Background: The prognosis for patients with high-risk Ewing's tumor, i.e. primarily multifocal or early relapsed disease, is extremely poor with conventional relapse therapy. High-dose radio/chemotherapy (HDC) with subsequent stem cell transplantation seems to improve outcome in this patient cohort. In spite of this intensified therapy however, relapse remains the most frequent cause of death. In the majority of patients the time to second relapse after HDC is shorter than the time to first relapse after conventional therapy (3.4 vs. 18 months). Event-free survival in Ewing's tumor patients who suffer a second relapse after first-line therapy (EICESS 92) is 2% after 18 months.
Case report: The present report describes the clinical course of two girls who relapsed after HDC and subsequently received low-dose oral trofosfamide and etoposide. The patient with very late multifocal relapse after first-line treatment and a second localized relapse 30 months after HDC remains disease-free for 5 years after the last relapse. However, the other patient with 2 early relapses after first-line treatment and HDC, respectively, did not benefit from this regime.
Conclusion: We propose that low-dose maintenance therapy may be beneficial in the subgroup of Ewing's tumor patients with late relapse after HDC.
Copyright 2003 S. Karger GmbH, Freiburg