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Risk-stratified staging in paediatric hepatoblastoma: a unified analysis from the Children’s Hepatic tumors International Collaboration - 17/03/17

Doi : 10.1016/S1470-2045(16)30598-8 
Rebecka L Meyers, ProfMD a, , , Rudolf Maibach, PhD b, , Eiso Hiyama, ProfMD c, , Beate Häberle, MD d, , Mark Krailo, PhD e, , Arun Rangaswami, ProfMD f, , Daniel C Aronson, MD g, Marcio H Malogolowkin, ProfMD h, Giorgio Perilongo, ProfMD i, Dietrich von Schweinitz, ProfMD d, Marc Ansari, ProfMD j, Dolores Lopez-Terrada, ProfMD k, Yukichi Tanaka, MD l, Rita Alaggio, ProfMD i, Ivo Leuschner, ProfMD m, Tomoro Hishiki, MD n, Irene Schmid, MD d, Kenichiro Watanabe, MD o, Kenichi Yoshimura, PhD p, Yurong Feng, MSe e, Eugenia Rinaldi q, Davide Saraceno q, Marisa Derosa q, Piotr Czauderna, ProfMD r,
a University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, UT, USA 
b International Breast Cancer Study Group Coordinating Center, Bern, Switzerland 
c Hiroshima University, Hiroshima, Japan 
d University of Munich, Munich, Germany 
e Children’s Oncology Group, Monrovia, CA, USA 
f Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA, USA 
g Department of Paediatric Surgery, Noah’s Ark Childrens’ Hospital for Wales, University Hospital of Wales, Cardiff, UK 
h University of California Davis, Davis, CA, USA 
i University Hospital of Padua, Padua, Italy 
j Geneva University Hospital, Geneva, Switzerland 
k Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA 
l Kanagawa Children’s Medical Center, Yokohama, Japan 
m University of Kiel, Kiel, Germany 
n Department of Pediatric Surgery, Chiba University Hospital, Chiba, Japan 
o Shizuoka Children’s Hospital, Shizuoka, Japan 
p Innovative Clinical Research Center (iCREK), Kanazawa University Hospital, Kanazawa, Japan 
q CINECA, Bologna, Italy 
r Medical University of Gdansk, Gdansk, Poland 

* Correspondence to: Prof Rebecka L Meyers, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, UT 84103, USA University of Utah School of Medicine Salt Lake City UT 84103 USA

Summary

Background

Comparative assessment of treatment results in paediatric hepatoblastoma trials has been hampered by small patient numbers and the use of multiple disparate staging systems by the four major trial groups. To address this challenge, we formed a global coalition, the Children’s Hepatic tumors International Collaboration (CHIC), with the aim of creating a common approach to staging and risk stratification in this rare cancer.

Methods

The CHIC steering committee—consisting of leadership from the four major cooperative trial groups (the International Childhood Liver Tumours Strategy Group, Children’s Oncology Group, the German Society for Paediatric Oncology and Haematology, and the Japanese Study Group for Paediatric Liver Tumours)—created a shared international database that includes comprehensive data from 1605 children treated in eight multicentre hepatoblastoma trials over 25 years. Diagnostic factors found to be most prognostic on initial analysis were PRETreatment EXTent of disease (PRETEXT) group; age younger than 3 years, 3–7 years, and 8 years or older; α fetoprotein (AFP) concentration of 100 ng/mL or lower and 101–1000 ng/mL; and the PRETEXT annotation factors metastatic disease (M), macrovascular involvement of all hepatic veins (V) or portal bifurcation (P), contiguous extrahepatic tumour (E), multifocal tumour (F), and spontaneous rupture (R). We defined five clinically relevant backbone groups on the basis of established prognostic factors: PRETEXT I/II, PRETEXT III, PRETEXT IV, metastatic disease, and AFP concentration of 100 ng/mL or lower at diagnosis. We then carried the additional factors into a hierarchical backwards elimination multivariable analysis and used the results to create a new international staging system.

Results

Within each backbone group, we identified constellations of factors that were most predictive of outcome in that group. The robustness of candidate models was then interrogated using the bootstrapping procedure. Using the clinically established PRETEXT groups I, II, III, and IV as our stems, we created risk stratification trees based on 5 year event-free survival and clinical applicability. We defined and adopted four risk groups: very low, low, intermediate, and high.

Interpretation

We have created a unified global approach to risk stratification in children with hepatoblastoma on the basis of rigorous statistical interrogation of what is, to the best of our knowledge, the largest dataset ever assembled for this rare paediatric tumour. This achievement provides the structural framework for further collaboration and prospective international cooperative study, such as the Paediatric Hepatic International Tumour Trial (PHITT).

Funding

European Network for Cancer Research in Children and Adolescents, funded through the Framework Program 7 of the European Commission (grant number 261474); Children’s Oncology Group CureSearch grant contributed by the Hepatoblastoma Foundation; Practical Research for Innovative Cancer Control and Project Promoting Clinical Trials for Development of New Drugs and Medical Devices, Japan Agency for Medical Research; and Swiss Cancer Research grant.

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Vol 18 - N° 1

P. 122-131 - janvier 2017 Retour au numéro
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