TY - JOUR
T1 - Childhood, Adolescent and Young Adult Poor-Prognosis Rhabdomyosarcoma
AU - Wasti, Ajla T.
AU - Bisogno, Gianni
AU - Hladun, Raquel
AU - Defachelles, Anne Sophie
AU - Casanova, Michela
AU - Breunis, Willemijn B.
AU - Gatz, Susanne A.
AU - Schoot, Reineke A.
AU - Ferrari, Andrea
AU - Jenney, Meriel
AU - Alaggio, Rita
AU - Davila Fajardo, Raquel
AU - Terwisscha van Scheltinga, Sheila
AU - Shipley, Janet
AU - Meister, Michael Torsten
AU - R. van Rijn, Rick
AU - Anderson, John
AU - Sparber-Sauer, Monika
AU - Chisholm, Julia C.
AU - Merks, Johannes H.M.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 by the authors.
PY - 2025/9/23
Y1 - 2025/9/23
N2 - Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is the most common soft tissue sarcoma in children and young people. Despite the advances in multimodality treatment over recent decades through successive prospective clinical trials, improved rates of survival for patients are mainly limited to those with localised RMS without adverse biologic features. Current clinicopathologic prognostic factors include PAX3(7)::FOXO1 fusion status, the site of primary disease, the pre-chemotherapy extent of disease (including microscopic vs. macroscopic residual disease, locoregional nodal involvement and metastatic status), tumour size and patient age. These factors are used to stratify patients into prognostic risk groups that guide treatment intensity and duration. Risk stratification algorithms are evolving, supported by advances in molecular biology and cancer genomics. In this review we focus on the poorest prognostic groups of paediatric-type RMS (i.e., Very High Risk or relapsed/progressive disease). These include patients whose tumours harbour poor biological characteristics such as PAX3(7)::FOXO1 fusion-positive tumours with locoregional nodal involvement and tumours harbouring other poor-risk genetic variants (particularly MYOD1 and TP53 variants); adolescent and young adult patients; newly diagnosed patients with metastatic RMS; and patients with relapsed and refractory disease. Here we aim to describe the clinical characteristics of these patients, outline current standard multimodality treatments in the context of sequential international clinical trials across the major cooperative groups and summarise emerging novel diagnostic and therapeutic approaches.
AB - Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is the most common soft tissue sarcoma in children and young people. Despite the advances in multimodality treatment over recent decades through successive prospective clinical trials, improved rates of survival for patients are mainly limited to those with localised RMS without adverse biologic features. Current clinicopathologic prognostic factors include PAX3(7)::FOXO1 fusion status, the site of primary disease, the pre-chemotherapy extent of disease (including microscopic vs. macroscopic residual disease, locoregional nodal involvement and metastatic status), tumour size and patient age. These factors are used to stratify patients into prognostic risk groups that guide treatment intensity and duration. Risk stratification algorithms are evolving, supported by advances in molecular biology and cancer genomics. In this review we focus on the poorest prognostic groups of paediatric-type RMS (i.e., Very High Risk or relapsed/progressive disease). These include patients whose tumours harbour poor biological characteristics such as PAX3(7)::FOXO1 fusion-positive tumours with locoregional nodal involvement and tumours harbouring other poor-risk genetic variants (particularly MYOD1 and TP53 variants); adolescent and young adult patients; newly diagnosed patients with metastatic RMS; and patients with relapsed and refractory disease. Here we aim to describe the clinical characteristics of these patients, outline current standard multimodality treatments in the context of sequential international clinical trials across the major cooperative groups and summarise emerging novel diagnostic and therapeutic approaches.
KW - adolescent
KW - chemotherapy
KW - child
KW - metastatic
KW - novel approaches
KW - radiotherapy
KW - relapse
KW - rhabdomyosarcoma
KW - surgery
KW - young adult
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105019183235
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/6c853640-ab38-3a02-867e-6ecba3af4e39/
U2 - 10.3390/cancers17193100
DO - 10.3390/cancers17193100
M3 - Review article
C2 - 41097629
AN - SCOPUS:105019183235
SN - 2072-6694
VL - 17
JO - Cancers
JF - Cancers
IS - 19
M1 - 3100
ER -