Victoria Castel
Instituto Politécnico Nacional
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Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1993
Garrett M. Brodeur; J Pritchard; Frank Berthold; N. L. T. Carlsen; Victoria Castel; R P Castelberry; B. De Bernardi; Audrey E. Evans; M Favrot; Hedborg F
PURPOSE AND METHODS: Based on preliminary experience, there was a need for modifications and clarifications in the International Neuroblastoma Staging System (INSS) and International Neuroblastoma Response Criteria (INRC). In 1988, a proposal was made to establish an internationally accepted staging system for neuroblastoma, as well as consistent criteria for confirming the diagnosis and determining response to therapy (Brodeur GM, et al: J Clin Oncol 6:1874-1881, 1988). A meeting was held to review experience with the INSS and INRC and to revise or clarify the language and intent of the originally proposed criteria. Substantial changes included a redefinition of the midline, restrictions on age and bone marrow involvement for stage 4S, and the recommendation that meta-iodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) scanning be implemented for evaluating the extent of disease. Other modifications and clarifications of the INSS and INRC are presented. In addition, the criteria for the diagnosis of neuroblastoma were modified. ...
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2009
Susan L. Cohn; Andrew D.J. Pearson; Wendy B. London; Tom Monclair; Peter F. Ambros; Garrett M. Brodeur; Andreas Faldum; Barbara Hero; Tomoko Iehara; David Machin; Véronique Mosseri; Thorsten Simon; Alberto Garaventa; Victoria Castel; Katherine K. Matthay
PURPOSE Because current approaches to risk classification and treatment stratification for children with neuroblastoma (NB) vary greatly throughout the world, it is difficult to directly compare risk-based clinical trials. The International Neuroblastoma Risk Group (INRG) classification system was developed to establish a consensus approach for pretreatment risk stratification. PATIENTS AND METHODS The statistical and clinical significance of 13 potential prognostic factors were analyzed in a cohort of 8,800 children diagnosed with NB between 1990 and 2002 from North America and Australia (Childrens Oncology Group), Europe (International Society of Pediatric Oncology Europe Neuroblastoma Group and German Pediatric Oncology and Hematology Group), and Japan. Survival tree regression analyses using event-free survival (EFS) as the primary end point were performed to test the prognostic significance of the 13 factors. RESULTS Stage, age, histologic category, grade of tumor differentiation, the status of the MYCN oncogene, chromosome 11q status, and DNA ploidy were the most highly statistically significant and clinically relevant factors. A new staging system (INRG Staging System) based on clinical criteria and tumor imaging was developed for the INRG Classification System. The optimal age cutoff was determined to be between 15 and 19 months, and 18 months was selected for the classification system. Sixteen pretreatment groups were defined on the basis of clinical criteria and statistically significantly different EFS of the cohort stratified by the INRG criteria. Patients with 5-year EFS more than 85%, more than 75% to < or = 85%, > or = 50% to < or = 75%, or less than 50% were classified as very low risk, low risk, intermediate risk, or high risk, respectively. CONCLUSION By defining homogenous pretreatment patient cohorts, the INRG classification system will greatly facilitate the comparison of risk-based clinical trials conducted in different regions of the world and the development of international collaborative studies.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2011
Wendy B. London; Victoria Castel; Tom Monclair; Peter F. Ambros; Andrew D.J. Pearson; Susan L. Cohn; Frank Berthold; Akira Nakagawara; Ruth Ladenstein; Tomoko Iehara; Katherine K. Matthay
