Kenneth L B Brown
University of British Columbia
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Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2008
James S. Meyer; Helen Nadel; Neyssa Marina; Richard B. Womer; Kenneth L B Brown; J. F. Eary; Richard Gorlick; Holcombe E. Grier; R. Lor Randall; Elizabeth R. Lawlor; Stephen L. Lessnick; Paula J. Schomberg; Mark D. Kailo
The Childrens Oncology Group (COG) is a multi‐institutional cooperative group dedicated to childhood cancer research that has helped to increase the survival of children with cancer through clinical trials. These clinical trials include a standardized regimen of imaging examinations performed prior to, during, and following therapy. This article presents imaging guidelines developed by a multidisciplinary group from the COG Bone Tumor Committee. These guidelines provide both required and recommended studies. Recommended examinations may become required in the future. These guidelines should be considered a work in progress that will evolve with advances in imaging and childhood cancer research. Pediatr Blood Cancer 2008;51:163–170.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2011
David A. Rodeberg; Norbert Garcia-Henriquez; Elizabeth Lyden; Elai Davicioni; David M. Parham; Stephen X. Skapek; Andrea Hayes-Jordan; Sarah S. Donaldson; Kenneth L B Brown; Timothy J. Triche; William H. Meyer; Douglas S. Hawkins
PURPOSE Regional lymph node disease (RLND) is a component of the risk-based treatment stratification in rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS). The purpose of this study was to determine the contribution of RLND to prognosis for patients with RMS. PATIENTS AND METHODS Patient characteristics and survival outcomes for patients enrolled onto Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study IV (N = 898, 1991 to 1997) were evaluated among the following three patient groups: nonmetastatic patients with clinical or pathologic negative nodes (N0, 696 patients); patients with clinical or pathologic positive nodes (N1, 125 patients); and patients with a single site of metastatic disease (77 patients). RESULTS Outcomes for patients with nonmetastatic alveolar N0 RMS were significantly better than for patients with N1 RMS (5-year failure-free survival [FFS], 73% v 43%, respectively; 5-year overall survival [OS], 80% v 46%, respectively; P < .001). Patients with a single site of alveolar metastasis had even worse FFS and OS (23% FFS and OS, P = .01) when compared with patients with N1 RMS; however, the differences was not as large as the differences between patients with N0 RMS and N1 RMS. For embryonal RMS, there was no statistically significant difference in FFS or OS (P = .41 and P = .77, respectively) for patients with N1 versus N0 RMS. Gene array analysis of primary tumor specimens identified that genes associated with the immune system and antigen presentation were significantly increased in N1 versus N0 alveolar RMS. CONCLUSION RLND alters prognosis for alveolar but not embryonal RMS. For patients with N1 disease and alveolar histology, outcomes were more similar to distant metastatic disease rather than local disease. Current data suggest that more aggressive therapy for patients with alveolar N1 RMS may be warranted.
Lancet Oncology | 2016
Neyssa Marina; Sigbjørn Smeland; Stefan S. Bielack; Mark Bernstein; Gordana Jovic; Mark Krailo; Jane Hook; Carola Arndt; Henk van den Berg; Bernadette Brennan; Bénédicte Brichard; Kenneth L B Brown; Trude Butterfass-Bahloul; Gabriele Calaminus; Heike E. Daldrup-Link; Mikael Eriksson; Mark C. Gebhardt; Hans Gelderblom; Joachim Gerss; Robert E. Goldsby; Allen M. Goorin; Richard Gorlick; Holcombe E. Grier; Juliet Hale; Kirsten Sundby Hall; Jendrik Hardes; Douglas S. Hawkins; Knut Helmke; Pancras C.W. Hogendoorn; Michael S. Isakoff
