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골육종
Abstract: Despite significant advancements in the diagnosis and
treatment of osteosarcoma to date, overall survival has remained
relatively constant for over 2 decades. The challenge in osteosarcoma
stems from the extreme variability from one tumor to the next,
making it unlikely that a single target approach would be able to
address all or even a majority of patients. Awareness, education, and
proper referral patterns serve to minimize avoidable errors in diagnosis
and treatment. However, it is unlikely that these efforts alone will
significantly improve survival outcomes. Modern multi-agent chemotherapy
has resulted in the greatest improvement in overall survival
to date, and it is very likely that future improvements in survival
will arise from combination-targeted chemotherapy in addition to
conventional treatment.
Introduction
Osteosarcoma is a primary mesenchymal tumor that is characterized
histologically by the production of osteoid by malignant cells.1
It
is a relatively rare malignancy, with approximately 900 new cases
reported in the United States per year.2 It represents less than 1%
of cancers reported within the United States, with a peak incidence
of 4.4 cases per million per year in the adolescent and young adult
population.3
Despite their rarity, osteosarcomas are the most common
primary malignancy of bone,4
representing approximately
3.4% of all childhood cancers and 56% of malignant bone tumors
in children.5
Epidemiology
Osteosarcoma follows a bimodal distribution, with an initial peak in
the late adolescent and young adult period and a second peak during
or after the 6th decade of life. Although adolescent and young
adult osteosarcomas are nearly always considered primary, one-third
to one-half of the adult tumors are classified as secondary,6,7 resulting,
for example, from malignant transformation of Paget disease of bone or, less commonly, another benign bone lesion.
A multi-institutional review of the Japanese population
reports a lower incidence of Paget disease and a higher
incidence of primary adult osteosarcoma, suggesting
either a geographic or ethnic influence on incidence.8
Adolescent and early adult osteosarcoma (ages 0–24
years) occurs at an age-adjusted incidence of 4.4 per million
within the United States.6
Incidence is higher among
males (male:female ratio, 1.43:1), but peaks earlier among
females (age 12 vs 16 years). An association between rapid
bone growth and osteosarcoma has been argued, given
the tumor’s typical metaphyseal location and its peak
incidence during adolescence and early adulthood. Support
for this theory includes a 185-fold risk in large-breed
compared with small-breed canines.9
Patients with osteosarcoma
have been found to be significantly taller than
the general population10,11 and the earlier age of onset in
the female population also seems to indirectly support
this theory, given earlier skeletal growth and maturity
in females compared with males. Incidence is highest
among Asian/Pacific Islanders (5.3 per million) followed
by blacks (5.1 per million), Hispanics (4.9 per million),
whites (4.4 per million), and American Indian/Alaskan
natives (3.0 per million). The second peak, between the
ages of 60 and 85, demonstrates an incidence within the
United States of 4.2 per million, and is overall more common
among females (male:female ratio, 0.89:1), though
Paget-associated osteosarcoma is more frequent among
males (male:female ratio, 1.58:1). The greatest incidence
within this age group is among blacks (4.6 per million),
followed by whites (3.7 per million), Hispanics (3.0 per
million), American Indian/Alaskan natives (2.9 per million),
and Asian/Pacific Islanders (1.9 per million).
Pathogenesis
Several risk factors for the development of osteosarcoma
are well established. The use of ionizing radiation for the
treatment of childhood solid cancers has been well implicated
in the development of a second malignancy,12,13 of
which osteosarcoma is the most likely to develop within
the first 2 decades following treatment.12,14 A more recent
review of 108 secondary sarcomas in patients surviving
all types of childhood malignancies found osteosarcoma
to be the second most common cancer, occurring in 31
of 100 classifiable tumors.15 This association has been
attributed to high cumulative radiation doses16 as well
as high doses of alkylator or anthracycline-containing
chemotherapies.12,14,17 More recently, it has been shown
that even after radiation and chemotherapy treatments
are controlled for, primary childhood sarcoma survivors
are at an increased risk for a second malignancy, with
osteosarcoma occurring approximately one-third of the
time.15 A review of 3,482 cases using the Surveillance,
Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) 17 database
found the overall incidence of osteosarcoma as a second
cancer to be 10%.3
A second recognized risk factor for the development
of osteosarcoma is Paget disease of bone, or osteitis
deformans, which is an uncoupling of bone formation
and resorption resulting in an accelerated rate of bone
turnover. The incidence of malignant transformation of
Paget disease is approximately 1%,18 relatively unchanged
from historical reviews.19,20 Although histologically the
same as spontaneous osteosarcomas, those arising from
Paget disease demonstrate a remarkably poor outcome,21
with no significant improvement in treatment or survival
despite the advent of modern adjuvant treatments.22
There is some evidence that the association between Paget
and osteosarcoma is in fact a genetic predisposition, with
both demonstrating a loss of heterozygosity involving, to
varying extents, the distal end of chromosome 18.23
There are a number of inherited genetic conditions
