Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Daniel M. Hays is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Daniel M. Hays.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1995

The Third Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study.

William M. Crist; Edmund A. Gehan; Abdelsalam H. Ragab; Paul S. Dickman; Sarah S. Donaldson; Christopher Fryer; D Hammond; Daniel M. Hays; J Herrmann; Ruth M. Heyn

PURPOSEnThe ultimate goal of the Third Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study (IRS-III, 1984 to 1991) was to improve treatment outcome in children with rhabdomyosarcoma through clinical trials comparing risk-based protocols of surgery and multiagent chemotherapy, with or without irradiation.nnnPATIENTS AND METHODSnOne thousand sixty-two previously untreated, eligible patients who were entered onto the study after surgery were randomized or assigned to treatment by clinical group (I through IV), histology (unfavorable or favorable), and site of the primary tumor. Initial responses, progression-free survival (PFS), and survival (S) were the end points used in comparisons between randomized groups and between patients treated in IRS-III and IRS-II (1978 to 1984).nnnRESULTSnThe overall outcome of therapy in IRS-III was significantly better than in IRS-II (5-year PFS, 65% +/- 2% v 55% +/- 2%; P < .001 by stratified testing). Patients with group I favorable-histology tumors fared as well on a 1-year regimen of vincristine and dactinomycin (VA), as did a comparable group treated with VA plus cyclophosphamide (C) (5-year PFS, 83% +/- 3% v 76% +/- 4%; P = .18). Results for patients with group II favorable-histology tumors, excluding orbit, head, and paratesticular sites, were inconclusive regarding the benefit from addition of doxorubicin (ADR) to VA. Patients with group III tumors, excluding those in special pelvic, orbit, and other selected nonparameningeal head sites, fared much better on the more intensive regimens of IRS-III than on pulsed VAC or VAC-VADRC in IRS-II (5-year PFS estimates, 62% +/- 3% v 52% +/- 3%; P < .01); however, there were no significant differences in outcome among the groups treated in IRS-III. Patients with metastatic disease at diagnosis (clinical group IV) did not benefit significantly from the more complex therapies evaluated in IRS-III.nnnCONCLUSIONnIntensification of therapy for most patients in IRS-III, using a risk-based study design, significantly improved treatment outcome overall. The largest gain from this strategy was realized in patients with gross residual tumor after biopsy (clinical group III). It was also possible to decrease therapy for selected patient subsets without compromising survival.


Cancer | 1988

The intergroup rhabdomyosarcoma study-I: a final report

Harold M. Maurer; William Crist; Walter Lawrence; Abdelsalam H. Ragab; R. Beverly Raney; Bruce Webber; Moody Wharam; Teresa J. Vietti; Mohan Beltangady; Edmund A. Gehan; Denman Hammond; Daniel M. Hays; Ruth Heyn; William A. Newton; Jorge Ortega; Frederick Ruymann; Edward H. Soule; Melvin Tefft