Summary Background We designed the EURAMOS-1 trial to investigate whether intensified postoperative chemotherapy for patients whose tumour showed a poor response to preoperative chemotherapy (≥10% viable tumour) improved event-free survival in patients with high-grade osteosarcoma. Methods EURAMOS-1 was an open-label, international, phase 3 randomised, controlled trial. Consenting patients with newly diagnosed, resectable, high-grade osteosarcoma aged 40 years or younger were eligible for randomisation. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive either postoperative cisplatin, doxorubicin, and methotrexate (MAP) or MAP plus ifosfamide and etoposide (MAPIE) using concealed permuted blocks with three stratification factors: trial group; location of tumour (proximal femur or proximal humerus vs other limb vs axial skeleton); and presence of metastases (no vs yes or possible). The MAP regimen consisted of cisplatin 120 mg/m2, doxorubicin 37·5 mg/m2 per day on days 1 and 2 (on weeks 1 and 6) followed 3 weeks later by high-dose methotrexate 12 g/m2 over 4 h. The MAPIE regimen consisted of MAP as a base regimen, with the addition of high-dose ifosfamide (14 g/m2) at 2·8 g/m2 per day with equidose mesna uroprotection, followed by etoposide 100 mg/m2 per day over 1 h on days 1–5. The primary outcome measure was event-free survival measured in the intention-to-treat population. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00134030. Findings Between April 14, 2005, and June 30, 2011, 2260 patients were registered from 325 sites in 17 countries. 618 patients with poor response were randomly assigned; 310 to receive MAP and 308 to receive MAPIE. Median follow-up was 62·1 months (IQR 46·6–76·6); 62·3 months (IQR 46·9–77·1) for the MAP group and 61·1 months (IQR 46·5–75·3) for the MAPIE group. 307 event-free survival events were reported (153 in the MAP group vs 154 in the MAPIE group). 193 deaths were reported (101 in the MAP group vs 92 in the MAPIE group). Event-free survival did not differ between treatment groups (hazard ratio [HR] 0·98 [95% CI 0·78–1·23]); hazards were non-proportional (p=0·0003). The most common grade 3–4 adverse events were neutropenia (268 [89%] patients in MAP vs 268 [90%] in MAPIE), thrombocytopenia (231 [78% in MAP vs 248 [83%] in MAPIE), and febrile neutropenia without documented infection (149 [50%] in MAP vs 217 [73%] in MAPIE). MAPIE was associated with more frequent grade 4 non-haematological toxicity than MAP (35 [12%] of 301 in the MAP group vs 71 [24%] of 298 in the MAPIE group). Two patients died during postoperative therapy, one from infection (although their absolute neutrophil count was normal), which was definitely related to their MAP treatment (specifically doxorubicin and cisplatin), and one from left ventricular systolic dysfunction, which was probably related to MAPIE treatment (specifically doxorubicin). One suspected unexpected serious adverse reaction was reported in the MAP group: bone marrow infarction due to methotrexate. Interpretation EURAMOS-1 results do not support the addition of ifosfamide and etoposide to postoperative chemotherapy in patients with poorly responding osteosarcoma because its administration was associated with increased toxicity without improving event-free survival. The results define standard of care for this population. New strategies are required to improve outcomes in this setting. Funding UK Medical Research Council, National Cancer Institute, European Science Foundation, St Anna Kinderkrebsforschung, Fonds National de la Recherche Scientifique, Fonds voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek-Vlaanderen, Parents Organization, Danish Medical Research Council, Academy of Finland, Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Deutsche Krebshilfe, Federal Ministry of Education and Research, Semmelweis Foundation, ZonMw (Council for Medical Research), Research Council of Norway, Scandinavian Sarcoma Group, Swiss Paediatric Oncology Group, Cancer Research UK, National Institute for Health Research, University College London Hospitals, and Biomedical Research Centre.