that predispose affected individuals to a variety of malignancies,
among them osteosarcoma. These include
hereditary retinoblastoma, Li-Fraumeni syndrome,
Rothmund-Thomson syndrome, and Bloom and Werner
syndromes. In patients carrying a germline mutation of
the RB gene, osteosarcoma is the second most common
malignancy to develop after retinoblastoma,24 and it
occurs at an incidence 500 times that of the normal population.25
In general, greater than 70% of all osteosarcomas
demonstrate an overt form of mutation in the RB gene.26
Li-Fraumeni is a familial syndrome, which involves the
germline mutation of p53, predisposing affected individuals
to a multitude of cancers including breast cancer,
brain cancers, soft tissue sarcomas, leukemia, adrenocortical
tumors, and osteosarcoma. Osteosarcoma has been
reported as being the second most common malignancy
in this patient population, with an incidence of around
12%.27 Approximately 71% of cases demonstrate a p53
tumor suppressor gene mutation on chromosome 17p13,
implicating this genetic defect as a likely but not exclusive
cause of malignancy in this syndrome.28 Overall, the
number of osteosarcoma cases associated with a germline
p53 mutation is low, and in the pediatric population has
been reported to be involved in only approximately 3%
of cases.29 Although over two-thirds of cases are associated
with an overt mutation in the RB and p53 genes, it is
conceivable that more elusive defects in their associated
pathways exist. The role of RB and p53 may be far understated,
and it has been postulated to be essential in the
development of this and many other cancers.
Rothmund-Thomson syndrome, or poikiloderma
congenitale, is a genomic instability syndrome with
RECQL4 gene mutations identified in approximately
70% of cases. Although sporadic osteosarcoma has not
been linked to RECQL4 gene mutations, osteosarcoma develops in up to 32% of Rothmund-Thomson syndrome
cases.30 Although these patients present at an earlier age,
their clinical course is similar to sporadic osteosarcoma.31
The RECQ gene family has also been implicated in conditions
such as Bloom syndrome (RECQL2) and Werner
syndrome (RECQL3), both of which are associated with
a wide variety of malignancies including osteosarcoma.
Clinical Presentation
Patients typically present with localized pain and swelling
of the affected area, with the most frequent sites of
disease in descending order being the metaphyseal bone
of the distal femur, the proximal tibia, and the proximal
humerus. Although mild blunt trauma is often reported
as an antecedent event, no convincing evidence to support
an association between trauma and osteosarcoma
currently exists. Pain may initially be described as activity-related,
but over time it often progresses to pain at
rest and night pain. Pain is typically reproducible with
palpation. Clinical symptoms frequently last for weeks to
months prior to presentation and are commonly attributed
to “growing pains.” The median time from onset of
symptoms to diagnosis is 4 months, though significant
variability exists. Rarely, pathologic fracture is the presenting
sign. Systemic complaints such as fever and weight
loss are rare. Laboratory values are of little utility with the
exception of alkaline phosphatase (ALP), which is elevated
in approximately 40% of cases32 and lactate dehydrogenase
(LDH), which is elevated in approximately 30% of
cases.33 Normal pretreatment ALP levels have been associated
with improved 5-year disease-free survival (67% vs
54%) and a longer time to disease recurrence (25 months
vs 18 months).34 LDH also offers prognostic information,
with an extreme elevation portending a poor outcome.35
Despite these and other studies, the clinical utility of these
markers is debatable.
Approximately 10–20% of patients present with
macroscopic evidence of metastatic disease and approximately
80% of patients present with microscopic metastatic
disease, which is subclinical or undetectable using
current diagnostic modalities. Metastatic disease typically
develops hematogenously, with the most common sites
of metastasis being the lungs followed by other bones.
Skip metastases, previously described as occurring hematogenously,
may represent locoregional events and may
occur in a manner distinct from distant hematogenous
spread. They are generally thought of as local noncontinuous
spread of disease within the same bone as the primary
tumor. While it may represent metastatic bone disease,
it is currently unclear whether this process is exactly the
same as more distant hematogenous spread. Regardless,
the presence of skip metastases portends dismal prognosis
and may reflect an inherently different biology in this
subset of tumors.
The most reliable and important prognostic indicator
currently available is the detection of metastatic disease
at the time of presentation, with long-term outcomes
reduced from 70% to less than 20% in such instances.
Metastatic lung disease has a better prognosis than does
either metastatic bone disease or skip metastases. Patients
with lung disease who have fewer than 3 nodules and
unilateral disease may have a survival advantage, probably
because surgery can render such individuals free of
disease. This advantage remains somewhat controversial,
however, and it has been suggested that increased 5-year
survival is related to tumor necrosis greater than 98%
and a disease-free interval of greater than 1 year rather
than nodule number or location.36,37 Patients with either
progressive tumor growth while undergoing systemic
treatment or with recurrent disease have a less than 20%
rate of long-term survival. Other commonly referenced
prognostic indicators include LDH elevation and Huvos
tumor necrosis grade,38 following standard neoadjuvant
chemotherapy administration and wide surgical resection.
