Abstract

Background

The French EMS study prospectively collected exhaustive data from STS patients diagnosed in the Rhone-Alpes region from 2005 to 07.

Methods

The database included diagnosis/histology, surgery, radiotherapy, systemic treatments and treatment response. Treatment patterns and outcomes of patients with metastatic disease, excluding adipocytic sarcoma and GIST were analyzed.

Results

Of 888 total patients, 145 were included based on having metastatic disease and appropriate subtypes. All patients received treatment with systemic therapy being most common (74%, n = 107), followed by radiotherapy (30%, n = 44) and surgery (23%, n = 33). Doxorubicin, alone or in combination, was the most common first line systemic therapy (65%, n = 46). Drugs without license in sarcoma were used in 38-83% of treatments depending on treatment line. 24% of frontline patients demonstrated an objective response, decreasing to 11% objective responses in second line but no responses were documented beyond second line, with median PFS declining with each additional line. Median PFS also declined in patients receiving surgery compared to those receiving no surgery (8-15 m vs 5 m). Median OS from metastatic diagnosis for patients receiving systemic therapy was double that of patients without systemic treatment (24 m vs 12 m, p = 0.007).

Conclusions

Outcomes in this population were poor and declined with successive treatment. However, results suggest that further anticancer therapies in recurrent sarcoma might be beneficial.

Details

Title
Treatment patterns and survival in an exhaustive French cohort of pazopanib-eligible patients with metastatic soft tissue sarcoma (STS)
Author
Ray-Coquard, Isabelle; Collard, Olivier; Ducimetiere, Francoise; Laramas, Mathieu; Mercier, Florence; Ladarre, Nadine; Manson, Stephanie; Tehard, Bertrand; Clippe, Sebastien; Jean-Philippe Suchaud; Stefani, Laetitia; Blay, Jean-Yves
Publication year
2017
Publication date
2017
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
e-ISSN
14712407
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1873453011
Copyright
Copyright BioMed Central 2017