Localized Ewing tumor of bone: final results of the cooperative Ewing's Sarcoma Study CESS 86.

  • M Paulussen
  • S Ahrens
  • J Dunst
  • W Winkelmann
  • G U Exner
  • R Kotz
  • G Amann
  • B Dockhorn-Dworniczak
  • D Harms
  • S Müller-Weihrich
  • K Welte
  • B Kornhuber
  • Gritta Janka-Schaub
  • U Göbel
  • J Treuner
  • P A Voûte
  • A Zoubek
  • H Gadner
  • H Jürgens

Abstract

PURPOSE: Cooperative Ewing's Sarcoma Study (CESS) 86 aimed at improving event-free survival (EFS) in patients with high-risk localized Ewing tumor of bone. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We analyzed 301 patients recruited from January 1986 to July 1991 (60% male; median age 15 years). Tumors of volume >100 mL and/or at central-axis sites qualified patients for "high risk" (HR, n = 241), and small extremity lesions for "standard risk" (SR, n = 52). Standard-risk patients received 12 courses of vincristine, cyclophosphamide, and doxorubicin alternating with actinomycin D (VACA); HR patients received ifosfamide instead of cyclophosphamide (VAIA). Tumor sites were pelvis (27%), other central axis (28%), femur (19%), or other extremity (26%). The initial tumor volume was or =100 mL in 67%. Local therapy was surgery (23%), surgery plus radiotherapy (49%), or radiotherapy alone (28%). Event-free survival rates were estimated by Kaplan-Meier analyses, comparisons were done by log-rank test, and risk factors were analyzed by Cox models. RESULTS: On May 1, 1999 (median time under study, 133 months), the 10-year EFS was 0.52. Event-free survival did not differ between SR-VACA (0.52) and HR-VAIA (0.51, P =.92). Tumor volume of >200 mL (EFS, 0.36 v 0.63 for smaller tumors; P =.0001) and poor histologic response (EFS, 0.38 v 0.64 for good responders; P =.0007) had negative impacts on EFS. In multivariate analyses, small tumor volumes of

Bibliographical data

Original languageGerman
Article number6
ISSN0732-183X
Publication statusPublished - 2001
pubmed 11251014