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"TGCT"
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Testicular Germ Cell Tumors Acquire Cisplatin Resistance by Rebalancing the Usage of DNA Repair Pathways
2021
Despite germ cell tumors (GCTs) responding to cisplatin-based chemotherapy at a high rate, a subset of patients does not respond to treatment and have significantly worse prognosis. The biological mechanisms underlying the resistance remain unknown. In this study, by using two TGCT cell lines that have acquired cisplatin resistance after chronic exposure to the drug, we identified some key proteins and mechanisms of acquired resistance. We show that cisplatin-resistant cell lines had a non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ)-less phenotype. This correlated with a reduced basal expression of TP53-binding protein 1 (53BP1) and DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PKcs) proteins and reduced formation of 53BP1 foci after cisplatin treatment. Consistent with these observations, modulation of 53BP1 protein expression altered the cell line’s resistance to cisplatin, and inhibition of DNA-PKcs activity antagonized cisplatin cytotoxicity. Dampening of NHEJ was accompanied by a functional increase in the repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) by the homologous recombination repair pathway. As a result, cisplatin-resistant cells were more resistant to PARP inhibitor (PARPi) monotherapy. Moreover, when PARPi was given in combination with cisplatin, it exerted an additive/synergistic effect, and reduced the cisplatin dose for cytotoxicity. These results suggest that treatment of cisplatin-refractory patients may benefit from low-dose cisplatin therapy combined with PARPi.
Journal Article
Metabolic profile and skeletal muscle as predictors of survival in testicular germ cell tumors
by
García-Pacheco, José Antonio
,
Santibáñez-Andrade, Miguel
,
Barrón-Hernández, Alejandra
in
Adult
,
Genitourinary Cancer
,
Humans
2026
Abstract
Background
Testicular germ cell tumors (TGCT) are highly curable malignancies, yet the prognostic impact of host metabolic status remains underexplored, especially in non-Caucasian populations.
Methods
We analyzed 2755 Mexican patients with TGCT treated at the Instituto Nacional de Cancerología (2007-2021). A Metabolic sub-cohort (n = 586) and an Imaging sub-cohort (n = 231) with baseline CT-derived lean mass index (LMI) were evaluated. Statistical analyses included multivariate Cox regression adjusted for IGCCCG risk, principal component analysis (PCA)-based clustering, and internal validation using bootstrapping.
Results
Multivariate Cox regression adjusted for IGCCCG risk identified LMI (HR 0.95, 95% CI 0.90-0.99, P = .047), serum albumin (HR 0.27, 95% CI 0.18-0.42, P < .001), and HDL cholesterol (HR 0.94, 95% CI 0.91-0.96, P < .001) as independently associated factors. PCA-based metabolic-nutritional risk profiles effectively stratified 5-year survival in patients with non-seminoma (from 16.1% in depleted profiles to 97.4% in preserved profiles) and seminoma (64.0% vs 100%). A reduced prognostic model (BMI, LMI, albumin) achieved a robust optimism-corrected AUC of 0.866.
Conclusions
Metabolic and body composition profiling provides prognostic discrimination complementary to the IGCCCG classification, suggesting the potential utility of incorporating objective nutritional assessments. Early identification of patients with metabolic vulnerability—specifically hypoalbuminemia, skeletal muscle depletion, and altered lipid profiles—could help guide personalized supportive strategies prioritizing nutritional and medical optimization to improve outcomes in TGCT.
Graphical abstract
Graphical Abstract
For image description, please refer to the figure legend and surrounding text.
