• Traitements

  • Traitements localisés : applications cliniques

  • Système nerveux central

Role of Surgery in the Treatment of Patients With Stage 4 Neuroblastoma Age 18 Months or Older at Diagnosis

A partir de données administratives portant sur 278 patients atteints d'un neuroblastome de stade 4 (âge au diagnostic : 18 mois ou plus), cet essai prospectif allemand identifie les types d'intervention chirurgicale réalisée avant ou après une chimiothérapie, évalue leur taux d'utilisation et analyse l'impact du traitement par chirurgie d'une tumeur primitive sur le contrôle de la maladie et la survie des patients

Purpose Although intensive multimodal treatment has improved the prognosis of patients with metastatic neuroblastoma, the impact of primary tumor resection on outcome is a matter of medical debate.Patients and Methods Patients from the German prospective clinical trial NB97 with stage 4 neuroblastoma and age 18 months or older at diagnosis were included. Operation notes and imaging reports were reviewed by two independent experienced physicians. Finally, the extent of tumor resections was correlated with local control rate and outcome.Results A total of 278 patients were included in this study. Image-defined risk factors present at diagnosis were found to be predictive for the extent of tumor resection at first (P < .001) and best (P < .001) operation. No patient died from surgery. Before chemotherapy, complete resection, incomplete resection, and biopsy or no surgery were performed in 6.1%, 5.0%, and 88.5% of patients, respectively. The extent of first operation had no impact on event-free survival (EFS; P = .207), local progression–free survival (LPFS; P = .195), and overall survival (OS; P = .351). After induction chemotherapy, 54.7% of patients underwent complete resection of the primary tumor, 30.6% underwent incomplete resection, and 13.3% had only biopsy or no surgery of the primary tumor. The extent of best operation also had no impact on EFS (P = .877), LPFS (P = .299), and OS (P = .778). Moreover, multivariate analyses showed that surgery did not affect EFS, LPFS, and OS.Conclusion In intensively treated patients with stage 4 neuroblastoma age 18 months or older at diagnosis, surgery of the primary tumor site has no impact on local control rate and outcome.

Journal of Clinical Oncology

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