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Adjuvant Therapies

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Adjuvant Therapies - Therapy Team-Up Time

  • Definition: Post-primary treatment (e.g., surgery) targeting residual/microscopic disease.
  • Aims: ↓ local & systemic recurrence, ↑ disease-free & overall survival.
  • Modalities:
    • Chemotherapy: Systemic; vital for Osteosarcoma, Ewing's Sarcoma.
    • Radiotherapy (RT): Local control; for radio-sensitive tumors (e.g., Ewing's), positive margins, or unresectable tumors.
    • Denosumab: For Giant Cell Tumor (GCT), especially unresectable or recurrent cases.

⭐ Neoadjuvant chemotherapy (given before surgery) is standard for high-grade Osteosarcoma & Ewing's sarcoma, improving resectability and aiding limb salvage surgery outcomes.

Adjuvant Therapies - Chemo's Cancer Crush

  • Targets micrometastases; improves event-free & overall survival.
    • Neoadjuvant: Pre-operative; shrinks tumor, allows limb salvage, assesses chemo-sensitivity (histologic necrosis).
    • Adjuvant: Post-operative; eradicates residual cells.
  • Key Tumors & Regimens:
    • Osteosarcoma: Highly responsive.
      • 📌 MAP protocol: Methotrexate (high-dose with Leucovorin rescue), Adriamycin (Doxorubicin), Cisplatin.
      • Good histologic response (>90% tumor necrosis) correlates with better prognosis.
    • Ewing's Sarcoma: Very chemosensitive.
      • 📌 VDC/IE protocol: Vincristine, Doxorubicin, Cyclophosphamide alternating with Ifosfamide, Etoposide.
    • Chondrosarcoma & Chordoma: Generally chemoresistant.
  • Monitoring: Essential for managing toxicities (e.g., cardiotoxicity with Doxorubicin, nephrotoxicity with Cisplatin).

MAP regimen schema for osteosarcoma

⭐ For Osteosarcoma, the degree of tumor necrosis following neoadjuvant chemotherapy is a critical prognostic factor; >90% necrosis is associated with a significantly better outcome (Huvos grading).

Adjuvant Therapies - Radiation's Radical Rays

  • Mechanism: Ionizing radiation damages DNA, inducing tumor cell death.
  • Indications: 📌 Sensitive tumors, Positive margins, Unresectable, Palliative (SPUR)
    • Radiosensitive: Ewing's sarcoma, lymphoma, myeloma.
    • Adjuvant: Post-op for close/positive margins.
    • Definitive: Unresectable tumors.
    • Palliative: Pain (metastases), spinal cord compression.
  • Modalities:
    • External Beam RT (EBRT): Most common.
    • Stereotactic Body RT (SBRT): Precise, high dose.
  • Sensitivity Spectrum:
    • High: Ewing's (~45-60 Gy), Lymphoma, Myeloma.
    • Moderate: Giant Cell Tumor (GCT), Chordoma (high dose needed).
    • Low/Resistant: Osteosarcoma, Chondrosarcoma (RT mainly palliative/unresectable).
  • Complications: Dermatitis, osteonecrosis, pathological fracture, radiation-induced sarcoma (late).

    ⭐ Ewing's sarcoma is highly radiosensitive; RT is a key component of its multimodal treatment, often combined with chemotherapy.

Adjuvant Therapies - Precision Bone Battle

  • Denosumab (RANKL Inhibitor)
    • Giant Cell Tumor (GCT): Neoadjuvant, unresectable, recurrent.
    • Action: ↓ osteoclast activation & bone resorption.
    • Dose: 120 mg SC.
  • Bisphosphonates (e.g., Zoledronic acid)
    • Osteolytic lesions (Myeloma, Mets).
    • Action: Inhibit osteoclasts, ↓ Skeletal-Related Events (SREs).
  • Ablative Therapies
    • Radiofrequency Ablation (RFA): Osteoid osteoma, palliative for small mets.
    • Cryoablation: Alternative local control.
  • Bone-Targeted Radiopharmaceuticals
    • Strontium-89 ($^{89}\text{Sr}$), Samarium-153 ($^{153}\text{Sm}$).
    • Use: Painful widespread osteoblastic mets.
  • Cementoplasty (Vertebroplasty/Kyphoplasty)
    • PMMA cement for pain relief & stabilization (vertebral).

⭐ Denosumab (anti-RANKL mAb) is key for Giant Cell Tumors (GCT), especially unresectable or for downstaging.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Neoadjuvant chemotherapy is standard for osteosarcoma (MAP: Methotrexate, Doxorubicin, Cisplatin) and Ewing's sarcoma (VDC/IE).
  • Ewing's sarcoma is highly radiosensitive; radiotherapy is a key adjuvant treatment.
  • Giant Cell Tumors (GCT) may respond to Denosumab (anti-RANKL), especially if unresectable or metastatic.
  • Chondrosarcomas are generally chemoresistant and radioresistant; surgery is mainstay.
  • Chordomas require surgery followed by high-dose radiation (e.g., proton beam therapy).
  • Key toxicities: Cisplatin (nephrotoxicity, ototoxicity), Doxorubicin (cardiotoxicity), Methotrexate (myelosuppression, mucositis).

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