PURPOSE Survival after neuroblastoma relapse is poor. Understanding the relationship between clinical and biologic features and outcome after relapse may help in selection of optimal therapy. Our aim was to determine which factors were significantly predictive of postrelapse overall survival (OS) in patients with recurrent neuroblastoma--particularly whether time from diagnosis to first relapse (TTFR) was a significant predictor of OS. PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients with first relapse/progression were identified in the International Neuroblastoma Risk Group (INRG) database. Time from study enrollment until first event and OS time starting from first event were calculated. Cox regression models were used to calculate the hazard ratio of increased death risk and perform survival tree regression. TTFR was tested in a multivariable Cox model with other factors. RESULTS In the INRG database (N = 8,800), 2,266 patients experienced first progression/relapse. Median time to relapse was 13.2 months (range, 1 day to 11.4 years). Five-year OS from time of first event was 20% (SE, ± 1%). TTFR was statistically significantly associated with OS time in a nonlinear relationship; patients with TTFR of 36 months or longer had the lowest risk of death, followed by patients who relapsed in the period of 0 to less than 6 months or 18 to 36 months. Patients who relapsed between 6 and 18 months after diagnosis had the highest risk of death. TTFR, age, International Neuroblastoma Staging System stage, and MYCN copy number status were independently predictive of postrelapse OS in multivariable analysis. CONCLUSION Age, stage, MYCN status, and TTFR are significant prognostic factors for postrelapse survival and may help in the design of clinical trials evaluating novel agents.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2009
Adela Cañete; Mary Gerrard; Hervé Rubie; Victoria Castel; Andrea Di Cataldo; Caroline Munzer; Ruth Ladenstein; Bénédicte Brichard; José D. Bermúdez; Jérôme Couturier; Bruno De Bernardi; Andrew J. Pearson; Jean Michon
PURPOSE To report the results of a prospective, nonrandomized European study on infants with neuroblastoma and MYCN gene amplification. PATIENTS AND METHODS Infants with neuroblastoma (stage 2, 3, 4, and 4s) and MYCN gene amplification who were diagnosed between 1999 and 2004 were eligible for enrollment onto the study. After diagnosis, staging, and mandatory biologic studies, induction chemotherapy (IC) with conventional drugs was administered, followed by delayed surgery, megatherapy (busulfan-melphalan as a conditioning regimen), and local radiotherapy. RESULTS Of the 46 infants enrolled onto the study, 35 infants were eligible; of these 35 infants, 97% had metastatic spread (24 infants had stage 4, and 10 infants had stage 4s). Two-year overall survival (OS) was 30% (SE, 0.08), with median survival time of 12 months, and 23 deaths due to disease. Two-year, event-free survival (EFS) was 29% (SE, 0.07). The treatment was well tolerated with no deaths as a result of toxicity or severe toxicity. Despite protocol adherence, 30% of the patients who were assessable for response to IC experienced disease progression or did not respond. Stage and high lactate dehydrogenase reached significance in the univariate analysis (P = .028 and .039, respectively for OS; and P = .05 and .031 respectively, for EFS). Ten of 16 patients who received megatherapy are still alive. CONCLUSION Although treatment was well tolerated, survival was poor and our IC failed to achieve a satisfactory response in 30% of our patients. New therapeutic approaches and more intense world-wide collaboration are needed to achieve a cure in this population.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2009
Bruno De Bernardi; Mary Gerrard; Luca Boni; Hervé Rubie; Adela Cañete; Andrea Di Cataldo; Victoria Castel; Ana Lacerda; Ruth Ladenstein; Ellen Ruud; Benédicte Brichard; Jérôme Couturier; Caroline Ellershaw; Caroline Munzer; Paolo Bruzzi; Jean Michon; Andrew J. Pearson
PURPOSE On the assumption that most infants with disseminated neuroblastoma without MYCN amplification (MYCNA) have a favorable prognosis, two concomitant prospective trials were started in which chemotherapy was limited to patients presenting life- or organ-threatening symptoms or overt metastases to skeleton, lung, or CNS. Surgery was to be performed only in the absence of surgical risk factors. PATIENTS AND METHODS One hundred seventy infants with disseminated neuroblastoma without MYCNA, diagnosed between June 1999 and June 2004 in nine European countries were eligible for either of the two studies. Trial 99.2 included all stage 4S infants and those with stage 4 with a primary tumor infiltrating across the midline or positive skeletal scintigraphy who were to be observed in absence of symptoms. Trial 99.3 included infants with overt metastases to the skeleton, lung, and CNS to be treated with a minimum of four chemotherapy courses. RESULTS The 125 infants treated on trial 99.2 