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Showing papers by "Sylvette Hoffstetter published in 1999"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a prospective study of 174 patients treated for medulloblastoma was conducted to correlate targeting deviation in external beam radiation therapy with site of relapse, and the authors found that minor deviations in therapy technique are slightly associated with an increased risk of relapse in the same range as the group with only one major deviation.
Abstract: Purpose: To correlate targeting deviation in external beam radiation therapy with site of relapse in a prospective study of 174 patients treated for medulloblastoma. Methods and Materials: Between February 1992 and February 1998 the radiotherapy treatment records were reviewed by a panel of radiation oncologists for 174 children treated with radiation therapy for medulloblastoma. The review was done without knowledge of patient outcome. Patterns of relapse were correlated with the results of the quality control review. Results: Among the 174 patients five relapsed before the start of radiotherapy. One hundred sixty-nine patients were evaluable for correlation between targeting deviation and site of relapse. Number of major deviations in radiation therapy treatment is strongly correlated with the risk of tumor relapse (67% [95% CI: 28–91] of 3-year relapse rate in patient group with 2 major deviations and 78% [95% CI: 35–96] with 3 major deviations). This is particularly correlated with relapse in the frontal region of the brain: 5 relapses occurred in the frontal region in patients with major deviation in this area. An erroneous choice of electron beam energy is also linked with craniospinal fluid (CSF) relapse (3-year relapse rate of 68% [95% CI: 42–86]). Minor deviations in therapy technique are slightly associated with an increased risk of relapse in the same range as the group with only one major deviation. Conclusion: The quality of medulloblastoma radiation therapy technique is strongly correlated with outcome. Pretreatment central quality assurance review or standardized computer-designed blocks would improve survival to an extent equivalent to that attributed to adjuvant chemotherapy.

134 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the role of surgery and/or radiotherapy in local progression-free, disease-free and overall survivals (LPFS, DFS, and OS, respectively) was evaluated.
Abstract: Background. Since January. 1984, 59 children with histologically confirmed Ewing sarcoma of the pelvic bone have been treated with three successive chemotherapy protocols recommended by the French Society of Pediatric Oncology. The purpose of the current study was to evaluate the role of surgery and/or radiotherapy in local progression-free, disease-free, and overall survivals (LPFS, DFS, and OS, respectively). Procedure. We retrospectively examined 59 children treated for nonmetastatic, pelvic Ewing sarcoma over the last 12 years. All were first treated with chemotherapy according to the current French protocol. Six patients developed progressive disease before local treatment and were excluded for local control and survival analysis. Local treatment was surgery alone in 17 cases, radiation therapy in 27 cases, and surgery plus radiation therapy in 9 cases. Results. With a median of follow-up of 6.5 years, no significant differences in local control or survival were observed with the three chemotherapeutic protocols. Of the 53 patients evaluable for local control, 6 relapsed locally only, 8 had local and distant relapses, and 9 had distant metastases only. The 5-year OS rate was worst for patients with radiotherapy alone compared to those with surgery or combined modality treatment (44 % vs. 72 %, P = 0.043). The 5-year LPFS and DFS rates were worst in the radiotherapy-alone group but not significantly (63% vs. 79%, P = 0.22 and 42% vs 71%, P =0.07, respectively). The importance of surgery to OS and DFS was confirmed by multivariate analysis (P = 0.026 and P = 0.048, respectively). One surviving patient was diagnosed with in-field fibrosarcoma, which was presumably radiation induced. Conclusions. Despite intensive, multiagent chemotherapy, survival from pelvic Ewing sarcoma has not improved over the past decade; how-ever, the survival rate does not seem to be worse than that from Ewing sarcoma at other locations, insofar as at least 50% of the patients were cured. Surgery or a combination of surgery and radiation therapy are the best local treatment; exclusive radiation therapy should be reserved for patients with inoperable lesions or partially or nonchemosensitive tumors or when surgery would be an amputation.

46 citations