TY - JOUR
T1 - Treatment at Relapse for Synovial Sarcoma of Children, Adolescents and Young Adults
T2 - From the State of Art to Future Clinical Perspectives
AU - Ferrari, Andrea
AU - Berlanga, Pablo
AU - Gatz, Susanne Andrea
AU - Schoot, Reineke A
AU - van Noesel, Max M
AU - Hovsepyan, Shushan
AU - Chiaravalli, Stefano
AU - Bergamaschi, Luca
AU - Minard-Colin, Veronique
AU - Corradini, Nadege
AU - Alaggio, Rita
AU - Gasparini, Patrizia
AU - Brennan, Bernadette
AU - Casanova, Michela
AU - Pasquali, Sandro
AU - Orbach, Daniel
N1 - © 2023 Ferrari et al.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - While the overall prognosis is generally quite satisfactory in children, adolescents and young adults with localised synovial sarcoma at first diagnosis, the outcome remains poor for patients after relapse. Conversely to the front-line standardised treatment options, patients with relapse generally have an individualised approach and to date, there is still a lack of consensus regarding standard treatment approaches. Studies on relapsed synovial sarcoma were able to identify some prognostic variables that influence post-relapse survival, in order to plan risk-adapted salvage protocols. Treatment proposals must consider previous first-line treatments, potential toxicities, and the possibility of achieving an adequate local treatment by new surgery and/or re-irradiation. Effective second-line drug therapies are urgently needed. Notably, experimental treatments such as adoptive engineered TCR-T cell immunotherapy seem promising in adults and are currently under validation also in paediatric patients.
AB - While the overall prognosis is generally quite satisfactory in children, adolescents and young adults with localised synovial sarcoma at first diagnosis, the outcome remains poor for patients after relapse. Conversely to the front-line standardised treatment options, patients with relapse generally have an individualised approach and to date, there is still a lack of consensus regarding standard treatment approaches. Studies on relapsed synovial sarcoma were able to identify some prognostic variables that influence post-relapse survival, in order to plan risk-adapted salvage protocols. Treatment proposals must consider previous first-line treatments, potential toxicities, and the possibility of achieving an adequate local treatment by new surgery and/or re-irradiation. Effective second-line drug therapies are urgently needed. Notably, experimental treatments such as adoptive engineered TCR-T cell immunotherapy seem promising in adults and are currently under validation also in paediatric patients.
KW - TCR-T cell therapy
KW - children
KW - new agents
KW - relapse
KW - second line therapy
KW - surgery
KW - synovial sarcoma
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/32a310d3-f08e-3181-aae3-038081fabc79/
U2 - 10.2147/CMAR.S404371
DO - 10.2147/CMAR.S404371
M3 - Article
C2 - 37920695
SN - 1179-1322
VL - 15
SP - 1183
EP - 1196
JO - Cancer Management and Research
JF - Cancer Management and Research
ER -