Desmoplastic Small Round-cell Tumor: Retrospective Review of Institutional Data and Literature Review.

2021 
Background Desmoplastic small round-cell tumor (DSCRT) in adults is an extremely rare (age-adjusted incidence 0.3 per million) and aggressive sarcoma with limited data for optimal management. Patients and methods Retrospective analysis of patients with DSCRT diagnosis (2010-2020) was performed following Institutional Review Board approval. The follow-up period was from pathological diagnosis to the last patient contact. Endpoints were type of response and duration of response. Results In the current analysis, first-line treatment in all cases was vincristine, anthracycline, and cyclophosphamide alternating with ifosfamide and etoposide (VAC-IE) with 100% response for a mean duration of 9.8 (range=5-12) months. Patients received 1-4 subsequent lines of therapy. All patients received temozolomide with irinotecan (50% partial response, duration 8-9 months). Two patients that underwent consolidative cytoreductive surgery with hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy had a longer survival (30.6 vs. 11.2 months). Patients suffered 100% mortality with a median survival was 17.8 (range=11.2-30.6) months. Conclusion While aggressive multimodality treatment is always warranted for DSCRT, the options are limited by the multicentric presentation, short-lived initial response and lack of established subsequent therapy portending a poor prognosis. Consolidative cytoreductive surgery following first-line therapy may improve survival.
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