Journal Article
Pexidartinib: first approved systemic therapy for patients with tenosynovial giant cell tumor
2020
Pexidartinib is an orally administered small molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitor. Phase III ENLIVEN study results provided clinical evidence for US FDA approval for treatment of adult patients with symptomatic tenosynovial giant cell tumor associated with severe morbidity or functional limitations and not amenable to improvement with surgery. Recommended dosage is 400 mg orally twice daily on an empty stomach. Long-term follow-up in pooled analyses showed increased response rates compared with those observed in ENLIVEN. Patients on pexidartinib also experience meaningful improvements in range of motion. Side effects associated with pexidartinib are generally manageable; however, there is a risk of potentially life-threatening mixed or cholestatic hepatotoxicity and pexidartinib has a Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy (REMS) program to ensure appropriate monitoring.
Journal Article
Tenosynovial Giant Cell Tumor Observational Platform Project (TOPP) Registry: A 2-Year Analysis of Patient-Reported Outcomes and Treatment Strategies
by
Martin-Broto, Javier
,
Ye, Xin
,
Gouin, Francois
in
Adult
,
Care and treatment
,
Clinical outcomes
2023
Background
The Tenosynovial giant cell tumor Observational Platform Project (TOPP) registry is an international prospective study that previously described the impact of diffuse-type tenosynovial giant cell tumour (D-TGCT) on patient-reported outcomes (PROs) from a baseline snapshot. This analysis describes the impact of D-TGCT at 2-year follow-up based on treatment strategies.
Material and Methods
TOPP was conducted at 12 sites (EU: 10; US: 2). Captured PRO measurements assessed at baseline, 1-year, and 2-year follow-ups were Brief Pain Inventory (BPI), Pain Interference, BPI Pain Severity, Worst Pain, EQ-5D-5L, Worst Stiffness, and Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System. Treatment interventions were no current/planned treatment (Off-Treatment) and systemic treatment/surgery (On-Treatment).
Results
A total of 176 patients (mean age: 43.5 years) were included in the full analysis set. For patients without active treatment strategy (Off-Treatment) at baseline (n = 79), BPI Pain Interference (1.00 vs. 2.86) and BPI Pain Severity scores (1.50 vs. 3.00) were numerically favorable in patients remaining Off-Treatment compared with those who switched to an active treatment strategy at year 1. From 1-year to 2-year follow-ups, patients who remained Off-Treatment had better BPI Pain Interference (0.57 vs. 2.57) and Worst Pain (2.0 vs. 4.5) scores compared with patients who switched to an alternative treatment strategy. In addition, EQ-5D VAS scores (80.0 vs. 65.0) were higher in patients who remained Off-Treatment between 1-year and 2-year follow-ups compared with patients who changed treatment strategy. For patients receiving systemic treatment at baseline, numerically favorable scores were seen in patients remaining on systemic therapy at 1-year follow-up: BPI Pain Interference (2.79 vs. 5.93), BPI Pain Severity (3.63 vs. 6.38), Worst Pain (4.5 vs. 7.5), and Worst Stiffness (4.0 vs. 7.5). From 1-year to 2-year follow-up, EQ-5D VAS scores (77.5 vs. 65.0) were higher in patients who changed from systemic treatment to a different treatment strategy.
Conclusion
These findings highlight the impact D-TGCT has on patient quality of life, and how treatment strategies may be influenced by these outcome measures. (ClinicalTrials.gov number: NCT02948088)
The TOPP registry is an international prospective study that previously described the impact of diffuse-type tenosynovial giant cell tumor on patient-reported outcomes from a baseline snapshot. This article reports a 2-year follow-up based on treatment strategies and could represent a benchmark for future clinical trials.
