<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" standalone="yes"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"><channel><title>Chondrosarcoma on Dual Brain Lab</title><link>https://csilab.net/en/tags/chondrosarcoma/</link><description>Recent content in Chondrosarcoma on Dual Brain Lab</description><generator>Hugo -- gohugo.io</generator><language>en</language><lastBuildDate>Tue, 21 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</lastBuildDate><atom:link href="https://csilab.net/en/tags/chondrosarcoma/index.xml" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><item><title>Bone Tumor Clinical Trial Timeline: A 40-Year Dual-Track Map</title><link>https://csilab.net/en/p/trials-bone-overview/</link><pubDate>Tue, 21 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://csilab.net/en/p/trials-bone-overview/</guid><description>&lt;h1 id="bone-tumor-clinical-trial-timeline-in-depth-report">Bone Tumor Clinical Trial Timeline: In-Depth Report
&lt;/h1>
 &lt;blockquote>
 &lt;p>Coverage: 35 landmark trials cited by NCCN Bone Cancer V2.2026 (34 published, all PMIDs traceable + 1 rEECur phase 3 primary manuscript pending) + 5 subtypes (osteosarcoma / Ewing sarcoma / chondrosarcoma / chordoma / GCTB)&lt;/p>
&lt;p>Curated by Dual Brain Lab (csilab.net)&lt;/p>
 &lt;/blockquote>
&lt;hr>
&lt;h2 id="1-one-sentence-definition">1. One-Sentence Definition
&lt;/h2>&lt;p>This report traces the evolution and current decision landscape of &lt;strong>systemic therapy for bone sarcomas (osteosarcoma + Ewing sarcoma + chondrosarcoma + chordoma + GCTB — five subtypes combined)&lt;/strong> over the past 40 years (1986-2026), focusing on landmark clinical trials cited in &lt;strong>NCCN Bone Cancer V2.2026&lt;/strong>, to provide frontline clinicians with a traceable panoramic map for 2026 decisions on &amp;ldquo;who, what, and why.&amp;rdquo;&lt;/p>
&lt;p>&lt;strong>Iron rule&lt;/strong>: every data point of every trial is traceable to PubMed (PMID) or ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT id) — every &lt;code>[PMID xxxxxxxx]&lt;/code> in the text can be opened directly in PubMed for verification.&lt;/p>
&lt;hr>
&lt;h2 id="2-vertical-timeline-of-four-treatment-paradigms">2. Vertical: Timeline of Four Treatment Paradigms
&lt;/h2>&lt;p>Bone tumor systemic therapy has evolved over 40 years along a logic completely different from NSCLC or BTC — &lt;strong>the mainstream major subtypes (osteosarcoma + Ewing sarcoma) have held a 40-year chemo backbone (MAP / VDC-IE) undefeated; the rare subtypes (chondrosarcoma + GCTB + chordoma) instead achieved precision-targeted breakthroughs first after 2010; and IO has failed across virtually all subtypes&lt;/strong>. These three forces together shape the &amp;ldquo;dual-track reality&amp;rdquo; of the 2026 bone tumor decision landscape: mainstream stagnation + rare-subtype precision breakthroughs + IO failure.&lt;/p>
&lt;p>The scale of each paradigm shift is far smaller than the five leaps seen in NSCLC — the reason lies in the unique biology of bone tumors: &lt;strong>low TMB (tumor mutational burden) + cold tumor immune-desert + osteosarcoma / Ewing lacking a unified driver gene + rare subtypes conversely having clear druggable drivers (IDH1 / RANKL / PDGFR)&lt;/strong>.&lt;/p>
&lt;h3 id="21-osteosarcoma-map-40-year-backbone-era-1986-2026-from-foundation-to-all-intensification-failures--marginal-tki-gains-in-relapse">2.1 Osteosarcoma MAP 40-Year Backbone Era (1986-2026): From Foundation to All Intensification Failures + Marginal TKI Gains in Relapse
&lt;/h3>&lt;p>&lt;strong>Story&lt;/strong>: MIOS 1986 moved adjuvant chemotherapy from &amp;ldquo;optional&amp;rdquo; to &amp;ldquo;mandatory,&amp;rdquo; pushing 2-year RFS (relapse-free survival) from 17% to 66%. Over the following 40 years all intensification strategies — adding ifosfamide, adding interferon, adding MTP-PE, switching to neoadjuvant sequencing, switching to targeted agents — &lt;strong>failed to further improve OS&lt;/strong>. Relapsed osteosarcoma entered the multi-TKI (tyrosine kinase inhibitor) era, where sorafenib / regorafenib / cabozantinib / pazopanib — all VEGFR-axis drugs — delivered &amp;ldquo;4-6 month PFS marginal wins&amp;rdquo; without anyone changing OS.&lt;/p>
