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Survival in patients with high-risk neuroblastoma treated without autologous stem cell transplant or dinutuximab beta.

Richa JainAmita TrehanPrema MenonRakesh KapoorNandita KakkarSrinivasan RadhikaAkshay Kumar SaxenaBhagwant Rai MittalNeelam VarmaRam SamujhDeepak Bansal
Published in: Pediatric hematology and oncology (2021)
The majority of patients with high-risk neuroblastoma (HR-NB) in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) do not have access to autologous stem cell transplant (ASCT) and dinutuximab. Consolidation with nonmyeloablative chemotherapy is not well-defined, and the outcomes are variable. We report a single-center outcome of patients with HR-NB, treated with nonmyeloablative consolidation. A tabulated compilation of similar reports is included. A retrospective chart review of patients with HR-NB was performed from January 2009 till June 2016. Patients were treated on the backbone of HR-NBL1/SIOPEN protocol. Treatment included induction with rapid-COJEC, surgery, followed by consolidation. Consolidation involved 4 cycles of topotecan, vincristine, and doxorubicin (TVD) instead of ASCT. Infusion of vincristine and doxorubicin were modified for ease and to enable administration in the clinic. Subsequent treatment included radiotherapy to the primary tumor and differentiation therapy with isotretinoin. Over 7½ years, 28 patients with HR-NB were treated. Two (7%) patients had therapy-related mortality. A relapse or disease progression occurred in 11 (39%) patients at a median duration of 17 months (IQR: 5, 18). Treatment abandonment was observed in 4 (14%) patients. The median follow-up of disease-free patients was 49 months (IQR: 45, 79). Patients with relapse were not treated further. A 4-year EFS of 29.3% was observed when 4-cycles of TVD were administered instead of ASCT in patients with HR-NB. The study and the review will aid decision-making for care of patients in LMIC while considering the options of treatment for HR-NB if access to ACST and dinutuximab is lacking.
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