Journal Article
Management of Pigmented Villonodular Synovitis (PVNS): an Orthopedic Surgeon’s Perspective
by
Burke, Zachary D
,
Bernthal, Nicholas M
,
Ishmael, Chad R
in
Autocrine signalling
,
Colony-stimulating factor
,
Medical treatment
2020
Purpose of ReviewPigmented villonodular synovitis (PVNS) or tenosynovial giant cell tumor (TGCT) encompasses a wide spectrum of disease and is divided into localized and diffuse variants. Surgical resection remains the principal treatment for nearly all localized type disease and most diffuse type. Recent mechanistic understanding of the disease led to drug discovery that has opened new avenues for patients with recalcitrant disease. In this manuscript, we review the current treatment options for TGCT, presenting outcomes from traditional surgical approaches as well as those from nonsurgical approaches.Recent FindingsArthroscopic and/or open surgery remains the mainstay of treatment for TGCT for the vast majority of patients. While radiosynoviorthesis and external beam radiation have been used for recalcitrant disease, recent understanding of the colony stimulating factor 1 receptor (CSF1R) pathway and its paracrine and autocrine role in TGCT has led to the development of targeted inhibitors. Their optimal role and efficacy are unclear due to limited number of high-quality studies and contradictory results; however, recent and ongoing studies suggest there may be a role for their use, especially in diffuse and/or refractory disease.SummarySurgery remains the most common treatment for TGCT, however, there may be an increasing role for adjuvant therapies, including the new targeted agents. Weighing the side effects of these treatments against the symptomatic benefit on a patient-by-patient basis in this benign disease remains critical.
Journal Article
The diffuse-type tenosynovial giant cell tumor (dt-TGCT) patient journey: a prospective multicenter study
2021
Background
Tenosynovial giant cell tumor (TGCT) is a rare, locally aggressive neoplasm arising from the synovium of joints, bursae, and tendon sheaths affecting small and large joints. It represents a wide spectrum ranging from minimally symptomatic to massively debilitating. Most findings to date are mainly from small, retrospective case series, and thus the morbidity and actual impact of this rare disease remain to be elucidated. This study prospectively explores the management of TGCT in tertiary sarcoma centers.
Methods
The TGCT Observational Platform Project registry was a multinational, multicenter, prospective observational study involving 12 tertiary sarcoma centers in 7 European countries, and 2 US sites. This study enrolled for 2 years all consecutive ≥ 18 years old patients, with histologically diagnosed primary or recurrent cases of diffuse-type TGCT. Patient demographic and clinical characteristics were collected at baseline and every 6 months for 24 months. Quality of life questionnaires (PROMIS-PF and EQ-5D) were also administered at the same time-points. Here we report baseline patient characteristics.
Results
166 patients were enrolled between November 2016 and March 2019. Baseline characteristics were: mean age 44 years (mean age at disease onset: 39 years), 139/166 (83.7%) had prior treatment, 71/166 patients (42.8%) had ≥ 1 recurrence after treatment of their primary tumor, 76/136 (55.9%) visited a medical specialist ≥ 5 times, 66/116 (56.9%) missed work in the 24 months prior to baseline, and 17/166 (11.6%) changed employment status or retired prematurely due to disease burden. Prior treatment consisted of surgery (i.e., arthroscopic, open synovectomy) (128/166; 77.1%) and systemic treatments (52/166; 31.3%) with imatinib (19/52; 36.5%) or pexidartinib (27/52; 51.9%). Treatment strategies at baseline visits consisted mainly of watchful waiting (81/166; 48.8%), surgery (41/166; 24.7%), or targeted systemic therapy (37/166; 22.3%). Patients indicated for treatment reported more impairment compared to patients indicated for watchful waiting: worst stiffness NRS 5.16/3.44, worst pain NRS 6.13/5.03, PROMIS-PF 39.48/43.85, and EQ-5D VAS 66.54/71.85.
Conclusion
This study confirms that diffuse-type TGCT can highly impact quality of life. A prospective observational registry in rare disease is feasible and can be a tool to collect curated-population reflective data in orphan diseases.
Name of registry
: Tenosynovial Giant Cell Tumors (TGCT) Observational Platform Project (TOPP).
Trial registration number
: NCT02948088.
Date of registration
: 10 October 2016.
URL of Trial registry record
:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02948088?term=NCT02948088&draw=2
.
