of 240 mg/m2 or experimental arm: epirubicine 450 mg/m2 applied during the first 22 weeks) [8]. The CWS Group, therefore, recommended IVA/VA as standard therapy for patients with SR and HR localized RMS in the CWS-Guidance, which outlines therapy recommendations for localized RMS since 2010. CWS studies have previously evaluated the role of low-dose chemotherapy given at the end of the standard therapy as an MT and showed promising effects in patients with metastatic RMS [21]. The CWS-2002P study investigated in a non-randomized way the feasibility, tolerability, and impact on the prognosis of 6-months low-dose cyclophosphamide and vinblastine in patients in HR and VHR groups and showed that this therapy was feasible, well tolerated, and improved EFS. RMS 2005 investigated the role of a similar MT (vinorelbine instead of vinblastine) by randomizing HR patients who have received 25 weeks of IVA+/− doxorubicin to receive or not receive an additional 24 weeks MT. The MT seemed to improve survival but not disease-free survival [22]. One has to keep in mind that one of the main reasons to use IFO in the standard RMS treatment in Europe instead of CYC as used in the USA, was the assumed lower gonadal toxicity. Cumulative doses of CYC in the MT (CWS-2002P 7.35 and RMS 2005 4.2 g/m2) are relevant for gonadal toxicity, which has to be considered in assessing the late effects of the MT. The role of MT continues to be evaluated. The CWS group is now conducting the CWS-2007HR study (EudraCT number: 2007-001478-10) in which patients with RMS and RMS-like tumors in HR and VHR are randomly assigned to receive another MT with etoposide, idarubicin, and trofosfamide following standard IVA or VAIA therapy. The new EpSSG FaR-RMS trial (EudraCT number: 2018-000515-24) investigates the role of a longer duration of MT with cyclophosphamide and vinorelbine (randomization 6 vs. 12 months).

5. Conclusions

The study shows that a reduction in the IFO dose did not deteriorate the outcome, and an increase in the dose intensity of doxorubicin did not improve prognosis in comparison to the CWS-91 and -96 and EpSSG RMS 2005 study. This is an important message in relation to the acute and long-term effects of therapy. The maintenance therapy with cyclophosphamide and vinblastine applied at the end of multimodal therapy in the high- and very high-risk groups improved event-free survival and has to be further evaluated, both regarding the outcome and long-term sequelae. This provides additional information to the results of the RMS 2005 study that investigated vinorelbine in MT. Vinblastine is more easily accessible in many countries and could be used as an alternative to vinorelbine. Our analysis also shows that the established assignment of primary sites into favorable or unfavorable, based on the consensus of the European and North American cooperative soft tissue sarcoma groups, needs to be revised. In our opinion, the current risk stratification system in general, which was historically developed through joint analyzes of potential risk factors within the framework of international cooperation, should be reassessed. An international effort is needed before relevant biologic subtypes may eventually be incorporated into standard practice [23]. The first step to harmonize approaches to optimize RMS risk stratification a collaboration of the three cooperative groups: Children’s Oncology Group (COG), Cooperative Weichteilsarkom Studiengruppe (CWS), and European pediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) was initiated, resulting in the INternational Soft Tissue SaRcoma ConsorTium (INSTRuCT) (https://commons.cri.uchicago.edu/instruct/ accessed on 8 February 2022).

Supplementary Materials

The following are available online at https://www.mdpi.com/article/10.3390/cancers14040899/s1, Table S1: Factors included in the risk stratification in the CWS studies -81, 86, -91, -96, and -2002P, Table S2: Patient characteristics in the high-risk group by therapy arm: maintenance vs. no maintenance therapy, Table S3: Characteristics of patients with second malignancy, Table S4: Univariate analysis, Table S5: Multivariate analysis, Table S6: Univariate analysis considering individual tumor sites and fusion status.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, E.K., F.N., G.L., R.H. and T.K.; Data curation, B.B.; Formal analysis, B.B. and M.S.-S.; Investigation, B.B., C.V., B.K. and J.F.; Methodology, E.K.; Project administration, E.K., B.K., R.L., F.N., G.L. and T.K.; Writing—original draft, E.K.; Writing—review and editing, E.K., B.B., C.V., B.K., R.L., F.N., G.L., R.H., G.S., J.F., B.F., M.S., R.W., I.S., M.S.-S. and T.K. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

The CWS-2002P trial was funded by grants from the German Cancer Aid Foundation (Deutsche Krebshilfe), Bonn, Germany, 50-2721-Tr2 and by the Foerderkreis Krebskranke Kinder Stuttgart, Germany.