Interestingly, modifications of neoadjuvant treatment
regimens to achieve better tumor necrosis thus
far have not affected survival outcomes.39 It has been
speculated that Huvos grading simply describes inherent
tumor responsiveness to chemotherapy and is not
an indicator of systemic chemotherapy effectiveness,
and furthermore, that manipulation of chemotherapy
to improve local necrosis does not necessarily improve
overall patient survival.
Diagnosis and Staging
Accurate diagnosis and staging are fundamental prerequisites
for appropriate treatment planning, patient education
and guidance, and patient participation in clinical
trials. It is important that the treating team be experienced
in the diagnosis and treatment of bone sarcomas to
minimize iatrogenic morbidity and maximize diagnostic
accuracy. Osteosarcomas are often treated at tertiary care
facilities, which evaluate and treat these rare malignancies
in multidisciplinary settings that serve to improve
communication between physicians and coordination of
patient care.
Imaging studies include plain radiographs of the
involved bone and adjacent joint. Osteosarcoma typically
appears as a mixed radiodense and lytic lesion arising
in an eccentric manner from the metaphyseal bone.
(Figures 1 and 2). There is frequently mass extension into
the adjacent tissue. Cortical destruction and periosteal
reaction are common, and typically manifest in a sunburst
pattern. In addition, a Codman’s triangle, or elevation of the periosteum at the tumor’s periphery, is a classic
though nonspecific feature. Osteosarcoma mineralizes in
a centrifugal manner and should not be confused with
myositis ossificans, which has an overall benign appearance
and which ossifies in a centripetal fashion. The plain
radiograph is very suggestive, and classic radiographic
features should prompt the assumption that the lesion is
a primary bone sarcoma until otherwise proven. Pain at
rest, night pain, and progressive pain all warrant radiographic
examination. Given the relative ease and safety of
radiography, clinicians should maintain a low threshold
for obtaining plain films.
A magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) study of the
entire bone is warranted for anatomic evaluation of soft
tissue extension, to assess proximity to surrounding structures,
and to identify skip metastases (Figures 3 and 4).
MRI studies can also suggest the rare but recognized
phenomenon of tumor extension into the adjacent joint,
which in the knee more commonly occurs by tumor
growth along the cruciate ligaments.
Computed tomography (CT) scans are rarely
obtained for the primary tumor, since soft tissue extension,
local intramedullary extension, and intramedullary
skip metastases are all better visualized using MRI.
However, a CT scan of the thorax is currently the most
sensitive noninvasive diagnostic modality available for
the detection of metastatic disease within the lungs. Current
diagnostic limitations preclude accurate detection of
metastatic nodules under 5 mm in size, and therefore, a
repeat CT scan for assessment of interval change in 6–12
weeks time is often recommended. CT scans have been
shown to be inferior to manual tactile examination during
open thoracotomies, with metastatic disease identified
in up to one-third more cases using manual palpation.40
In general, florid disease throughout the lungs can be
diagnosed with CT scan alone; however, a single or a few
small nodules should be histologically confirmed to be
metastatic osteosarcoma.
Bone scintigraphy using technetium99 is employed
for the detection of distant bone disease, which is the
second most likely location for metastatic spread. Positive
findings on bone scan may warrant additional imaging of the area of concern and, ultimately, a biopsy may
be necessary to prove the definitive presence of distant
bone disease.
The role of positron emission tomography (PET) in
the setting of osteosarcoma continues to evolve. There
has been some interest in using PET technology to assess
histologic response to chemotherapy and/or to predict
progression-free survival (PFS). At least 1 report has concluded
that total lesion glycolysis before chemotherapy
correlates with poor overall survival and that an increase
in total lesion glycolysis after chemotherapy correlates
with worse PFS.41 The same authors reported that high
post-chemotherapy maximum standardized uptake values
(SUV), defined as more than 5 g/mL, correlated with poor
overall survival, and high pre- and post-chemotherapy
SUV (max) correlated with poor PFS. Currently, the exact
role for PET imaging within the formal staging scheme
remains unclear.
Biopsies should be performed at a tertiary care medical
center with experience in sarcoma diagnosis and treatment.
Ideally, the biopsy should be obtained either by the
surgeon who will ultimately render definitive care or, in
some instances, by a radiologist well versed in sarcoma
core needle biopsy techniques. This concept is critical to
oncologic and functional outcomes, and adverse effects
associated with deviation from this approach have been
well documented. Biopsies performed at a referring facility
were compared with those performed at a treatment
center, and results included a higher rate of major error in
diagnosis (27% vs 12%), nonrepresentative biopsy results
(14% vs 3.5%), alteration in treatment (36 vs 4%), and,
most importantly, a change in outcome (17% vs 3.5%).42
The biopsy should be performed as the final step in the
staging process, after imaging studies have been reviewed
and considered by the multidisciplinary sarcoma team.