Journal Article
Patient-reported Symptoms of Tenosynovial Giant Cell Tumors
2016
Tenosynovial giant cell tumor (TGCT), a rare locally aggressive neoplasm of the synovium of joints and tendon sheaths, is associated with joint destruction, inflammation, pain, and swelling, in part due to colony-stimulating factor 1 receptor–bearing macrophages recruited to the tumor by genetic elevation of colony-stimulating factor 1 activity. The most common treatment is surgery, although promising pharmacologic treatments are in development. Patient-reported outcome (PRO) instruments are critical end points in demonstrating the clinical relevance of standard oncologic outcome measures and the overall impact of novel pharmacologic therapies in nonmalignant neoplastic conditions such as TGCT. The content validity of PROs relevant to patients with TGCT has not been formally investigated, and instruments to evaluate such outcomes do not exist for this condition.
PRO instruments of potential relevance were evaluated by using a literature review and by clinical and PRO experts. Patients with TGCT were recruited through clinical sites and the Internet for participation in qualitative research interviews to identify predominant symptoms and to test the relevance and content validity of several PRO measures. Select PRO measures were included in a Phase I clinical trial, and preliminary results of the PRO end points are reported descriptively.
Of the 22 subjects who participated in qualitative interviews, 73% were female, and their mean age was 42.5 years (range, 27–56 years). The TGCTs (19 diffuse and 3 localized) were located in the knee (n = 15), hip (n = 3), ankle (n = 2), elbow (n = 1), and forearm (n = 1). The most common symptoms cited were pain (82%), swelling (86%), stiffness (73%), reduced range of motion (64%), and joint instability (64%), which were consistent with clinical expert input and with the content of instruments chosen by PRO experts. The worst pain numeric rating scale, Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System physical functioning items, and the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index, as well as a worst stiffness numeric rating scale developed for TGCT, were confirmed as meaningful measures of TGCT patient symptoms and were well understood in qualitative interviews. Results from the Phase I trial showed trends of improvement in both pain and stiffness over time.
This study is the first to gather information directly from patients with TGCT regarding their symptom experiences. Pain, stiffness, and physical functioning are important treatment outcomes in patients with TGCT. We have identified content-valid PRO measures of these concepts, which are included in an ongoing Phase III TGCT clinical trial with pexidartinib (PLX3397) (NCT02371369).
Journal Article
METTL3 May Regulate Testicular Germ Cell Tumors Through EMT and Immune Pathways
2020
Testicular germ cell tumors (TGCTs) are highly prevalent in young men aged 20–40 years and are one of the most common lethal solid tumors in men of this age. Due to the current unclear mechanism of tumor development, there is a lack of effective treatment, and therefore in-depth research of the molecular mechanism of the occurrence and development of TGCT and the search for suitable and effective therapeutic targets and molecular markers are of great significance for achieving effective treatment. METTL3 is a very important methylase, which has been implicated in the progression of many cancers, but the role of METTL3 in TGCT has not been fully elucidated. In this article, we found that METTL3 expression was significantly downregulated in TGCT tissues, and patients with low expression levels had lower overall survival and relapse-free survival rates. After overexpressing METTL3, cell proliferation, invasion, and migration ability significantly increased, while influencing the expression of epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT)-related proteins. In addition, we observed that the expression level of METTL3 positively correlated with molecular markers and infiltration level of CD8+ and CD4+ T cells and natural killer cells. In sum, our findings identified that METTL3 can be used as an independent prognostic marker in patients with TGCT. METTL3 participates in the proliferation, migration, and invasion of TGCT cells by regulating the expression of EMT-related genes and may also play a role in activating the tumor immune response in TGCT.