had a 2-year overall survival (OS) of 97.6% with no difference between asymptomatic and symptomatic patients (97.7% v 97.3%), patients without or with unresectable primary tumors (96.8% v 100%), and patients without or with positive skeletal scintigraphy without radiologic abnormalities (97.2% v 100%). The 45 infants treated on trial 99.3 had a 2-year OS of 95.6%. No patients died of surgery- or chemotherapy-related complications. CONCLUSION Infants with disseminated disease without MYCNA have excellent survival with minimal or no treatment. Asymptomatic infants with an unresectable primary tumor or positive skeletal scintigraphy without radiologic abnormalities may undergo observation alone.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2010
Ruth Ladenstein; Domonique Valteau-Couanet; Penelope Brock; Isaac Yaniv; Victoria Castel; Genevieve Laureys; Josef Malis; Vassilios Papadakis; Ana Lacerda; Ellen Ruud; Per Kogner; Miklós Garami; Walentyna Balwierz; Henrik Schroeder; Maja Beck-Popovic; Guenter Schreier; David Machin; Ulrike Pötschger; Andrew D.J. Pearson
PURPOSE To reduce the incidence of febrile neutropenia during rapid COJEC (cisplatin, vincristine, carboplatin, etoposide, and cyclophosphamide given in a rapid delivery schedule) induction. In the High-Risk Neuroblastoma-1 (HR-NBL1) trial, the International Society of Paediatric Oncology European Neuroblastoma Group (SIOPEN) randomly assigned patients to primary prophylactic (PP) versus symptom-triggered granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (GCSF; filgrastim). PATIENTS AND METHODS From May 2002 to November 2005, 239 patients in 16 countries were randomly assigned to receive or not receive PPGCSF. There were 144 boys with a median age of 3.1 years (range, 1 to 17 years) of whom 217 had International Neuroblastoma Staging System (INSS) stage 4 and 22 had stage 2 or 3 MYCN-amplified disease. The prophylactic arm received a single daily dose of 5 microg/kg GCSF, starting after each of the eight COJEC chemotherapy cycles and stopping 24 hours before the next cycle. Chemotherapy was administered every 10 days regardless of hematologic recovery, provided that infection was controlled. RESULTS The PPGCSF arm had significantly fewer febrile neutropenic episodes (P = .002), days with fever (P = .004), hospital days (P = .017), and antibiotic days (P = .001). Reported Common Toxicity Criteria (CTC) graded toxicity was also significantly reduced: infections per cycle (P = .002), fever (P < .001), severe leucopenia (P < .001), neutropenia (P < .001), mucositis (P = .002), nausea/vomiting (P = .045), and constipation (P = .008). Severe weight loss was reduced significantly by 50% (P = .013). Protocol compliance with the rapid induction schedule was also significantly better in the PPGCSF arm shown by shorter time to completion (P = .005). PPGCSF did not adversely affect response rates or success of peripheral-blood stem-cell harvest. CONCLUSION Following these results, PPG-GSF was advised for all patients on rapid COJEC induction.
British Journal of Cancer | 2008
B. De Bernardi; Véronique Mosseri; Hervé Rubie; Victoria Castel; A Foot; Ruth Ladenstein; Genevieve Laureys; Maja Beck-Popovic; A de Lacerda; Adj Pearson; J. de Kraker; Peter F. Ambros; Y. De Rycke; Massimo Conte; Paolo Bruzzi; Jean Michon
Main objective of this study was to confirm that surgery alone is an effective and safe treatment for localised resectable neuroblastoma except stage 2 with amplified MYCN gene (MYCNA). Of 427 eligible stages 1–2 patients, 411 had normal MYCN and 16 had MYCNA. Of the 288 stage 1 patients with normal MYCN, 1 died of complications and 16 relapsed, 2 of whom died; 5-year relapse-free survival (RFS) and overall survival (OS) rates were 94.3% (95% confidence interval (CI): 91.6–97) and 98.9% (95% CI: 97.7–100), respectively. Of the 123 stage 2 patients with normal MYCN, 1 died of sepsis and 22 relapsed, 8 of whom died (RFS 82.8%, 95% CI: 76.2–89.5; OS 93.2%, 95% CI: 88.7–97.8). In stage 2, OS and RFS were worse for patients with elevated LDH and unfavourable histopathology. Of 16 children with MYCNA, 7 were stage 1 (5 relapses and 4 deaths) and 9 were stage 2 (3 relapses and 2 deaths) patients. In conclusion, surgery alone yielded excellent OS for both stage 1 and 2 neuroblastoma without MYCNA, although stage 2 patients with unfavourable histopathology and elevated LDH suffered a high number of relapses. Both stage 1 and 2 patients with MYCNA were at greater risk of relapse.
