Abstract

Giant-cell tumor of bone (GCTB) is a locally aggressive, benign osteolytic tumor in which bone destruction is mediated by RANK ligand (RANKL). The RANKL inhibitor denosumab is being investigated for treatment of GCTB. We describe histologic analyses of GCTB tumor samples from a phase II study of denosumab in GCTB. Adult patients with recurrent or unresectable GCTB received subcutaneous denosumab 120 mg every 4 weeks (with additional doses on days 8 and 15). The primary histologic efficacy endpoint was the proportion of patients who had a 90% or more elimination of giant cells from their tumor. Baseline and on-study specimens were also evaluated for overall tumor morphology and expression of RANK and RANKL. Baseline tumor samples were typically composed of densely cellular proliferative RANKL-positive tumor stromal cells, RANK-positive rounded mononuclear cells, abundant RANK-positive tumor giant cells, and areas of scant de novo osteoid matrix and woven bone. In on-study samples from 20 of 20 patients (100%), a decrease of 90% or more in tumor giant cells and a reduction in tumor stromal cells were observed. In these analyses, thirteen patients (65%) had an increased proportion of dense fibro-osseous tissue and/or new woven bone, replacing areas of proliferative RANKL-positive stromal cells. Denosumab treatment of patients with GCTB significantly reduced or eliminated RANK-positive tumor giant cells. Denosumab also reduced the relative content of proliferative, densely cellular tumor stromal cells, replacing them with nonproliferative, differentiated, densely woven new bone. Denosumab continues to be studied as a potential treatment for GCTB.

Highlights

  • Giant-cell tumor of bone (GCTB) is a benign, locally aggressive, osteolytic tumor that causes significant bone destruction and has a predilection for the epiphyseal/ metaphyseal region of long bones and spine [1]

  • Denosumab continues to be studied as a potential treatment for GCTB

  • GCTB is composed of sheets of neoplastic ovoid mononuclear cells with high RANK ligand (RANKL) expression, RANK-positive mononuclear cells of myeloid linage, and a randomly distributed population of large RANKexpressing osteoclast-like giant cells [2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13]

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Summary

Introduction

Giant-cell tumor of bone (GCTB) is a benign, locally aggressive, osteolytic tumor that causes significant bone destruction and has a predilection for the epiphyseal/ metaphyseal region of long bones and spine [1]. Nature [4, 6, 10] and that the true neoplastic cells are ovoid cells displaying markers of mesenchymal stem cells that have partially differentiated along the osteoblast lineage [14,15,16,17] These tumors are frequently described to contain small areas of osteoid matrix deposition, woven bone, and occasionally new bone, which may be reactive tissue at the tumor margin or formed de novo within the tumor [9, 18, 19]. The hallmarks of this tumor are its aggressively lytic behavior and the clear role that osteoclast-like tumor giant cells play in the lytic process. It was hypothesized that denosumab would inhibit the osteoclastlike giant cells in a similar manner

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