&lt;ul>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>MIOS&lt;/strong> [PMID 3520317] (Link 1986 NEJM, N=113): non-metastatic high-grade extremity osteosarcoma, postoperative adjuvant multi-drug chemotherapy (high-dose methotrexate + doxorubicin + BCD + cisplatin) vs surgery alone with observation. &lt;strong>2-year RFS 66% vs 17%, OS similarly significantly improved&lt;/strong>. Established the foundation that &amp;ldquo;osteosarcoma adjuvant chemo is mandatory&amp;rdquo;; all subsequent trials used this as baseline, and the 60-70% EFS (event-free survival) ceiling has been fixed here ever since.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>POG-8651&lt;/strong> [PMID 12697883] (Goorin 2003 JCO, N=106): neoadjuvant chemotherapy + surgery + adjuvant chemotherapy vs upfront surgery + adjuvant chemotherapy. &lt;strong>5-year EFS 61% vs 69%, OS no difference&lt;/strong>. A rarely cited &amp;ldquo;inconvenient truth&amp;rdquo; — &lt;strong>the &amp;ldquo;neoadjuvant is standard&amp;rdquo; narrative has no RCT support on survival data&lt;/strong>; it became standard because neoadjuvant enables limb-sparing surgery + makes histologic response stratification a prognostic tool.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>COSS-86&lt;/strong> [PMID 9789613] (Fuchs 1998 Ann Oncol, N=171): high-risk osteosarcoma MAP backbone plus ifosfamide. &lt;strong>vs historical control COSS-82, 10-year EFS/OS no significant improvement&lt;/strong>. Europe&amp;rsquo;s earliest intensification-failure signal, foreshadowing EURAMOS-1.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>INT-0133&lt;/strong> [PMID 18235123] (Meyers 2008 JCO, N=662): MAP ± ifosfamide ± MTP-PE (mifamurtide, muramyl tripeptide phosphatidylethanolamine), 2×2 factorial design. &lt;strong>MTP-PE arm 6-year OS 78% vs 70% (p=0.03)&lt;/strong>; ifosfamide addition failed (EFS p=0.39). The &lt;strong>only &amp;ldquo;possible&amp;rdquo; frontline OS-positive signal&lt;/strong> in 40 years, but factorial interaction left interpretation contested: FDA refused approval of mifamurtide, EMA approved. Ifosfamide failed for the first time here.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>EURAMOS-1 Good Responders&lt;/strong> [PMID 26033801] (Bielack 2015 JCO, N=716): patients with good histologic response after neoadjuvant MAP (&amp;lt;10% viable tumor cells), adjuvant MAP + pegylated interferon alfa-2b maintenance vs MAP alone. &lt;strong>3-year EFS 77% vs 74%, HR 0.83 (p=0.21) negative&lt;/strong>. IFN toxicity caused about 40% of patients not to complete planned treatment.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>EURAMOS-1 Poor Responders&lt;/strong> [PMID 27569442] (Marina 2016 Lancet Oncol, N=618): patients with poor histologic response after neoadjuvant MAP (≥10% viable tumor cells), postoperative MAPIE (MAP + ifosfamide + etoposide) vs continued MAP. &lt;strong>EFS HR 0.98 (95% CI 0.78-1.23, p=0.86) completely negative&lt;/strong>. Risk of secondary AML (acute myeloid leukemia) rose notably. &lt;strong>The largest frontline RCT in osteosarcoma history (two-arm total N=1334), both arms negative&lt;/strong> — the 2000s strategy of &amp;ldquo;intensify for poor responders&amp;rdquo; was definitively shut down here.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>SORAFENIB-ISG&lt;/strong> [PMID 21527590] (Grignani 2012 Ann Oncol, N=35): sorafenib monotherapy in relapsed / unresectable osteosarcoma. &lt;strong>4-month PFS 46%, mPFS 4 months, mOS 7 months, ORR 8%&lt;/strong>. The first positive TKI signal in osteosarcoma, benefit short but reproducible; paved the way for subsequent VEGFR TKIs.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>SORAFENIB-EVEROLIMUS&lt;/strong> [PMID 25498219] (Grignani 2015 Lancet Oncol, N=38): sorafenib + everolimus (mTOR inhibitor) combination in relapsed osteosarcoma. &lt;strong>6-month PFS 45%, failed to meet prespecified 50% threshold&lt;/strong>; notable toxicity. Adding mTOR didn&amp;rsquo;t help — the osteosarcoma TKI story is mainly about the VEGFR angiogenesis axis.