The results of treatment of 686, previously untreated patients younger than 21 years with rhabdomyosarcoma or undifferentiated sarcoma, who were entered on Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study‐I (IRS‐I) were analyzed after a minimum potential follow‐up time of 7 years. Patients in Clinical Group I (localized disease, completely resected) were randomized to receive either vincristine, dactinomycin, and cyclophosphamide (VAC) or VAC + radiation. At 5 years, approximately 80% of patients given either treatment were still disease‐free and there was no significant difference between treatments in the overall percentages of patients surviving of 93% and 81%, respectively (P = 0.67). Patients in Clinical Group II (regional disease, grossly resected) were randomized to receive either vincristine and dactinomycin (VA) + radiation or VAC + radiation. At 5 years, 72% and 65% of the patients, respectively, were disease‐free and there was no evidence of a difference between treatments (P = 0.46). The overall survival percentage at 5 years was approximately 72% for both treatments. Patients in Clinical Groups III (gross residual disease after surgery) and IV (metastatic disease) were randomized to receive either “pulse” VAC + radiation or “pulse” VAC + Adriamycin (doxorubicin) + radiation. The complete remission (CR) rate was 69% in Clinical Group III and 50% in IV, with no statistically significant difference in CR rates between treatments in either group. Those who achieved a CR had a nearly 60% chance of staying in remission for 5 years in Clinical Group III compared with approximately 30% in Clinical Group IV. The overall survival percentage at 5 years was 52% in Clinical Group III compared to 20% in Clinical Group IV (P < 0.0001). The 5‐year survival percentage for the entire cohort of 686 patients was 55%. Survival after relapse was poor, being 32% at 1 year and 17% at 2 years. The risk of distant metastasis was much greater than the risk of local recurrence within each clinical group, and there was no evidence of differing types of relapses between treatments. Primary tumors of the orbit and genitourinary tract carried the best prognosis, whereas tumors of the retroperitoneum had the worst prognosis. The authors conclude that for the therapeutic regimens evaluated there was no therapeutic advantage to including radiation in the treatment of Clinical Group I disease, or cyclophosphamide given as a daily low‐dose oral regimen in the treatment of Clinical Group II disease or Adriamycin in the treatment of Clinical Groups III and IV diseases.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1990

Prognosis in children with rhabdomyosarcoma: a report of the intergroup rhabdomyosarcoma studies I and II. Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Committee.

William M. Crist; L Garnsey; M Beltangady; Edmund A. Gehan; Frederick B. Ruymann; Bruce Webber; Daniel M. Hays; Moody D. Wharam; Harold M. Maurer

Prestudy patient characteristics and specific therapy of all eligible patients with rhabdomyosarcoma entered into Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) Studies I (IRS-I) (1972 to 1978, n = 686) or II (IRS-II) (1978 to 1984, n = 1,002) were examined for their relationship to survival within each of the four clinical groups using univariate and multivariate analyses. The estimated survival at 5 years from the start of treatment was 56% in IRS-I and 62% in IRS-II (P = .006). The largest survival difference between studies was in patients with group III tumors (52% v 65%). The clinical group was the most important patient characteristic related to survival in both studies. Survival progressively decreased for patients from clinical group I (localized disease, completely resected) to group IV (metastatic disease at the onset). In clinical group I, the only patient characteristic consistently related to survival was histology. Patients with alveolar tumors had the poorest survival, while those with botryoid/embryonal lesions had the best survival. In clinical group II, no characteristic was consistently related to survival. In clinical group III, an orbital primary site was associated with a favorable survival. In clinical group IV, patients with genitourinary tumors had a significant survival advantage. Use of disease-free survival as an end point gave very similar results. This information, from the largest available data base on prognostic indicators in childhood RMS in the context of aggressive multimodal therapies, is being used to plan therapy in the forthcoming study (IRS-IV).


Cancer | 1987

Lymphatic metastases with childhood rhabdomyosarcoma. A report from the intergroup rhabdomyosarcoma study

Walter Lawrence; Daniel M. Hays; Ruth Heyn; Melvin Tefft; William M. Crist; Mohan Beltangady; William A. Newton; Moody D. Wharam

A review of 1415 patients without distant metastasis from the Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study (IRS) I and II revealed an overall 10% incidence of identified lymphatic spread at diagnosis, whereas 81 of 592 children with localized rhabdomyosarcoma who had grossly complete resection (and therefore with more complete pathologic data) had histologically proven lymphatic spread (14%). The percentage of patients in this latter group with nodal metastases was highest for the prostate (41%), paratesticular sites (26%), and genitourinary sites overall (24%). Sites with a small percentage of proven lymphatic involvement were the orbit (0%), nonorbital head and neck sites (7%), and truncal sites (3%), whereas the percentage of patients with nodal metastases from extremity lesions was 12%. The primary tumor mean diameter was significantly larger in the group with nodal metastases, but there was no evidence of a relationship between lymphatic spread and age, sex, or histologic subtype. Patients with lymph node metastases who had resection had a poorer survival rate (logrank P value = 0.001), with a 3‐year survival estimate of 54%, compared with 78% for patients without lymphatic metastases. Patients with extremity lesions and positive lymph nodes also did poorly when compared with patients with normal nodes (P = 0.006), and a similar observation was made for patients with paratesticular sarcoma (P = 0.06).


