Purpose: In osteosarcoma of the extremity, a strong correlation between chemotherapy-induced necrosis and prognosis has been reported. The aim of this study was to investigate the possible factors that influence histologic response to primary chemotherapy.
Patients and methods: In 272 patients with high-grade osteosarcoma of the extremity preoperatively treated with high-dose methotrexate (HDMTX), cisplatin (CDP), and doxorubicin (ADM), the histologic response to chemotherapy was evaluated and graded as complete (no viable tumor cells) or incomplete (persistence of viable tumor cells). Several factors, such as metastatic disease to the lung at diagnosis, sex, age, site and tumor volume, histologic subtype, serum alkaline phosphatase, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), and methotrexate (MTX) pharmacokinetics were investigated to test their predictive significance on histologic response.
Results: Fifty-one patients with localized disease (20.6%) and none of the 25 patients with metastatic disease at presentation had a complete histologic response (P = .006). After multivariate analysis, performed on patients with localized disease only, MTX serum peak (> or = 700 micromol/L) and histologic subtype were proven to be significant predictive factors of histologic response. A complete response was seen in 28.8% of patients with 700 micromol/L or greater MTX serum levels and in 9.9% of those patients with lower levels (P = .001). The chondroblastic subtype was less responsive (6.1% of complete response), compared with the osteoblastic (16.3%), fibroblastic (33.3%), and telangiectatic (42.3%).
Conclusion: Patients with metastatic osteosarcoma and localized chondroblastic osteosarcoma have a reduced chemosensitivity to primary chemotherapy with MTX, CDP, and ADM. MTX serum peak significantly influences tumor necrosis. A dose adaptation of MTX is recommended to obtain a serum peak of 700 micromol/L or greater when MTX is infused in 6 hours.