Treatment of rhabdomyosarcoma in children and adolescent from four low health expenditures average rates countries
Artikel-Kategorie: Research Article
Online veröffentlicht: 21. Okt. 2020
Seitenbereich: 455 - 460
Eingereicht: 18. Juni 2020
Akzeptiert: 08. Sept. 2020
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/raon-2020-0059
Schlüsselwörter
© 2020 Maja Cesen Mazic, Aleksandra Bonevski, Martina Mikeskova, Emilia Mihut, Gianni Bisogno, Janez Jazbec, published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.
Background
Survival of children with cancer in Eastern and Central Europe is 10–20% lower than in high income European countries. We evaluated outcome of children and adolescents with rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) in Slovenia, Croatia, Slovakia and in Romania.
Patients and methods
We retrospectively analysed event-free survival (EFS) and overall survival (OS) for all patients treated in Slovenia and Croatia. Slovakia included patients from two centers, representing half of expected cases. Romania included patients from single institution, representing only 10% of expected patients. Joint database for analysis was established.
Results
One hundred seventy-eight children and adolescent with RMS diagnosed from January 2000 to December 2015 were included. Mean patient age at diagnosis was 7.7 years, one third was older than 10 years. Twenty-five percent had alveolar histology and 72% unfavorable location. Higher than expected proportion of patients had nodal involvement (24%) or metastatic disease (27%). All patients received systemic chemotherapy, 57% had radiotherapy and 63% surgery as local control. Kaplan- Meier estimates for 5-year EFS and OS were 50.7% and 59.6%, respectively. Five-year OS for patients with localised disease was 72% compared to 24% for metastatic disease.
Conclusions
Children with RMS treated in Eastern and Central Europe have inferior outcome compared to their counterparts treated in high income European countries. Active participation of low health expenditures average rates (LHEAR) countries in international clinical trials may improve outcome of paediatric oncology patients.