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Journal ArticleDOI

Multidisciplinary treatment of primary Ewing's sarcoma of bone. A 6-year experience of a European Cooperative Trial.

TLDR
Tumor load and responsiveness to chemotherapy are the two major factors influencing prognosis in patients with primary Ewing's sarcoma of bone.
Abstract
The German Society of Pediatric Oncology in 1981 initiated the Cooperative Ewing's Sarcoma Study (CESS 81) using a four-drug combination of chemotherapy prior to definitive local control with surgery and/or radiation. From January 1, 1981 until February 28, 1985, 93 patients were registered at the trial office from 54 participating institutions in West Germany, Austria, Switzerland, and the Netherlands. On February 1, 1987, 54 of 93 patients were disease-free. Using the Kaplan-Meier life table analysis, the estimated disease-free survival (DFS) rate was 60% at 36 months and 55% at 69 months. The median period of observation was 29 months, ranging from 22 months to 69 months. Twenty-one of 93 patients (23%) had local failure, 18 of 93 patients (19%) developed systemic metastases. The local failure rate was particularly high in patients treated with radiation and was reduced when radiation planning was centralized within the study based upon the extent of disease at diagnosis. Cox regression analysis of prognostic factors showed that tumor volume was a significant factor influencing prognosis. The estimated 3-year DFS rate was 80% for patients with small tumors (volume less than 100 ml) compared to 31% for patients with large tumors (volume greater than or equal to 100 ml). In patients who had surgery for local control, the histologic response to chemotherapy was analyzed on the surgical specimen and had a strong influence on survival: 79% DFS at 3 years for patients with less than 10% viable tumor (good responders) compared to 31% DFS for patients with more than 10% viable tumor (poor responders). Tumor load and responsiveness to chemotherapy are the two major factors influencing prognosis in patients with primary Ewing's sarcoma of bone.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Prognostic Factors in Ewing’s Tumor of Bone: Analysis of 975 Patients From the European Intergroup Cooperative Ewing’s Sarcoma Study Group

TL;DR: Survival and RFS improved over the period and radiotherapy or amputation were more common in the period before 1986, whereas endoprosthetic surgery was widely used in the later period.
Journal ArticleDOI

Changes in incidence and survival of Ewing sarcoma patients over the past 3 decades: Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results data.

TL;DR: The incidence of Ewing sarcoma has not increased appreciably over the last 30 years and a marked decrease in the proportion of unstaged cases may be reflective of diagnostic improvement or changes in reporting.
Journal ArticleDOI

Primary Disseminated Multifocal Ewing Sarcoma: Results of the Euro-EWING 99 Trial

TL;DR: PDMES patients may survive with intensive multimodal therapy with a dose-intense treatment concept and age, tumor volume, and extent of metastatic spread are relevant risk factors.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

Nonparametric Estimation from Incomplete Observations

TL;DR: In this article, the product-limit (PL) estimator was proposed to estimate the proportion of items in the population whose lifetimes would exceed t (in the absence of such losses), without making any assumption about the form of the function P(t).
Journal ArticleDOI

Accelerated fractionation vs hyperfractionation: Rationales for several treatments per day

TL;DR: The choice between accelerated fractionation and hyperfractionation is determined by the regenerative capability of tumor clonogens during treatment, and a method of selection based on potential doubling times is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ewing's sarcoma: ten-year experience with adjuvant chemotherapy.

TL;DR: Recent experience with T‐9 CT has demonstrated that CT given prior to RT or surgery can cause a great reduction in the size of the primary tumor while allowing the pathologicallyeroded bone to heal prior to the initiation of RT; this also allows the high‐risk patient with an axial primary to tolerate the aggressive CT needed to prevent distant metastases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ewing's sarcoma of bone. Experience with 140 patients.

TL;DR: It is concluded that patients with surgically accessible lesions with histologically verified Ewing's sarcoma of bone treated between 1969 and 1982 should undergo treatment consisting of surgery, chemotherapy, and, in selected cases, radiation.
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