Biopsies may be performed in the operating room in an
incisional open manner or as an outpatient procedure
using a core needle technique. An incisional biopsy yields
a large amount of tissue and enjoys the highest rate of
diagnostic success, approximately 96%. Careful hemostasis
is critical to minimize hematoma formation. Incision
and drain site location are vital, as they ultimately need
to be resected with the tumor in an en bloc manner. Core
needle techniques are also acceptable, and in the setting of
malignant bone tumors, yield reasonable, albeit reduced,
diagnostic accuracy ranging from 74% to 88%,43-45 with
positive predictive value reported to be above 98%.46 Fine
needle aspiration, while useful for the identification of
malignant cytologic features, provides too small a sample
with no appreciable histologic architecture, and is not
appropriate for the diagnosis of a primary sarcoma.
Surgical staging is performed using the Musculoskeletal
Tumor Society staging scheme, originally developed
and described by Enneking.47 It defines tumors
as being either low grade or high grade (I vs II), intracompartmental
or extracompartmental (A vs B), and metastatic (III; Table 1). The American Joint Committee
on Cancer (6th edition) has put forth a tumor, lymph
nodes, metastases staging system, which arguably is of
less surgical utility.
Surgical Treatment
Surgical treatment demands complete extirpation of the
tumor together with any previously placed biopsy tract,
drain tract, or potentially contaminated tissue. This
should be a wide excision, meaning a normal cuff of
tissue should surround or envelope the tumor, ensuring
complete containment of malignant cells. Wide excisions
may be realized through more ablative means such
as an amputation or a disarticulation, or through more
conservative means. The latter approach spares many of
the uninvolved structures and allows for limb-salvage
reconstruction. The decision as to whether a limb salvage
procedure is appropriate needs to be objectively
and accurately stated, and should be considered by the
treating sarcoma team in advance of surgery. Though
limb salvage surgery is often the preferred choice for
many patients and families, it is not always the proper
oncologic procedure, and optimizing oncologic outcomes
takes priority over functional outcomes.
As most osteosarcomas arise within the metaphyseal
bone and do not extend into the joint, intra-articular
resections are most commonly offered. In the case of
rare intra-articular tumor extension, an extra-articular
resection becomes necessary. In the uncommon advent
of a small tumor, a hemicortical or partial metaphyseal
resection may be possible, which in some instances can
yield much better long-term limb function. In the case
of a purely diaphyseal lesion, intercalary resection of the
involved diaphysis also offers excellent reconstructive
and functional outcomes, sparing the adjacent joints
and obviating the joint reconstruction typically required
(Figure 5).
Intra-articular resections can be reconstructed in a
variety of manners. Allograft bone can be obtained from
commercial cadaveric bone banks and can be selected to
match the patient’s size and anatomy (Figure 6). Bulk
osteoarticular allograft offers the benefit of restoring bone
stock and postponing the need for joint replacement.
If and when arthritis necessitates joint replacement,
allograft allows for use of conventional joint replacement
implants, which have improved longevity compared
with that of megaprostheses. In addition, allograft bone
is harvested with tendonous and/or ligamentous soft
tissue attachments, allowing for a more physiologic soft
tissue repair and improved joint function, in particular at
the proximal tibia and the proximal humerus where the
patellar ligament and the rotator cuff insert, respectively.
Despite these advantages, allograft bone does have substantial
limitations. Although it will heal to the adjacent
host bone and will remodel for several millimeters at
the allograft-host junction, it is not viable and does not ever fully re-vascularize. For this reason it is subject to
non-union, fracture, and infection. Non-union has been
shown to increase in the setting of either fracture or infection,
and can occur in 11–27% of cases, with the higher
rates seen in cases of concomitant chemotherapy administration.48
Infection can occur in approximately 15% of
cases49 and fracture may occur in up to 27% of cases.50
These complications are challenging and often require
additional surgery, including, at times, amputation.
Intra-articular resections may also be reconstructed
using endoprosthetic joint replacements or megaprostheses
(Figure 7). Although historically these were custom
made for each patient, they are currently modular and
typically available as off-the-shelf implants. They can replace a small segment of bone adjacent to the joint or,
at the extreme, an entire bone as well as both adjacent
joints. Theses modular systems support intraoperative
needs, which may not always be anticipated. They allow
for immediate weight bearing and immediate joint stability,
resulting in improvement of joint motion and return
to functional activity. They preclude additional splinting
or casting and facilitate a return to independence
for patients. Drawbacks include implant failure such as
fracture or aseptic loosening, and infection is always a
concern. In addition, the polyethylene articulating components
suffer surface wear over time and almost always
require replacement at some point.
Allograft-prosthetic composites combine the 2 techniques
discussed thus far, marrying the implant benefits of
stability, strength, and modularity with the bone-restoring
and soft-tissue benefits conferred by the allograft. This
reconstruction has particular application in the proximal
tibia and in the proximal humerus.
