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A prospective real‐world study of the diffuse‐type tenosynovial giant cell tumor patient journey: A 2‐year observational analysis
- Bernthal, Nicholas M;
- Healey, John H;
- Palmerini, Emanuela;
- Bauer, Sebastian;
- Schreuder, Hendrik;
- Leithner, Andreas;
- Martin‐Broto, Javier;
- Gouin, Francois;
- Lopez‐Bastida, Julio;
- Gelderblom, Hans;
- Staals, Eric L;
- Burke, Zachary D;
- Geiger, Erik J;
- Spierenburg, Geert;
- Laeis, Petra;
- Beyerlein, Elisabeth;
- Ye, Xin;
- van de Sande, Michiel
Abstract
Background and objectives
Diffuse-tenosynovial giant cell tumor (D-TGCT) is a rare, locally aggressive, typically benign neoplasm affecting mainly large joints, representing a wide clinical spectrum. We provide a picture of the treatment journey of D-TGCT patients as a 2-year observational follow-up.Methods
The TGCT Observational Platform Project registry was a multinational, multicenter, prospective observational study at tertiary sarcoma centers spanning seven European countries and two US sites. Histologically confirmed D-TGCT patients were categorized as either those who remained on initial treatment strategy (determined at baseline visit) or those who changed treatment strategy with specific changes documented (e.g., systemic treatment to surgery) at the 1-year and/or 2-year follow-up visits.Results
A total of 176 patients were assessed, mean diagnosis age was 38.4 (SD ± 14.6) years; most patients had a knee tumor (120/176, 68.2%). For the 2-year observation period, most patients (75.5%) remained on the baseline treatment strategy throughout, 54/79 patients (68.4%) remained no treatment, 30/45 patients (66.7%) remained systemic treatment, 39/39 patients (100%) remained surgery. Those who changed treatment strategy utilized multimodal treatment options.Conclusions
This is the first prospectively collected analysis to describe D-TGCT patient treatments over an extended follow-up and demonstrates the need for multidisciplinary teams to determine an optimal treatment strategy.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.