A nationwide cohort study on treatment and survival in patients with malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumours

Publication date

2020-01

Authors

Martin, Enrico
Coert, J Henk
Flucke, UtaISNI 0000000012486985
Slooff, Willem-Bart MISNI 0000000387449056
Ho, Vincent K Y
van der Graaf, Winette T
van Dalen, ThijsISNI 0000000387114977
van de Sande, Michiel A J
van Houdt, Winan J
Grünhagen, Dirk J

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Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Despite curative intents of treatment in localized malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumours (MPNSTs), prognosis remains poor. This study investigated survival and prognostic factors for overall survival in non-retroperitoneal and retroperitoneal MPNSTs in the Netherlands. METHODS: Data were obtained from the Netherlands Cancer Registry and the Dutch Pathology Database. All primary MPNSTs were collected. Paediatric cases (age ≤18 years) and synchronous metastases were excluded from analyses. Separate Cox proportional hazard models were made for retroperitoneal and non-retroperitoneal MPNSTs. RESULTS: A total of 629 localized adult MPNSTs (35 retroperitoneal cases, 5.5%) were included for analysis. In surgically resected patients (88.1%), radiotherapy and chemotherapy were administered in 44.2% and 6.7%, respectively. In retroperitoneal cases, significantly less radiotherapy and more chemotherapy were applied. In non-retroperitoneal MPNSTs, older age (60+), presence of NF1, size >5 cm, and deep-seated tumours were independently associated with worse survival. In retroperitoneal MPNSTs, male sex and age of 60+ years were independently associated with worse survival. Survival of R1 and that of R0 resections were similar for any location, whereas R2 resections were associated with worse outcomes. Radiotherapy and chemotherapy administrations were not associated with survival. CONCLUSION: In localized MPNSTs, risk stratification for survival can be done using several patient- and tumour-specific characteristics. Resectability is the most important predictor for survival in MPNSTs. No difference is present between R1 and R0 resections in both retroperitoneal and non-retroperitoneal MPNSTs. The added value of radiotherapy and chemotherapy is unclear.

Keywords

Combined modality treatment, Epidemiology, MPNST, NF1, Neurofibromatosis, Retroperitoneal space, Sarcoma, Survival analysis, Oncology, Cancer Research

Citation

Martin, E, Coert, J H, Flucke, U E, Slooff, W-B M, Ho, V K Y, van der Graaf, W T, van Dalen, T, van de Sande, M A J, van Houdt, W J, Grünhagen, D J & Verhoef, C 2020, 'A nationwide cohort study on treatment and survival in patients with malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumours', European Journal of Cancer, vol. 124, pp. 77-87. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejca.2019.10.014