For skeletally immature patients with lower extremity
tumors, anticipated limb length inequality beyond 5 cm
was historically an indication for amputation. Currently,
expandable prostheses are available, which allow for either
invasive or non-invasive incremental limb lengthening.
These systems are often considered temporary prostheses,
lacking the structural strength required for adults’
demands, and are often implanted with the understanding
that they will need to be revised at some point in the
future. They are relatively costly, but address an unusual
reconstructive challenge and have made limb salvage for
the very young patient possible.
Amputation is always a good oncologic procedure
but is often misconstrued to be a procedure with poor
functional results. Interestingly, amputations are often
preferred over limb-salvage procedures for patients who
want to maintain very athletic lifestyles. Patients who
undergo amputations can sustain a much higher activity
level, including impact activities such as running or skiing.
In addition to having a lower risk of recurrence, amputation
offers a more definitive solution in the sense that
patients are much less likely to require additional surgeries,
thereby eliminating the complications of non-union
and fracture entirely and greatly decreasing the risk of
infection.51 Replacement or repair of an external prosthesis
obviously does not involve surgery or hospitalization
and thereby avoids inherently associated complications.
Although thought to be less costly in the past, more recent
data show that the cost of an amputation and the external
prosthesis is more expensive over a patient’s lifetime when
compared with that of a limb-salvage procedure.52
The Van Ness rotationplasty serves to convert an
above knee amputation into a below knee amputation
and has been characterized as an intercalary amputation
with sparing of the sciatic nerve and, when possible, the
femoral vessels.53,54 This is accomplished by resecting the
tumor, rotating the lower leg 180 degrees, and reattaching
the remaining distal tibia to the remaining proximal
femur. This effectively converts the ankle joint into a knee
joint. The reconstruction allows for preservation of proprioception
and sensation and decreases energy expenditure
compared with an above knee amputation. Function
is often remarkable, with excellent gait, functional activity,
and emotional acceptance reported. The technique is
especially appropriate for skeletally immature patients.
Although oncologic and functional outcomes are excellent,
many parents and patients prefer limb salvage procedures
if possible for cosmetic and social reasons. Having a
candidate and his or her family meet with a rotationplasty
patient often helps to alleviate many initial fears and
concerns and offers patients a better appreciation for the
procedure and its benefits.
Metastatic disease must be aggressively resected.
Complete removal of all known sites of disease confers a
survival benefit, and cure is improbable without metastasectomy.55
Surgical resection should be undertaken via an
open thoracotomy, which allows for manual examination
of the lung tissue and often identifies small, otherwise
unnoticed foci of disease. Up to 30% of lung metastases
are too small to detect using current CT scan technology.40
For this reason, even without radiographic evidence
of disease, patients with histologically-proven lung metastases
should undergo exploration of the contralateral lung.
Systemic Treatment
Historically, chemotherapy was administered as singleagent
treatment. Early studies proved such regimens to
be of less benefit, and combination protocols became
favored. Doxorubicin and methotrexate in combination
provided relapse-free survival rates of up to 60% and,
as a result, became central to modern chemotherapy
treatment regimens. Although bleomycin, cyclophosphamide,
and actinomycin D (BCD) were frequently
utilized in the past, this regimen was ultimately abandoned,
as it offered little benefit when given in addition
to adriamycin and methotrexate.
The value of chemotherapy for the treatment of
osteosarcoma has been clearly proven in randomized
clinical trials.56,57 Current systemic chemotherapy treatment
typically consists of cisplatin, doxorubicin, and
high-dose methotrexate. Neoadjuvant or induction chemotherapy
is generally administered for a period of 10
weeks prior to local control. Following surgical resection
and a brief lapse to allow for surgical wound healing,
maintenance chemotherapy is typically continued for a
period of 29 weeks. This treatment regimen yields cure rates in approximately 70% of patients with localized
disease. Unfortunately, it achieves a long-term survival
rate of less than 20% in patients presenting with metastatic
disease. Patients who responded poorly to frontline
3-agent chemotherapy in prior studies have not enjoyed
improved results from second-line or additional chemotherapy
regimens. Though some reports suggest a role for
added systemic treatment,58,59 others conclude that these
efforts are of minimal benefit at best55 and, to date, are
recognized to be largely ineffective.60 Rendering a patient
surgically clear of disease does confer survival improvement
and is currently the most effective means for dealing
with recurrence.55
Ifosfamide both alone and in combination with
etoposide has been controversial and remains under
investigation. Response rates of up to 30–40% for
patients with either recurrent or metastatic disease have
been reported,59,61 and its efficacy as an addition to
first-line treatment has been purported by a number of
European studies.62-64 However, this finding has been
called into question by North American studies, which
reported a lack of obvious efficacy using ifosfamide
alone as an addition to standard first-line treatment.65
Although the study was designed to evaluate safety and
not survival benefit, Schwartz and colleagues noted no
statistically significant difference with the intensification
of ifosfamide and etoposide for poor responders following
induction chemotherapy.66 To better characterize the
efficacy of ifosfamide and etoposide in osteosarcoma, the
European and American Osteosarcoma Study Group 1
trial (EURAMOS-1) was undertaken by several European
cooperative groups and the Children’s Oncology Group
(COG) in a collaborative effort and is currently ongoing.