International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2011
Trang H. La; Suzanne L. Wolden; David A. Rodeberg; Douglas S. Hawkins; Kenneth L B Brown; James R. Anderson; Sarah S. Donaldson
PURPOSE To evaluate the incidence and prognostic factors for regional failure, with attention to the in-transit pathways of spread, in children with nonmetastatic rhabdomyosarcoma of the extremity. METHODS AND MATERIALS The Intergroup rhabdomyosarcoma studies III, IV-Pilot, and IV enrolled 226 children with rhabdomyosarcoma of the extremity. Failure at the in-transit (epitrochlear/brachial and popliteal) and proximal (axillary/infraclavicular and inguinal/femoral) lymph nodes was evaluated. The median follow-up for the surviving patients was 10.4 years. RESULTS Of the 226 children, 55 (24%) had clinical or pathologic evidence of either in-transit and/or proximal lymph node involvement at diagnosis. The actuarial 5-year risk of regional failure was 12%. The prognostic factors for poor regional control were female gender and lymph node involvement at diagnosis. In the 116 patients with a distal extremity primary tumor, 5% had in-transit lymph node involvement at diagnosis. The estimated 5-year incidences of in-transit and proximal nodal failure was 12% and 8%, respectively. The in-transit failure rate was 0% for patients who underwent radiotherapy and/or underwent lymph node sampling of the in-transit nodal site but was 15% for those who did not (p = .07). However, the 5-year event-free survival rate did not differ between these two groups (64% vs. 55%, respectively, p = .47). CONCLUSION The high incidence of regional involvement necessitates aggressive identification and treatment of regional lymph nodes in patients with rhabdomyosarcoma of the extremity. In patients with distal extremity tumors, in-transit failures were as common as failures in more proximal regional sites. Patients who underwent complete lymph node staging with appropriate radiotherapy to the in-transit nodal site, if indicated, were at a slightly lower risk of in-transit failure.
Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2010
R. Beverly Raney; James R. Anderson; Kenneth L B Brown; Winston W. Huh; Harold M. Maurer; William H. Meyer; David M. Parham; David A. Rodeberg; Suzanne L. Wolden; Sarah S. Donaldson
To assess local control, event‐free survival (EFS), and overall survival (OS) rates in 71 patients with localized, completely resected (Group I) alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma (ALV RMS) and their relation to radiation therapy (RT) on IRSG Protocols III and IV, 1984–1997.
Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2015
Odile Oberlin; Annie Rey; Kenneth L B Brown; Gianni Bisogno; Ewa Koscielniak; Michael C. Stevens; Douglas S. Hawkins; William H. Meyer; Trang H. La; Modesto Carli; James R. Anderson
Extremity rhabdomyosarcomas do not always show satisfactory outcomes. We analyzed data from 643 patients treated in 14 studies conducted by European and North American groups between 1983 and 2004 to identify factors predictive of outcome.
Journal of The American Academy of Dermatology | 2009
Michele L. Ramien; Julie S. Prendiville; Kenneth L B Brown; Robyn Cairns
We describe asymptomatic bone cysts in the right humerus of a 17-year-old boy with Darier disease. The cysts were found when a radiographic skeletal survey was performed to monitor for adverse effects of oral retinoid therapy. Magnetic resonance imaging was used to confirm that the lesions were cystic and to delineate their extent. The literature was reviewed for previous reports of this association.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2010
Odile Oberlin; Annie Rey; Kenneth L B Brown; Gianni Bisogno; Ewa Koscielniak; Michael C. Stevens; Douglas S. Hawkins; William H. Meyer; T. H. La; James R. Anderson
9505 Background: We present pooled data from 643 patients (pts) treated in 14 studies conducted by European and American cooperative groups. Methods: Clinical factors, including age, histology, site of primary (hand and foot vs others), size, invasiveness (T), nodal involvement (N) and post surgical group (complete R0, microscopic residue R1 or macroscopic residue / biopsy only R2), chemotherapy (CT) type and duration, radiation therapy (RT) and period of treatment (before or after 1995) were looked at for their impact on survival (OS). Results: The 5 and 10 year OS are 67% (se 1.8) and 62% (se 2) respectively. By univariate analysis, OS is adversely influenced by age > 3 years, size > 5 cm, T2 stage, N1 stage, cooperative group (Europe vs US), incomplete initial surgery and treatment before 1995. Site and alveolar histology are less significant. RT has no impact. Many of these variables are associated. Pts treated by the US group were more often operated on and had more complete surgery at diagnosis than...
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2010
David A. Rodeberg; Moody D. Wharam; Elizabeth Lyden; Julie A. Stoner; Kenneth L B Brown; Suzanne L. Wolden; Charles N. Paidas; Sarah S. Donaldson; Douglas S. Hawkins; Carola Arndt
Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2008
James S. Meyer; Helen Nadel; Neyssa Marina; Richard B. Womer; Kenneth L B Brown; J. F. Eary; Richard Gorlick; Holcombe E. Grier; R. Lor Randall; Elizabeth R. Lawlor; Stephen L. Lessnick; Paula J. Schomberg; Mark D. Kailo