Journal Article
MRI of diffuse-type tenosynovial giant cell tumour in the knee: a guide for diagnosis and treatment response assessment
by
Suevos Ballesteros, Carlos
,
Stoel, Berend C
,
van de Sande, Michiel A. J
in
Artificial intelligence
,
Image segmentation
,
Knee
2023
Tenosynovial giant cell tumour (TGCT) is a rare soft-tissue tumour originating from synovial lining of joints, bursae and tendon sheaths. The tumour comprises two subtypes: the localised-type (L-TGCT) is characterised by a single, well-defined lesion, whereas the diffuse-type (D-TGCT) consists of multiple lesions without clear margins. D-TGCT was previously known as pigmented villonodular synovitis. Although benign, TGCT can behave locally aggressive, especially the diffuse-type. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the modality of choice to diagnose TGCT and discriminate between subtypes. MRI can also provide a preoperative map before synovectomy, the mainstay of treatment. Finally, since the arrival of colony-stimulating factor 1-receptor inhibitors, a novel systemic therapy for D-TGCT patients with relapsed or inoperable disease, MRI is key in assessing treatment response. As recurrence after treatment of D-TGCT occurs more often than in L-TGCT, follow-up imaging plays an important role in D-TGCT. Reading follow-up MRIs of these diffuse synovial tumours may be a daunting task. Therefore, this educational review focuses on MRI findings in D-TGCT of the knee, which represents the most involved joint site (approximately 70% of patients). We aim to provide a systematic approach to assess the knee synovial recesses, highlight D-TGCT imaging findings, and combine these into a structured report. In addition, differential diagnoses mimicking D-TGCT, potential pitfalls and evaluation of tumour response following systemic therapies are discussed. Finally, we propose automated volumetric quantification of D-TGCT as the next step in quantitative treatment response assessment as an alternative to current radiological assessment criteria.Key PointsTGCT is categorised according to its site of involvement and growth pattern.D-TGCT is characterised by irregular synovial proliferation infiltrating multiple synovial knee recesses.Systematic MRI approach is provided for preoperative and systemic treatment response assessment.An overview of synovial knee recesses guides the radiologist in assessing blind spots.Machine learning-based tumour segmentation may be applied to assess D-TGCT tumour volume in the near future, so that treatment response assessment can be quantified and improved by artificial intelligence.
Journal Article
Tenosynovial giant cell tumours of the foot and ankle: a retrospective single centre experience with surgical treatment of 34 cases
2025
Background
Tenosynovial giant cell tumour (TGCT) is one of the most prevalent soft tissue tumours of the foot and ankle. Although typically benign, it can exhibit locally aggressive behaviour. This study aims to evaluate the distribution, surgical management, and recurrence rates of localized (L-TGCT) and diffuse (D-TGCT) forms of TGCT.
Methods
A retrospective study of 34 TGCT cases in the foot and ankle treated surgically between 2010 and 2023 was conducted. Inclusion criteria required a histologically confirmed diagnosis and a minimum potential follow-up period of 18 months. Patient demographics, radiological findings, surgical approach and recurrence rates were evaluated.
Results
Of 34 cases, 61.8% were L-TGCT and 38.2% were D-TGCT. L-TGCT had a significantly shorter duration of symptoms (median: 6 months) than D-TGCT (36 months,
p
= 0.01) and affected significantly more females (76.2%;
p
= 0.013). Nineteen cases were intraarticular, and 15 cases extraarticular manifestationsMacroscopically complete resection was achieved in 95.2% of L-TGCT cases and 69.2% of D-TGCT cases (
p
= 0.037). The recurrence rate with limited follow-up was 26.7% for L-TGCT and 50.0% for D-TGCT (
p
= 0.263). Time to recurrence was 7.0 months for L-TGCT and 12.0 months for D-TGCT (
p
= 0.287). In 40% of these cases, therapeutic intervention was performed.
Conclusion
In the foot and ankle, L-TGCT is more common in females, presents earlier after symptom onset, and has a higher rate of complete resection, whereas D-TGCT has a longer symptom duration and higher recurrence rates. It’s important for orthopaedic surgeons to weigh surgical margins against functional results, as stable outcomes appear to be attainable even in cases of residual or recurrent tumours.
Journal Article