Cancer | 1990

Primary chemotherapy with or without radiation therapy and/or surgery for children with localized sarcoma of the bladder, prostate, vagina, uterus, and cervix. A comparison of the results in Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Studies I and II.

R. Beverly Raney; Edmund A. Gehan; Daniel M. Hays; Melvin Tefft; William A. Newton; Veronica Haeberlen; Harold M. Maurer

A major objective of the second Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study (IRS‐II) (1978 to 1984) was to preserve the bladder without compromising the survival of children with localized genitourinary sarcomas arising in or near the bladder. After incisional biopsy, 109 patients with localized, gross residual sarcoma of the prostate (43 patients), bladder (43 patients), vagina (20 patients), or cervix/uterine corpus (3 patients) were treated with vincristine, dactinomycin, and cyclophosphamide (VAC). After two to four drug courses, radiation therapy and/or surgery were used to treat patients with residual or recurrent tumor. the 3‐year survival rate of patients treated on this primary chemotherapy regimen (70%) was similar to that of the primary surgery regimens of IRS‐I (78%; P = 0.46), but the 3‐year disease‐free survival rate was significantly inferior (52% versus 70%; P = 0.02). Since the IRS‐II encouraged bladder preservation at the onset of therapy, the percentage of patients with bladder and prostate tumors who retained the bladder was initially substantially higher in IRS‐II (97%) than in IRS‐I (58%). However, the percentages of 95 patients with bladder‐prostate (BP) tumors in IRS‐II who retained the bladder and were alive at 2 and 3 years after starting treatment were only 33% and 22%, respectively, compared with 26% and 23%, respectively, in the 66 patients with BP tumors in IRS‐I. Thus, sequential treatment with primary chemotherapy, followed by radiation therapy and/or surgery as given in IRS‐II, failed to improve the eventual bladder salvage rate.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1992

Late effects of therapy in patients with paratesticular rhabdomyosarcoma. Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study Committee.

Ruth M. Heyn; R B Raney; Daniel M. Hays; Melvin Tefft; Edmund A. Gehan; Bruce Webber; Harold M. Maurer

PURPOSEnWe report on long-term health-related problems determined from extended follow-up of 86 children and adolescents who were treated for paratesticular rhabdomyosarcoma on the Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Studies I and II (IRS I-II).nnnPATIENTS AND METHODSnPatients were treated between 1972 and 1984, and ages at diagnosis ranged from 10 months to 19 years. The majority of these patients had initial retroperitoneal lymph node dissection (RLND) or sampling performed.nnnRESULTSnProblems related to surgical procedures included bowel obstruction in nine patients, loss of normal ejaculatory function in eight, development of a hydrocele in five, and lymphedema of the leg in five. Sequelae related to radiotherapy were difficult to assess with the exception of three patients whose remaining testes were in the field of radiotherapy. In general, kidney and bladder function were normal in patients who received radiotherapy to the paraaortic lymph nodes and/or bladder. Four patients who had abdominal radiotherapy had chronic diarrhea. Two patients had urethral strictures and urethritis. Four patients had bone or soft tissue hypoplasia in the field of radiotherapy. Chemotherapy-related late effects were primarily hemorrhagic cystitis or gonadal dysfunction after cyclophosphamide. A third of the patients who received cyclophosphamide developed hemorrhagic cystitis, and half of these had extended periods of gross hematuria after therapy was discontinued. The testicular size was small in children whose testes were irradiated and in some who received cyclophosphamide. Tanner staging was normal in 45 patients for whom it was recorded. Elevated follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) values or known azoospermia occurred in more than half the patients for whom data were available.nnnCONCLUSIONSnA variety of sequelae related to therapy were determined in this patient population. These findings suggest that some aspects of therapy warrant reevaluation and that improved plans for follow-up care need to be provided.