This study is designed to evaluate whether ifosfamide plus
etoposide offers added benefit to patients demonstrating
poor response to induction chemotherapy. In addition, it
seeks to identify whether interferon-a offers added benefit
for patients demonstrating good response to induction
chemotherapy.
Future Strategies
Immunomodulatory Agents
Muramyl tripeptide phosphatidylethanolamine (MTPPE),
a liposomally encapsulated synthetic analog of 1
component of the Bacille Calmette-Guérin bacterial cell
wall, is believed to activate monocytes and macrophages
against osteosarcoma cells. Initial interest in the drug is
rooted in the notion that inflammatory responses, such
as those seen with infection, result in improved outcomes
in the treatment of malignant tumors. In a nonrandomized
retrospective review, postoperative infection had been
reported to serve as an independent prognostic factor in
patients with osteosarcoma, with 10-year survival increasing
to 84.5% from 62.2% in noninfected patients.67
MTP-PE is intended to cause an inflammatory response,
including the activation of macrophages, induction of
tumoricidal monocytes, and an increase in levels of cytokines
and inflammatory molecules.68 In vitro work has
shown that the drug can enhance activation of murine
macrophages and human monocytes69 and that liposomal
packaging further enhances this effect while reducing
toxicity.70 Although activity has been demonstrated in
both xenograft and canine models, initial reports of a
cooperative Children’s Cancer Group (CCG) and Pediatric
Oncology Group (POG) phase III study were difficult
to interpret due to an interaction between ifosfamide and
MTP-PE in the initial report. More recently, a second
report with longer follow-up data from the same study
demonstrated improved 6-year overall survival (78% vs
70%). This study still showed no significant difference
between event-free survivals.65 Although approval for
clinical use has been granted in Europe, approval by the
US Food and Drug Administration has not been realized.
Tremendous controversy surrounding this topic
is ongoing.71
Aerosolized granulocyte macrophage colony stimulating
factor has primarily been utilized to promote
recovery from chemotherapy-induced neutropenia. More
recently, its immunomodulatory effects have been investigated.
Although phase I results in patients with lung
metastases showed no adverse effects,72 recently presented
phase II results were less encouraging.
Signal Transduction Pathway Inhibitors
The mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) is a serine/threonine
kinase, which plays an important role in
mRNA translation, cell growth, and cell proliferation via
phosphorylation of downstream targets.73 It is affected
by a variety of signaling factors, including insulin, amino
acids, and oxygen levels. It controls advancement of the
cell cycle from G1 into S phase via S6K1, which affects
ribosomal translation, and via eIF4E, which affects translation.
Abnormal mTOR signaling has been implicated in
numerous malignancies and, as such, it has been considered
a potential therapeutic target. Immunohistochemical
expression of mTOR and p70S6 kinase, a downstream
target of mTOR, has a significant association with
worse survival outcomes.74 Rapamycin, a macrocyclic
lactone antibiotic and its analogs—temsirolimus (Torisel,
Wyeth), everolimus (Afinitor, Novartis), and AP23573
(ridaforolimus)—are specific inhibitors of mTOR and
may directly effect cancer cell growth and proliferation.
In addition, they may also exert an anti-angiogenic effect
by decreasing vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)
production and by inhibiting endothelial response to
circulating VEGF. Rapamycin has shown initial promise,
inhibiting metastatic disease in murine models75 and demonstrating activity in in vivo testing against osteosarcoma
xenografts.76 To date, encouraging phase II data
have been reported, with 30% of patients with bone
sarcomas treated with AP23573 demonstrating either a
partial response or stable disease for 16 weeks.77 Ongoing
evaluation of rapalog use in a variety of malignancies,
including sarcomas, is under way.
Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors
The insulin-like growth factor pathway has been recognized
as essential to normal growth, with mutations in
either the receptor or the ligand resulting in a multitude
of developmental abnormalities.78 The insulin-like growth
factor 1 receptor (IGF-1 R) is a dimeric receptor tyrosine
kinase, which binds IGF-1 and IGF-2 to affect the downstream
pathways, phosphatidylinositol 3’-kinase (P13K),
and mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK). There is
abundant evidence supporting IGF signal transduction
as playing a central role in tumorigenesis. High levels of
expression of IGF-1, IGF-2, and IGF-1R in sarcomas have
been reported.79,80 Epidemiologic links between IGF-1
serum levels and the risk of developing a malignancy
have been observed,81,82 and IGF-1R has been reported
to transform human fibroblast cells both in vitro and in
vivo.83 Interest in IGF-1R-targeted therapy has developed
in 2 ways. The first involves the use of semi-specific smallmolecule
tyrosine kinase inhibitors such as OSI-906 (OSI
Pharmaceuticals, Inc.) or BMS-754807 (Bristol-Myers
Squibb). There is some concern that glucose metabolism
may be affected due to the cross-reactivity resulting from
similarities between the binding sites of the IGF-1R and
the insulin receptor. To date, most small molecule inhibitors
have not progressed on to clinical trials due to toxicity
concerns. The second approach to targeted therapy has
been the development of monoclonal antibodies against
IGF-1R. Preclinical data have been encouraging, with
one agent achieving complete responses in 2 osteosarcoma
xenografts.84 The combination of a second IGF-1R
targeting antibody, CP-751,871 (figitumumab, Pfizer),
with the mTOR inhibitor rapamycin has been reported
to induce significant in vivo reduction in tumor VEGF
levels and complete remission in 3 of 4 xenograft osteosarcoma
models.85 Phase I results evaluating the use of
CP-751,871 in patients with multiple sarcoma subtypes
including Ewing sarcoma demonstrated the drug to be
well tolerated with a favorable pharmacokinetic profile.86
Two patients with Ewing sarcoma showed an objective
response, one of whom had a complete response. In addition,
8 patients experienced stabilization of their disease
for 4 months or longer. Additional agents have shown
variable promise in selected cases of other bone and solid
tumors,87 all with relatively well-tolerated side-effect profiles.
Phase II trials are currently under way.
Platelet derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR),
another tyrosine kinase protein implicated in the development
of osteosarcoma, is thought to inhibit apoptosis
through the Akt pathway. Poor prognosis has been linked
to the expression of both PDGFR-a and one of the ligand’s
dimeric forms, PDGF-AA.88 This finding has been supported
in a more recent report, which demonstrated that
co-expression of PDGF-AA and PDGF-a receptor correlated
with significantly shorter event-free survival, but did
not correlate with chemotherapy response.89 Although
preclinical in vitro inhibition of osteosarcoma cell growth
using imatinib (Gleevec, Novartis) was achieved, the concentrations
required to do so were too high to be clinically
relevant. The findings of constitutively active MAPK in 8
of 10 cultures may explain the high concentration needed
to inhibit tumor growth. Recent results from a phase II
COG study do not support its utility as a single agent.90
HER2/neu
The HER2/neu proto-oncogene, located at 17q21,
encodes for a transmembrane glycoprotein with tyrosine
kinase activity. Its protein shares significant similarity
to epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and other
members of the EGFR superfamily.91 Since its description
in 1981, the overexpression of HER2 has been implicated
in tumorigenicity, and its role is most clearly defined
in breast carcinoma, where it is amplified and its gene
product is overexpressed in approximately 30% of cases.
HER2-targeted treatments have been developed and have
yielded improved survival outcomes for patients with
HER2 overexpression. In light of HER2-targeted treatment
success for breast cancer, interest in HER2-targeted
therapy for osteosarcoma has increased. However, the relevance
of HER2 expression, even in the context of prognosis,
continues to be extremely controversial. Numerous
reasons for this controversy exist. To date, published
reports have been small, single-institution, retrospective
studies with limited size and power. Tissue handling and
specimen preparation techniques differ from one institution
to the next, which may have variably influenced
the interpretation of HER2 expression. Similarly, institutional
differences as they relate to treatment, antibody
use, storage systems, and scoring schemes all play a role in
how HER2 expression is identified and interpreted.
Given the fact that HER2-targeted treatment
(trastuzumab [Herceptin, Genentech]) has side effects, it
would likely serve as clinically relevant only in patients
with proven HER2-positive tumors. Furthermore, if
this patient population is, in fact, already responding
reasonably well to standard treatment, it is not clear that
outcomes would be impacted in any meaningful way.
Alternatively, if this patient population showed substantial
improvement in overall survival, the argument for targeted treatment for a small subset of patients could be
conceivably supported.
In an effort to better answer HER2-targeted treatment
relevance, the COG initiated a phase II clinical trial
of trastuzumab plus standard chemotherapy for patients
with newly diagnosed metastatic osteosarcoma that was
histologically proven to be HER2-positive. The results
from this study are not yet available.
Novel Antifolates
Resistance to high-dose methotrexate, one of the current
first-line chemotherapies used for osteosarcoma, can
occur via a number of mechanisms, including a decrease
in reduced folate carrier (RFC) expression, which has
been shown to occur in 65% of biopsied tumors.92
Trimetrexate is a structural analog of methotrexate, which
achieves transport into cells independent of RFC and
can directly inhibit dihydrofolate reductase. To date, a
phase II trial combining refractory acute lymphoblastic
leukemia and osteosarcoma patients has shown response
in 13% of cases.93 These results have prompted a phase I
trial combining high-dose methotrexate and trimetrexate
for patients with recurrent osteosarcoma, with the
rationale that trimetrexate would impact the transportdefective
osteosarcoma cells and methotrexate would
affect the transport-intact osteosarcoma cells. A second
novel antifolate, pralatrexate, has been evaluated for use
with T-cell lymphoma and lung cancer, with variable
results reported. Phase II results demonstrated a response
rate in patients with relapsed or refractory lymphoma of
10% for B-cell lymphoma patients and 54% for T-cell
lymphoma patients, with an overall response of 31%.94
Phase II results in non–small-cell lung cancer demonstrated
median time to progression of more than 10.5
months and median duration of survival of 13 months.95
A phase II study in adult patients with unresectable
malignant pleural mesothelioma resulted in no partial or
complete responses.96 Currently, the role of pralatrexate in
the treatment of osteosarcoma is unclear.
