Ewing Sarcoma: Current Management and Future Approaches Through Collaboration

Nathalie Gaspar(Université Paris-Sud), Douglas S. Hawkins(Université Paris-Sud), Uta Dirksen(Université Paris-Sud), Ian Lewis(Université Paris-Sud), Stefano Ferrari(Université Paris-Sud), Marie‐Cécile Le Deley(Université Paris-Sud), Heinrich Kovar(Université Paris-Sud), R. J. Grimer(Université Paris-Sud), Jeremy Whelan(Université Paris-Sud), L. Claude(Université Paris-Sud), Olivier Delattre(Université Paris-Sud), Michael Paulussen(Université Paris-Sud), Piero Picci(Université Paris-Sud), Kirsten Sundby Hall(Université Paris-Sud), Hendrik Van den Berg(Université Paris-Sud), Ruth Ladenstein(Université Paris-Sud), Jean Michon(Université Paris-Sud), Lars Hjorth(Université Paris-Sud), Ian Judson(Université Paris-Sud), Roberto Luksch(Université Paris-Sud), Mark L. Bernstein(Université Paris-Sud), Perrine Marec‐Bérard(Université Paris-Sud), Bernadette Brennan(Université Paris-Sud), Alan Craft(Université Paris-Sud), Richard B. Womer(Université Paris-Sud), Heribert Juergens(Université Paris-Sud), Odile Oberlin(Université Paris-Sud)
Journal of Clinical Oncology
August 25, 2015
Cited by 728Open Access
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Abstract

Ewing sarcoma (ES) is an aggressive sarcoma of bone and soft tissue occurring at any age with a peak incidence in adolescents and young adults. The treatment of ES relies on a multidisciplinary approach, coupling risk-adapted intensive neoadjuvant and adjuvant chemotherapies with surgery and/or radiotherapy for control of the primary site and possible metastatic disease. The optimization of ES multimodality therapeutic strategies has resulted from the efforts of several national and international groups in Europe and North America and from cooperation between pediatric and medical oncologists. Successive first-line trials addressed the efficacy of various cyclic combinations of drugs incorporating doxorubicin, vincristine, cyclophosphamide, ifosfamide, etoposide, and dactinomycin and identified prognostic factors now used to tailor therapies. The role of high-dose chemotherapy is still debated. Current 5-year overall survival for patients with localized disease is 65% to 75%. Patients with metastases have a 5-year overall survival < 30%, except for those with isolated pulmonary metastasis (approximately 50%). Patients with recurrence have a dismal prognosis. The many insights into the biology of the EWS-FLI1 protein in the initiation and progression of ES remain to be translated into novel therapeutic strategies. Current options and future approaches will be discussed.


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