Medical and Pediatric Oncology | 1997

Primary and metastatic rhabdomyosarcoma in the breast: Neoplasms of adolescent females, a report from the Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study

Daniel M. Hays; Sarah S. Donaldson; Hiroyuki Shimada; William M. Crist; William A. Newton; Richard J. Andrassy; Eugene S. Wiener; Jennifer Green; Timothy J. Triche; Harold M. Maurer

UNLABELLEDnThe occurrence of rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) primary in or metastatic to breast has been regarded as an uncommon event, associated with an unfavorable outcome. Records of 26 patients with diagnoses of breast RMS, either primary or secondary, entered in the Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study (IRS) (1972-1992) were reviewed and compared with data regarding 47 similar patients in published reports. Of the 26 IRS cases, the histologic subtype was alveolar in 24, embryonal in 1, and not determined in 1. All were female with ages ranging from 11.5 to 20.2 years (median, 15.2 years; mode, 14-16 years). This compact age distribution of both primary (n = 7) and metastatic (n = 19) breast RMS was seen in previously reported series. Among the 19 cases of RMS with initial dissemination to breast, primary tumor sites, were extremity (n = 8), nasopharynx/paranasal sinuses (n = 7), and trunk (n = 4). IRS treatment was risk-based according to site and extent of disease. Four of 7 patients with primary RMS remain disease free 2.9 to 7 years post diagnosis. Among 19 patients with RMS initially metastatic to breast, including 7 in IRS clinical group IV at original diagnosis, three are disease free at 7.6, 15.7 and 17.0 years.nnnCONCLUSIONSnprimary or metastatic RMS in breast is almost confined to adolescent females having tumors with alveolar histology. Approximately one-half of the patients with primary breast disease and 15% of those with metastatic breast disease as an initial recurrence are long-term survivors.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 1994

Neonatal rhabdomyosarcoma: The IRS experience

Thom E. Lobe; Eugene S Wiener; Daniel M. Hays; Walter Lawrence; Richard J Andrassy; Jean Johnston; Moody D. Wharam; Bruce Webber; Abdelsalam H. Ragab

Neonatal rhabdomyosarcoma is rare, and the characteristics and optimal therapy for patients with this condition have not been well described. Of 3,217 eligible patients entered in the Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study (IRS), 14 were less than 30 days old at the time of diagnosis. Among these patients, male gender, Caucasian race, caudal tumors, and embryonal/botryoid and undifferentiated histology predominate. Although half the neonates survived, neither histology, tumor size, nor type of surgery were predictive of outcome. The presence of necrosis and small round cell configuration coincides with a poor prognosis, regardless of histological diagnosis. Neonatal rhabdomyosarcoma of caudal origin has a favorable prognosis.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 1994

Retroperitoneal node biopsy in paratesticular rhabdomyosarcoma

Eugene S. Wiener; Walter W. Lawrence; Daniel M. Hays; Thom E. Lobe; Richard Andrassy; Sarah S. Donaldson; William M. Crist; William A. Newton; Jean Johnson; Edmund A. Gehan; Chantal Rodary