Delivery Mechanisms
Nonconventional delivery mechanisms continue to
evolve in an effort to realize improved outcomes, even
in the face of relapsed or resistant disease. Aerosolized
liposomal cisplatin (sustained release lipid inhalation
[SLIT] targeting cisplatin, Transave, Inc.) has been
evaluated in patients with pulmonary osteosarcoma in
a phase Ib/IIa study.97 High concentrations within the
lungs were achieved in this manner while minimizing
systemic side effects. Two of 14 patients were disease free
at 1 year from initiation of treatment.
Liposomal doxorubicin has been shown to have
increased uptake within osteosarcoma tumor cells.98
Phase II results yielded objective responses in 3 of 47
patients; however, the authors felt that 15 of 47 patients
derived some degree of clinical benefit.99
Microenvironment
The importance of tumor microenvironment is gaining
recognition, and there is a growing interest in effecting
tumor inhibition through the manipulation of local factors
and conditions. Bisphosphonates are widely used in
the treatment of osteoporosis as well as tumor-related
bone pain. The more commonly utilized non-nitrogenous
drugs exhibit a much higher potency and act by blocking
farnesyl diphosphate synthase (FPPS) within the HMGCoA
reductase pathway.100 This, in turn, results in inhibition
of protein prenylation and, in particular, interferes
with the osteoclast’s ruffled border. It is speculated that
the positive feedback loop of bone resorption, growth
factor release, and bone formation may predispose or
play a role in the development of osteosarcoma. Therefore,
bisphosphonate-dampened bone resorption may be
important in the treatment of osteosarcoma. In addition,
in vitro and animal studies have shown a more direct
effect on tumor cells.101,102 Currently, a COG feasibility
and dose discovery analysis study (COG-AOST06P1) is
under way; it is designed to evaluate the use of zoledronic
acid (Zometa, Novartis) in combination with cisplatin,
high-dose methotrexate, doxorubicin, ifosfamide, and
etoposide. It will evaluate the safety profile and eventfree
survival effects of zoledronic acid in patients with
newly diagnosed metastatic osteosarcoma.
VEGF is a glycoprotein involved in the migration of
vascular endothelial cells, playing a role in angiogenesis. In
addition, its effect on vascular properties, such as permeability,
may promote increased migration of tumor cells into
and out of the vascular network, leading to more successful
metastatic phenomena. The utility of bevacizumab (Avastin,
Genentech), an anti-VEGF monoclonal antibody, has been
demonstrated in the setting of colorectal carcinoma when
used together with conventional chemotherapy. A phase II
COG study is under way using bevacizumab in addition
to conventional chemotherapy for the treatment of recurrent
Ewing sarcoma. Recently, the pediatric preclinical
testing program reported results from a second inhibitor
of the VEGF receptor family, AZD2171 (cediranib,
AstraZeneca), which was shown to exhibit in vivo tumor
inhibition in 78% of solid tumor xenografts, including 3
of 3 Ewing sarcomas and 4 of 5 osteosarcomas.103
Conclusion
Despite great strides in the diagnosis and treatment
of osteosarcoma to date, substantial improvement in
overall survival has been elusive and overall survival has remained relatively constant for over 2 decades.
Although awareness, education, and proper referral
patterns serve to minimize avoidable errors in diagnosis
and treatment, it is unlikely that these efforts alone will
significantly improve survival outcomes in the subset of
patients who appear to have an inherently more challenging
subtype of tumor. It is theoretically possible that
a small subset of patients would benefit from upfront
surgery, eliminating neoadjuvant treatment cycles and
undergoing all of their chemotherapy following local
control. These patients—namely those who both present
with truly localized disease and who will ultimately
also prove to respond poorly to conventional chemotherapy—probably
constitute only 5–6% of all patients.
Nevertheless, this change in management strategy may
result in a small but measurable improvement in overall
survival without any new systemic treatments. Ultimately,
the greatest potential improvement in outcomes
will arise from combination-targeted chemotherapy in
addition to conventional treatment. The challenge in
osteosarcoma stems from the extreme variability of one
tumor to the next, making it unlikely that a single-target
approach would be able to address all or even a majority
of patients.
Acknowledgment: Grant support: The Swim Across
America Foundation, Foster Foundation, and Cure Search
Foundation.
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