Institutional Review Board Statement

CWS-2002P was conducted in accordance with principles of the Declaration of Helsinki and Good Clinical Practice guidelines and approved by the Ethics Review Board of the University of Tuebingen (51/2003). All participating centers had to obtain additionally written approval from their local authorities and ethics committees

Informed Consent Statement

Informed consent was obtained from all parents/guardians or patients according to the legal requirements.

Data Availability Statement

Individual participant data are not publicly available since this requirement was not anticipated in the study protocol.

Acknowledgments

We thank all patients, parents, national and international investigators and data managers who participated in the study, data manager of the CWS study Erika Hallmen, for data management and study coordination assistance, and Mary Morgan, a native speaking colleague, for review of the manuscript. We are especially indebted to Jörn Treuner, the former Chair of the CWS Group, and Modesto Carli, the former Chair of the STS ICG, who unfortunately passed away in 2021, for their crucial role in establishing the European cooperation of STS groups and in founding the EpSSG.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors do not have any potential conflict of interest in relation to any aspects of the CWS-2002P study and declare no competing interests.

References

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Figure 1. CWS-2002P treatment plan.
Figure 1. CWS-2002P treatment plan.
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Figure 2. Consort diagram.
Figure 2. Consort diagram.
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Figure 3. Legend: event-free and overall survival (EFS and OS) for all patients.
Figure 3. Legend: event-free and overall survival (EFS and OS) for all patients.
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Figure 4. Legend: event-free and overall survival (EFS and OS) by risk group.
Figure 4. Legend: event-free and overall survival (EFS and OS) by risk group.
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Figure 5. Legend: event-free and overall survival for patients in the HR group according to treatment with maintenance therapy (MT).
Figure 5. Legend: event-free and overall survival for patients in the HR group according to treatment with maintenance therapy (MT).
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Table 1. Risk stratification for patients with localized rhabdomyosarcoma.
Table 1. Risk stratification for patients with localized rhabdomyosarcoma.
Risk GroupPathologyIRS Group SiteLN StageSize and Age
Low (LR)eRMSIAnyN0Favorable
Standard (SR)eRMSIAnyN0Unfavorable
eRMSII, IIIFavorableN0Any
eRMSII, IIIUnfavorableN0Favorable
High (HR)eRMSII, IIIUnfavorableN0Unfavorable
eRMSII, IIIAnyN1Any
aRMSI, II, IIIAnyN0Any
Very High (VHR)aRMSI, II, IIIAnyN1Any
Abbreviations and/or definitions: IRS group—postsurgical stage; Pathology: eRMS—all embryonal RMS spindle cell and botryoid, aRMS–all alveolar RMS (including solid-alveolar variant); Site—primary tumor site Favorable: orbit (ORB), genitourinary non-bladder and prostate GU-NBP (i.e., paratesticular, vagina/uterus), head and neck non-paramenigeal (HN-NPM), Site—primary tumor site Unfavorable: head and neck paramenigeal (HN-PM), genitourinary bladder and prostate (GU-BP), extremities (EXT), “other site” (OTH); LN Stage—regional lymph node status; Size and Age Favorable: ≤5 cm and ≤10 years, Size and Age Unfavorable: >10 years and/or >5 cm.
Table 2. Patient characteristics.
Table 2. Patient characteristics.
Risk Group
TotalLowStandardHighVery High
No.%No.%No.%No.%No.%
4441002351174021949256
Variable
Sex
Male26058219110358123561354
Female1844229744296441246
Age
≤10 years331742310013576162741146
>10 years11325--422457261454
Histology
aRMS fusion positive5312----34161976
aRMS fusion negative72----74--
aRMS fusion unknown214- --147631
Non-aRMS363822310017710016374--
Tumor site
EXT389--423014415
HN-nPM451029221219928
HN-PM11426--261576-1246
ORBITA4410--412331--
GU-BP5011--21122913-4
GU-nBP80182191533063--
OTH7216--10655-727
Not specified1 ----1---
Tumor size
≤5 cm2235023100132746228623
>5 cm20647--4224145661977
Not specified153--32126--
IRSG
I551223100271552--
II6715--4324231114
III32273--10761191872496
Tumor invasiveness
T1210471983115657032627
T2204463135431129591869
TX307148420914
Regional lymph nodes
N035079231001699615873--
N16615----411825100
NX286--84209--
Table 3. Failures and survival parameters by risk groups.
Table 3. Failures and survival parameters by risk groups.
Risk Group
Low
n = 23
Standard
n = 177
High
n = 219
Very High
n = 25
Total
n = 444
n (%)n (%)n (%)n (%)n (%)
1st Complete remission (CR) achieved23 (100)172 (97)204 (93)18 (73)417 (94)
Failures
Local1 (4)26 (15)37 (17)4 (16)68 (15)
Metastatic--6 (3)3 (12)9 (2)
Combined-3 (2)5 (2)-8 (2)
Progression-6 (3)18 (8)7 (28)31 (7)
Not specified-1 ()3 (1)-4 (1)
Total failures1 (4)36 (20)69 (32)14 (56)120 (27)
Sec malignancy0139022
Alive23 (100)155 (88)165 (75)11 (44)354 (80)
Dead022 (12)54 (25)14 (56)90 (20)
DOD020511485
DOT00101
DoOT00202
DOC 02002
Median follow-up
years (IQR)
9.8 (7.8–10.6)9.9 (7.7–10.6)9.7 (7.4–11.3)9.3 (8.4–10.2)9.6 (7.6–10.9)
EFS 5 years rate% (95% CI)10079 (72–84)69 (63–75)42 (23–61)73 (69–77)
EFS 10 years rate% (95% CI)95 (72–84)77 (70–84)67 (71–83)42 (23–61)71 (67–75)
OS 5 years rate% (95% CI)10088 (83–93)76 (70–82)42 (23–61)80 (76–84)
OS 10 years rate% (95% CI)10087 (84–90)75 (69–81)42 (23–61)79 (75–83)
Legend: CR = complete remission, DOD = dead of disease, DOT = dead of therapy, DOC = dead of other causes, DOoT = dead of other therapy (non-CWS) EFS = event-free survival. FU = median follow-up (in years) (min-max) for patients alive, LN = lymph node, OS= overall survival, RT = radiotherapy, ukn = unknown.
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Koscielniak, E.; Blank, B.; Vokuhl, C.; Kazanowska, B.; Ladenstein, R.; Niggli, F.; Ljungman, G.; Handgretinger, R.; Seitz, G.; Fuchs, J.; et al. Long-Term Clinical Outcome and Prognostic Factors of Children and Adolescents with Localized Rhabdomyosarcoma Treated on the CWS-2002P Protocol. Cancers 2022, 14, 899. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14040899

AMA Style

Koscielniak E, Blank B, Vokuhl C, Kazanowska B, Ladenstein R, Niggli F, Ljungman G, Handgretinger R, Seitz G, Fuchs J, et al. Long-Term Clinical Outcome and Prognostic Factors of Children and Adolescents with Localized Rhabdomyosarcoma Treated on the CWS-2002P Protocol. Cancers. 2022; 14(4):899. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14040899

Chicago/Turabian Style

Koscielniak, Ewa, Bernd Blank, Christian Vokuhl, Bernarda Kazanowska, Ruth Ladenstein, Felix Niggli, Gustaf Ljungman, Rupert Handgretinger, Guido Seitz, Jörg Fuchs, and et al. 2022. "Long-Term Clinical Outcome and Prognostic Factors of Children and Adolescents with Localized Rhabdomyosarcoma Treated on the CWS-2002P Protocol" Cancers 14, no. 4: 899. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14040899

APA Style

Koscielniak, E., Blank, B., Vokuhl, C., Kazanowska, B., Ladenstein, R., Niggli, F., Ljungman, G., Handgretinger, R., Seitz, G., Fuchs, J., Fröhlich, B., Scheer, M., Wessalowski, R., Schmid, I., Sparber-Sauer, M., & Klingebiel, T. (2022). Long-Term Clinical Outcome and Prognostic Factors of Children and Adolescents with Localized Rhabdomyosarcoma Treated on the CWS-2002P Protocol. Cancers, 14(4), 899. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14040899

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