Abstract
Background/Aim: Although few studies have shown the effectiveness of adjuvant therapy with acridine orange (AO) for soft tissue sarcoma (STS) patients, no study has investigated this among cases with marginal resection. The aim of the study was to evaluate the effectiveness of AO therapy directly by comparing it to marginal resection cases that did not receive AO. Patients and Methods: This retrospective study included 19 and 33 patients with STS who received AO therapy (AO group) and marginal resection without AO therapy (non-AO group), respectively. The patients' clinical information was collected, and the clinical courses were compared. Results: The local recurrence rate in the AO group was significantly lower than that in the non-AO group (p<0.05). The local recurrence-free survival curves significantly differed between the two groups (p<0.05). High grade malignancy and no treatment with AO were identified as risk factors for local recurrence (p<0.05). Conclusion: AO therapy strongly suppressed local recurrence after marginal resection of STS.
Soft tissue sarcoma (STS) is relatively rare compared with other types of cancer. Radical resection with adequate margin is important in the treatment of STS for the prevention of local recurrence. However, when tumors are in contact with important tissues such as major nerves and blood vessels, removal of these important tissues causes serious dysfunctions. Conversely, if resection is conducted in the area where the tumor is in contact with the tissue, the recurrence rate increases. In such cases, radiation therapy is one of adjuvant therapies; it may be effective in reducing local recurrence rate without serious dysfunction (1, 2). However, adjuvant radiotherapy can also cause various conditions that could lead to dysfunction, such as fibrosis, edema, and other pathological fractures (1, 3). Therefore, it is expected that adjuvant therapy will assist in suppressing local recurrence and hindering local dysfunction.
Kusuzaki et al. were the first to report the effectiveness of acridine orange (AO) treatment as an adjuvant therapy in STS; their research team has reported its effectiveness in various different studies (4-10). AO accumulates in acidic environments. As sarcoma cells have many large acidic vesicles, AO specifically binds to malignant tumors and immediately accumulates in tumor cells after local administration (11-15). AO has a strong cell destruction effect on tumor cells after a single session of blue light excitation or low-dose radiation, and residual tumor cells after tumor resection are killed.
Comparisons of STS cases in which extensive resection surgery was or was not performed have shown the efficacy of AO therapy (7, 8). However, there has been no report directly comparing whether or not AO should be used after marginal resection.
The aim of this study was to clarify the effectiveness of AO therapy in the treatment of STS.
Patients and Methods
Subjects. Twenty patients with initial STS involving the extremities or trunk were treated with AO therapy after surgical resection conducted in the Akita University Hospitals, in the Akita prefecture in Japan, between December 2004 and December 2014. We performed surgical treatment with AO on patients with indications that the tumor was in contact with major nerves or vessels, bones, and/or major organs, who did not show signs of massive invasion upon image evaluation before surgery. We defined resection through the capsule of the tumor as marginal resection and resection through the tumor as intralesional resection. Although tumor cells remained after employment of both methods, intralesional resection leaved behind more tumor cells. Only one patient who received intralesional resection among the 20 patients treated with AO therapy was excluded. Finally, 19 consecutive patients with STS treated with AO therapy, with a mean age of 64.4 years (range=52-87 years), were included in this study (AO group). On the other hand, we retrospectively investigated the clinical and pathological data of STS patients with partial marginal resection without AO therapy and adjuvant radiotherapy, and we defined these patients as the control group (non-AO group). We enrolled 33 consecutive patients, with a mean age of 58.4 years (range=32-93 years), with initial STS involving the extremities or trunk who received marginal resection in the Akita University Hospital and Sapporo Medical University Hospital between January 1997 and April 2017 in the non-AO group.
This study was approved by the Institutional Review Board for Clinical Research at Akita University (approval number: 221), and informed consent was obtained from all patients.
Data variables and definitions. The patients' information, including: age, sex, tumor type, anatomical location of the tumor, size, metastasis at diagnosis, stage of the primary tumor, local and distant relapse, follow-up period, and outcomes were collected. The stage of the primary tumor was determined based on the staging system of the American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC), 7th edition (16). The specimens were classified using the French Federation of Cancer Center Sarcoma Group (FNCLCC) classification. This classification is based on the mitotic index, necrosis extension, and histological differentiation of the tumor (17). In the absence of death event, the date of the last follow-up was considered as the end of the follow-up period. The local recurrence-free survival (LRS) was defined as the time remaining free of local recurrence after the primary tumor had been resected. Overall survival (OS) was defined as the time period from the date of diagnosis to that of death or the last follow-up. As there were no deaths due to postoperative complications in this study, we defined death from original disease as died of disease (DOD). Cases were regarded to have a surgical indication if all lesions, including distant metastases, could be excised and if general anesthesia could be administered by an anesthesiologist.
Procedures for AO therapy. We conducted AO therapy, including photodynamic surgery (PDS), photodynamic therapy (PDS), and radiodynamic therapy (RDT), according to previously reported methods (4-9). After we performed marginal resections of STS, microscopic curettage was conducted using an ultrasonic surgical knife (Olympus Co. Ltd., Tokyo, Japan). During microscopic resection, we used a high-power xenon lamp (500 mW, >100,000 lx) and special interference and resorption filters (450-490nm) to select the blue light emitted by a xenon lamp (PDS). We sprayed a 1 μg/ml solution of AO (Sigma Aldrich Co, St Louis, MO, USA) on the resected surfaces, and microscopic curettage was repeated until the green AO fluorescence area representing the remaining tumor cells disappeared completely. PDT was followed by PDS. PDT was subsequently applied to the resected area of the tumor by illuminating it with >100,000 lx of unfiltered light from a xenon lamp for 10 min. The final step of RDT was performed in patients who agreed to undergo RDT. After closure of the surgical wound, without washing of the AO solution, a single-session of radiotherapy with 5 Gy was immediately administered to the resected area. Although, the policy was to conduct RDT in all cases, we did not conduct RDT when patients did not want it or when the radiation room could not be used immediately after surgery.
Statistical analysis. The clinical courses and results between the AO and the non-AO groups were compared. Furthermore, we investigated these factors in patients with high-grade sarcoma only. Additionally, we examined the factors affecting the local recurrence and patient prognosis.
All continuous variables were expressed as means±standard deviations (SD). Student's t-tests, Welch t-tests, and Chi Squared (χ2) tests were used to compare characteristics between the two groups. The curves for LRS and OS were drawn using the Kaplan–Meier method, and differences were analyzed using the Long-rank test. A Cox proportional hazards model was used to identify the factors associated with local recurrence and prognosis. Probability (p) values less than 0.05 were considered significant.
Results
Metastasis at diagnosis was observed in lymph nodes in only one patient among the non-AO group. According to the AJCC staging system, 0 (0%), 4 (21.1%), 1 (5.2%), 2 (10.5%), and 12 (63.5%) patients were classified as IA, IB, IIA, II B, and III in the AO group, respectively. In the non-AO group, 1 (3.0%), 10 (30.3%), 4 (12.2%), 8 (24.2%), and 10 (30.3%) patient were classified as IA, IB, IIA, II B, and III, respectively. All patients that received chemotherapy received doxorubicin and ifosfamide (Table I). Combined treatment with PDS and PDT was performed in 8 (42.1%) patients in the AO group, and that with PDS, PDT and RDT was performed in 11 (57.9%) patients in the AO group.
Among all patients, the AJCC stages in the AO group were significantly worse than those in the non-AO group (p<0.05), and the local recurrence rate in the AO group was significantly lower than that in the non-AO group (p<0.05) (Table I). Although the Kaplan–Meier OS curves for the two groups did not significantly differ, the LRS curves showed a significant difference (p<0.05) (Figure 1). Outcomes among patients in the AO group were: 8 alive without disease (42.1%), 3 alive with disease (15.8%), and 8 dead (42.1%). Outcome in the non-AO group were: 22 alive without disease (66.7%), 4 alive with disease (12.1%), and 7 dead (21.2%). There were no significant differences in outcomes between the two groups (Table I). No patients died of complications during the perioperative period. Only among patients with high grade sarcoma, the AJCC stage in the AO group was significantly worse than that in the non-AO group (p<0.05), and the local recurrence rate in the AO group was significantly lower than that in the non-AO group (p<0.05) (Table II). There were no significant differences in the Kaplan–Meier LRS and OS curves between the two groups (Figure 2).
Comparison of patient characteristics between those in the acridine orange (AO) and non-acridine orange (non-AO) groups.
In the univariate analysis which investigated factors associated with local recurrence, older age, high grade malignancy, and no treatment with AO were identified as risk factors for local recurrence. Upon multivariate analysis, high grade malignancy and no treatment with AO were identified as risk factors for local recurrence (p<0.05 and p<0.01) (Table III). In the univariate logistic regression analysis, which investigated factors associated with prognosis, only high-grade malignancy affected prognosis (p<0.05).
Discussion
In the current study, it was demonstrated that AO administration significantly decreased the local recurrence rate among all STS cases and among only those with high-grade STS when compared with patients with marginal resection who did not receive AO. Additionally, it was shown that the use of AO reduces the risk of local recurrence. Matsubara et al. have reported that there was no significant difference in the local recurrence rate between STS cases that received AO and extensive resection STS cases that did not receive AO; LRS was 71% among cases that received AO and those with extensive resection who did not receive AO (8). Nakamura et al. have reported that long-term AO therapy resulted in 78.9% and 73.3% 5- and 10-year LRS, respectively (9). In our study, the LRS for all STS patients and for those with high-grade STS only were 73.7% and 66.7%, respectively. Although somewhat low, the LRS detected in this study was similar to that from past reports. Additionally, a histologic high-grade was a risk factor for local recurrence. Patients in the AO group showed a high tendency for malignancy and frequently had grade III malignancy; this relationship existed even among those with high-grade STS only. Despite the fact that the histological grade was worse in the AO group than in the non-AO group, the effectiveness of AO on local recurrence was demonstrated. Conversely, in the case of partial marginal resection without AO or adjuvant therapy, LRS for all STS patients and those with only high-grade STS was 39.4% and 31.8%, respectively, and high local recurrence rates were shown. Based on our findings, we should be considered AO therapy for STS patients with expected marginal resection before surgery, and adjuvant therapy such as radiotherapy should be strongly recommended for cases in which marginal resection is suspected histopathologically after surgery.
Characteristics of the patients with high grade sarcoma between the acridine orange (AO) and non-acridine orange (non-AO) groups.
Although there was no significant difference in OS, a slightly lower trend was seen in the AO group. Matsubara et al. have reported that there was no significant difference in OS between STS cases that received AO and extensive resection STS cases who did not receive AO; the OS in cases that received AO and extensive resection cases were 68% and 63%, respectively (8). However, based on our findings, the OS in the AO group was a little lower. Factors, such as older age, larger tumor size, high histological grade, and non-surgical treatment, have been identified as significant independent adverse prognostic factors (18-26). In the current study, high-grade sarcoma tended to be higher in the AO group, and grade III was more common in the AO group. This may have lowered the prognosis in the AO group. Additionally, there have been some reports in which local recurrence was not associated with prognosis, in fact, the influence on prognosis may be weak (18-22). The 5-year OS rates in a large series of patients with high-grade STS ranged from 66% to 76%, and the OS of our marginal resection patients without AO was not significantly inferior (23-26). The frequency of high-histological malignancy, distant metastasis after tumor resection, and death was relatively high despite the small number cases that received AO. This relationship needs to be further explored by including larger numbers of cases in the future.
Kaplan–Meier local recurrence-free survival curves (a) and overall survival curves (b) based on the use of acridine orange (AO) in all patients. A significant difference was shown between the two groups in local recurrence-free survival (p=0.040) (a). AO: Acridine orange.
Kaplan-Meier local recurrence-free survival curves (a) and overall survival curves (b) based on the use of acridine orange (AO) in patients with high grade sarcoma. No significant difference was shown between the two groups. AO: Acridine orange.
Although adjuvant radiotherapy has also been reported to assist in improving prognosis, some studies have reported that the effects of radiotherapy were not superior to those of extensive resection (25, 27-29). Additionally, the frequency of complications is high, and it is easy for complications to arise as a result of surgical wounds due to radiotherapy before surgery and fibrosis due to radiotherapy after surgery, thus causing dysfunction (30, 31). Although radiation is also applied to RDT, the dose of 5 Gy is small, and there have been no reports of complications to date. Nakamura et al. have shown the possibility of RDT efficacy in patients with intralesional resection; additionally, they have shown that RDT may be necessary to prevent local recurrence in addition to PDT (9).
AO is recommended not only for its effects on the surgical site but also for its effects following intravenous administration. It has been reported that lung metastasis was suppressed by intravenous administration of AO to an osteosarcoma mouse model (32). Additionally, a clinical trial of radiotherapy after intravenous injection of AO in patients with advanced cancer is ongoing (10); results for this will released in the future.
Univariate and multivariate analysis of the factors affecting local recurrence and prognosis.
One of the main limitations in this study was the small number of patients. Several factors may have led to biases, such as histological malignancy, size, and location; a larger number of patients are needed to sufficiently analyze these factors. If we judge that we have a marginal resection, we often conduct adjuvant therapies such as radiotherapy. Therefore, only patients with STS of low-grade malignancy or those who refuse radiotherapy would be included to the control group. Second, the extent of marginal resection may affect prognoses, however we could not accurately evaluate this in this study. Patients in the AO group were expected to require marginal resection before surgery, and the area of marginal resection may be wider than that in the non-AO group. There is a need to perform further detailed studies which will evaluate the extent of the marginal resection area.
The present study showed the strong inhibitory effect of AO therapy on local recurrence after marginal resection of STS. AO therapy should be considered for STS patients expected to require marginal resection before surgery. Although there was no improvement in prognosis, we need to perform further detailed studies including a larger number of patients to confirm these findings.
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Japan orthopedics and traumatology foundation, Inc. under Grant (number: 390).
Footnotes
Authors' Contributions
All Authors were involved in the planning and revising for this research. Tsuchie H, Nagasawa H, Emori M, Murahasi Y, Mizushima E, and Shimizu J collected the clinical data. Tsuchie H analyzed the raw data. Tsuchie H wrote this study. Miyakoshi N, Okada K, Yamashita Y, and Shimada Y reviewed this manuscript.
Conflicts of Interest
Hiroyuki Tsuchie received funding from a research grant foundation that may be affected by the research reported in this paper.
- Received September 4, 2019.
- Revision received September 19, 2019.
- Accepted September 23, 2019.
- Copyright© 2019, International Institute of Anticancer Research (Dr. George J. Delinasios), All rights reserved