Clinical Cancer Research | 2011
Katleen De Preter; Pieter Mestdagh; Joëlle Vermeulen; Fjoralba Zeka; Arlene Naranjo; Isabella Bray; Victoria Castel; Caifu Chen; Elżbieta Drożyńska; Angelika Eggert; Michael D. Hogarty; Ewa Izycka-Swieszewska; Wendy B. London; Rosa Noguera; Marta Piqueras; Kenneth Bryan; Benjamin Schowe; Peter van Sluis; Jan J. Molenaar; Alexander Schramm; Johannes H. Schulte; Raymond L. Stallings; Rogier Versteeg; Genevieve Laureys; Nadine Van Roy; Frank Speleman; Jo Vandesompele
Purpose: More accurate assessment of prognosis is important to further improve the choice of risk-related therapy in neuroblastoma (NB) patients. In this study, we aimed to establish and validate a prognostic miRNA signature for children with NB and tested it in both fresh frozen and archived formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) samples. Experimental Design: Four hundred-thirty human mature miRNAs were profiled in two patient subgroups with maximally divergent clinical courses. Univariate logistic regression analysis was used to select miRNAs correlating with NB patient survival. A 25-miRNA gene signature was built using 51 training samples, tested on 179 test samples, and validated on an independent set of 304 fresh frozen tumor samples and 75 archived FFPE samples. Results: The 25-miRNA signature significantly discriminates the test patients with respect to progression-free and overall survival (P < 0.0001), both in the overall population and in the cohort of high-risk patients. Multivariate analysis indicates that the miRNA signature is an independent predictor of patient survival after controlling for current risk factors. The results were confirmed in an external validation set. In contrast to a previously published mRNA classifier, the 25-miRNA signature was found to be predictive for patient survival in a set of 75 FFPE neuroblastoma samples. Conclusions: In this study, we present the largest NB miRNA expression study so far, including more than 500 NB patients. We established and validated a robust miRNA classifier, able to identify a cohort of high-risk NB patients at greater risk for adverse outcome using both fresh frozen and archived material. Clin Cancer Res; 17(24); 7684–92. ©2011 AACR.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2011
Hervé Rubie; Bruno De Bernardi; Mary Gerrard; Adela Cañete; Ruth Ladenstein; Jérôme Couturier; Peter F. Ambros; Caroline Munzer; Andrew D.J. Pearson; Alberto Garaventa; Penelope Brock; Victoria Castel; Dominique Valteau-Couanet; Keith Holmes; Andrea Di Cataldo; Bénédicte Brichard; Véronique Mosseri; Catalina Marquez; Dominique Plantaz; Luca Boni; Jean Michon
PURPOSE To evaluate the efficacy of low-dose chemotherapy in infants with nonmetastatic and unresectable neuroblastoma (NB) without MYCN amplification. PATIENTS AND METHODS Infants with localized NB and no MYCN amplification were eligible in the SIOPEN Infant Neuroblastoma European Study 99.1 study. Primary tumor was deemed unresectable according to imaging defined risk factors. Diagnostic procedures and staging were carried out according to International Staging System recommendations. Children without threatening symptoms received low-dose cyclophosphamide (5 mg/kg/d × 5 days) and vincristine (0.05 mg/kg at day 1; CyV), repeated once to three times every 2 weeks until surgical excision could be safely performed. Children with either one threatening symptom or insufficient response to CyV were given carboplatin and etoposide (CaE), sometimes followed by vincristine, cyclophosphamide, and doxorubicin. No postoperative treatment was to be administered. RESULTS Between December 1999 and April 2004, 120 infants were included in the study. Eighty-eight had no threatening symptoms and 79 received CyV. CaE was given to 49 of them because of insufficient response. Thirty-two children had threatening symptoms, 30 of whom received CaE. Anthracyclines were given to 46 children. Surgery was attempted in 102 patients, leading to gross surgical excision in 93. Relapse occurred in 12 patients (nine local and three metastatic). Five-year overall and event-free survivals were 99% ± 1% and 90% ± 3%, respectively, with a median follow-up of 6.1 years (range, 1.6 to 9.1). CONCLUSION Low-dose chemotherapy without anthracyclines is effective in 62% of infants with an unresectable NB and no MYCN amplification, allowing excellent survival rates without jeopardizing their long-term outcome.
Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2009
Terry A. Vik; Thomas Pfluger; Richard Kadota; Victoria Castel; Mark Tulchinsky; J.C. Alonso Farto; Sherif Heiba; Aldo N. Serafini; Sabah S. Tumeh; Natalie Khutoryansky; Arnold F. Jacobson
A prospective trial was conducted to confirm the diagnostic performance of 123I‐mIBG scintigraphy in patients with known or suspected neuroblastoma.