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Article Abstract

Background: Irinotecan is a drug active against pediatric sarcomas with a toxicity profile that theoretically allows for its association with more myelotoxic drugs. We examined the feasibility of a dose-density strategy integrating irinotecan in standard chemotherapy regimens for patients with high-risk sarcomas.

Methods: Between November 2013 and January 2020, 23 patients ≤25 years old were included in the study. Eleven patients newly diagnosed with metastatic disease received nine cycles of IrIVA (irinotecan-ifosfamide-vincristine-actinomycin D; ifosfamide 3 g/m on days 1 and 2, vincristine 1.5 mg/m on day 1, actinomycin D 1.5 mg/m on day 1, irinotecan 20 mg/m for 5 consecutive days starting on day 8) as first-line therapy. Two relapsed patients received IrIVA and 10 IrVAC (irinotecan-vincristine-actinomycin D-cyclophosphamide; cyclophosphamide 1.5 g/m on day 1 instead of ifosfamide). Feasibility was assessed in terms of toxicity and time to complete the treatment.

Results: Seventeen rhabdomyosarcomas, four Ewing sarcomas, two desmoplastic small round cell tumors received a total of 181 cycles (range 2-10). Grade 4 neutropenia occurred in 62.4% of the cycles. Thirteen patients had febrile neutropenia. Diarrhea occurred in 14 cycles. The median time to complete the treatment was 195 days (range 170-231), 83.4% of cycles were administered on time or with a delay <1 week. With a median follow-up of 2.6 years (range 0.2-5.0), 12 patients are alive, nine complete remissions, three with the disease.

Conclusions: A dose-density strategy combining irinotecan with standard chemotherapy is feasible. This approach will be investigated in the next trial coordinated by the European pediatric Soft tissue sarcoma Study Group.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pbc.28951DOI Listing

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