UNLABELLEDnRetroperitoneal lymph node dissection (RPLND) was used in 121 Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study (IRS) III patients with nonmetastatic paratesticular (PT) rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) to assess retroperitoneal lymph node (RPLN) involvement so as to determine the need for x-ray therapy (XRT). Clinical node evaluation (CNE) was accomplished by a computed tomography (CT) scan in 105 and a sonogram in six. Pathological node evaluation (PNE) was performed in 113: lymphadenectomy (9 bilateral, 85 unilateral) and biopsy in 19. Vincristine and actinomycin D were used for 1 year postoperatively in 89%; all patients who had positive PNE received RPLN XRT. This study compares CNE with PNE and evaluates predictors of relapse and survival.nnnFINDINGSnThere were clinically negative nodes (cN0) in 81% of the 121 patients. Among cN0 patients, 14% had positive nodes (pN1). Of the clinically positive (cN1) patients, 94% had pN1. RPLN relapse occurred in only two of the 121 patients. Initially both had cN0 and one had PNE that was negative. For all 121 patients, the 5-year survival was 91%. For cN0 patients, the 5-year survival was 96% compared with 69% for cN1 patients (P < .001). Among the children in whom treatment failed, nodes were cN1 in 5 of 11 (45%) compared with 15 of 107 (14%) in those whose treatment did not fail (P < .008).nnnCONCLUSIONSn(1) Results of RPLN imaging studies were negative in 81% of patients with PT RMS (specificity 99%, sensitivity 57%). (2) RPLN recurrence is uncommon (even when RPLN are initially involved) if regional XRT and appropriate chemotherapy are used.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Cancer | 1988

Disease patterns and survival rate in children with metastatic soft‐tissue sarcoma: A report from the intergroup rhabdomyosarcoma study (IRS)‐I

R. Beverly Raney; Melvin Tefft; Harold M. Maurer; Abdelsalam H. Ragab; Daniel M. Hays; Edward H. Soule; Mary A. Foulkes; Edmund A. Gehan

The patterns of disease extent, response to treatment, and survival rates were examined in 129 children registered as metastatic (Group IV) soft‐tissue sarcoma patients on the Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study (IRS)‐I protocol from November 1972 through October 1978. The patients ages at diagnosis ranged from 3 months to 21 years (median, 10.5 years); 72 were male patients and 57 were female patients (male‐to‐female ratio, 1.3:1). The tumor arose in an extremity in 34 patients, the head and neck (exclusive of the orbit) in 27, the genitourinary tract in 25, the retroperitoneum or pelvis in 14, the trunk in 12, the intrathoracic region in nine, the hepatobiliary system in four, the perineum in two, and the orbit in two patients. The histologic types of soft‐tissue sarcoma confirmed by the pathology review committee were embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma in 68 patients, alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma in 41, undifferentiated sarcoma in 14, embryonal‐botryoid in two, pleomorphic in one patient, and other sarcoma in three patients. Of 105 patients who were confirmed in Group IV and had complete information concerning sites of metastatic deposits, 53 patients presented with metastases restricted to only one anatomic region or tissue; the other 52 had diffuse metastases. The most common sites of distant tumor deposits were the lungs, bone marrow, and other soft tissues. After treatment with vincristine, dactinomycin, and cyclophosphamide with or without Adriamycin (Adria Laboratories, Inc., Columbus, OH) and radiation therapy, 65 (50%) of the 129 eligible patients achieved complete disappearance of all detectable tumor. The likelihood of achieving and maintaining a complete response for 2 years was highest among patients whose tumors originated in the genitourinary tract, retroperitoneum‐pelvis, or the hepatobiliary or perineum regions. Thirteen of these 45 children (29%) are alive and disease‐free at a minimum of 2 years after initiation of treatment. Only 10 of the other 84 (8%) are surviving disease‐free at 2 years (P = 0.02). The presence of restricted rather than diffuse metastases at diagnosis (P = 0.02) was the only other characteristic significantly related to long‐term complete remissions. One hundred and two patients (79%) died at a median of 47 weeks after diagnosis, 92 from sarcoma and ten from other causes. Prolonged disease‐free survival was possible for some children with metastatic soft‐tissue sarcoma arising in the genitourinary tract, retro‐peritoneum‐pelvis, or hepatobiliary and perineal sites, but it was unlikely for those whose tumor arose elsewhere.

Collaboration


Dive into the Daniel M. Hays's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Edmund A. Gehan

Children's Cancer Study Group

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Melvin Tefft

Children's Cancer Study Group

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

William A. Newton

Children's Cancer Study Group

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge