TY - GEN
T1 - Is there a role for immunotherapy in osteosarcoma?
AU - Loeb, David M.
PY - 2009/12/1
Y1 - 2009/12/1
N2 - With the introduction of effective systemic chemotherapy, the prognosis for patients with osteosarcoma has improved dramatically. Estimates of overall survival for osteosarcoma patients prior to 1975 ranged from 5 to 20%, even for patients with localized disease of the extremity treated with amputation. The majority of these patients eventually developed pulmonary metastases and succumbed to their disease. The introduction of effective chemotherapy has dramatically improved the outcome of patients with localized disease, but has not altered the survival of patients with metastatic disease. Moreover, there has been little, if any, improvement in the outcomes of patients with localized disease since the mid-1980s. This has led to the investigation of other treatment approaches, including immunotherapy. Coincident with the initial development of chemotherapy, there were early attempts at immunotherapy. These met with little success. Subsequent approaches to harnessing the immune system have yielded more encouraging results. This chapter will review these various approaches, highlighting the role that immunotherapy might play in the multi-modality treatment of localized and metastatic osteosarcoma.
AB - With the introduction of effective systemic chemotherapy, the prognosis for patients with osteosarcoma has improved dramatically. Estimates of overall survival for osteosarcoma patients prior to 1975 ranged from 5 to 20%, even for patients with localized disease of the extremity treated with amputation. The majority of these patients eventually developed pulmonary metastases and succumbed to their disease. The introduction of effective chemotherapy has dramatically improved the outcome of patients with localized disease, but has not altered the survival of patients with metastatic disease. Moreover, there has been little, if any, improvement in the outcomes of patients with localized disease since the mid-1980s. This has led to the investigation of other treatment approaches, including immunotherapy. Coincident with the initial development of chemotherapy, there were early attempts at immunotherapy. These met with little success. Subsequent approaches to harnessing the immune system have yielded more encouraging results. This chapter will review these various approaches, highlighting the role that immunotherapy might play in the multi-modality treatment of localized and metastatic osteosarcoma.
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U2 - 10.1007/978-1-4419-0284-9_25
DO - 10.1007/978-1-4419-0284-9_25
M3 - Conference contribution
C2 - 20213407
AN - SCOPUS:77953673602
SN - 9781441902832
T3 - Cancer Treatment and Research
SP - 447
EP - 457
BT - Pediatric and Adolescent Osteosarcoma
A2 - Jaffe, Norman
A2 - Bruland, Oyvind
A2 - Bielack, Stefan
ER -