Purpose: Multiple drug resistance due to P-glycoprotein (P-gp) expression has been reported to be a cause of disease recurrence in osteosarcoma. Tumor specimens derived from children and young adults with osteosarcoma enrolled onto a national Intergroup trial (INT0133) were analyzed prospectively to determine the role of multiple drug resistance in osteosarcoma. Patients and Methods: From October 15, 1992, to November 25, 1997, 685 patients with localized, high-grade osteosarcoma were enrolled onto INT0133. Paraffin-embedded diagnostic tumor specimens were assayed for P-gp using monoclonal antibodies C-494 (139 patients) and JSB-1 (133 patients). Percent necrosis at the time of definitive surgery (NEC), event-free survival (EFS), and overall survival (OS) were evaluated as outcome measures for patients with P-gp-positive disease and were compared with patients with P-gp-negative disease. Results: P-gp expression in the biopsy specimen did not significantly increase the risk for adverse outcomes as measured by EFS, OS, or NEC. EFS for those patients with C-494-positive tumors was 59% at 4 years versus 61% at 4 years for patients with C-494-negative tumors (P = .79), or 58% at 4 years versus 61% at 4 years for patients with JSB-1-positive versus JSB-1-negative tumors (P = .65). OS for patients with C-494-positive tumors was 82% at 4 years versus 82% at 4 years for patients with C-494-negative tumors (P = .61). Conclusion: Prospective analysis of the role of multiple drug resistance in localized osteosarcoma did not find that immunohistochemical analysis of P-gp expression predicted outcome for patients treated on INT0133. © 2007 by American Society of Clinical Oncology.
CITATION STYLE
Schwartz, C. L., Gorlick, R., Teot, L., Krailo, M., Chen, Z., Goorin, A., … Meyers, P. (2007). Multiple drug resistance in osteogenic sarcoma: INT0133 from the Children’s Oncology Group. Journal of Clinical Oncology, 25(15), 2057–2062. https://doi.org/10.1200/JCO.2006.07.7776
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