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>SARC024&lt;/strong> [PMID 31013172] (Davis 2019 JCO, N=42 randomised): regorafenib vs placebo (crossover allowed) in adult relapsed / metastatic osteosarcoma. &lt;strong>mPFS 3.6 vs 1.7 months (HR 0.42, p=0.017), 8-week progression-free rate ~65% vs 0%, no RECIST response&lt;/strong>. The first positive PFS signal in modern relapsed osteosarcoma.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>REGOBONE&lt;/strong> [PMID 30477937] (Duffaud 2019 Lancet Oncol, N=38): independent European validation of SARC024, also regorafenib vs placebo. &lt;strong>8-week progression-free rate 17/26 vs 0/12, mPFS 16.4 vs 4.1 weeks&lt;/strong>. Cross-continental replication is rare in sarcoma — SARC024 + REGOBONE together pinned regorafenib as a 2L option in relapsed osteosarcoma.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>CABONE&lt;/strong> [PMID 32078813] (Italiano 2020 Lancet Oncol, dual cohorts N=45 each): cabozantinib (60 mg/d) monotherapy in relapsed osteosarcoma + relapsed Ewing sarcoma. &lt;strong>Osteosarcoma 6-month PFR 33%, ORR 12%&lt;/strong>; &lt;strong>Ewing sarcoma 6-month PFR 26%, ORR 26% (one of the highest ORRs ever recorded in relapsed Ewing)&lt;/strong>. The only relapsed-osteosarcoma TKI producing real RECIST tumor shrinkage.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>PAZO-OSTEO&lt;/strong> [PMID 35075361] (Frankel 2022 J Oncol, N=12, slow accrual and early termination): pazopanib 800 mg/d in relapsed osteosarcoma with lung metastases. &lt;strong>PFS numbers in the same band as sorafenib / regorafenib / cabozantinib&lt;/strong>, confirming VEGFR TKI class effect.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>AOST1321&lt;/strong> [PMID 41159913] (Janeway 2026 Clin Cancer Res, N=40): denosumab (RANKL inhibitor) monotherapy in relapsed / refractory pediatric + AYA osteosarcoma, two cohorts. &lt;strong>Failed to meet prespecified efficacy threshold, both cohorts negative&lt;/strong>. The &amp;ldquo;hijacking osteoclast biology&amp;rdquo; hypothesis was refuted in osteosarcoma — sharp contrast with the near-universal response of GCTB to denosumab: &lt;strong>the same drug is landscape-changing in one bone tumor and inactive in another&lt;/strong>, a textbook example of bone tumor heterogeneity.&lt;/li>
&lt;/ul>
&lt;p>&lt;strong>Takeaway&lt;/strong>: in 2026, frontline osteosarcoma SoC (standard of care) = &lt;strong>the MIOS 1986 MAP chemotherapy framework continued&lt;/strong>. All intensification failed (EURAMOS-1 both arms / COSS-86 / MTP-PE contested). Relapsed osteosarcoma = &lt;strong>VEGFR TKI marginal PFS&lt;/strong> (regorafenib the archetype, double-validated by SARC024 + REGOBONE; cabozantinib produces real shrinkage). Denosumab has no antitumor activity in osteosarcoma itself — retained only for skeletal-related-event prevention.&lt;/p>
&lt;h3 id="22-ewing-sarcoma-interval-compression-marginal-wins--high-risk-transplant--first-ever-relapse-rct-reecur-2003-2024">2.2 Ewing Sarcoma: Interval Compression Marginal Wins + High-Risk Transplant + First-Ever Relapse RCT rEECur (2003-2024)
&lt;/h3>&lt;p>&lt;strong>Story&lt;/strong>: after INT-0091 established the Ewing sarcoma VDC-IE backbone (vincristine / doxorubicin / cyclophosphamide / ifosfamide / etoposide) in 2003, subsequent progress came not from new drugs but from &lt;strong>trial-design optimization&lt;/strong>: AEWS0031 compressed dosing interval from every 3 weeks to every 2 weeks (&amp;ldquo;timing matters more than new drugs&amp;rdquo;) to grab 8 percentage points of EFS; EURO-EWING-99-R2 added busulfan-melphalan (BuMel) + autologous HSCT in high-risk localized disease to grab 14 percentage points. rEECur 2024 used Bayesian adaptive design to give relapsed Ewing sarcoma its &lt;strong>first&lt;/strong> RCT-level answer.&lt;/p>
&lt;ul>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>INT-0091&lt;/strong> [PMID 12594313] (Grier 2003 NEJM, N=518): newly diagnosed localized or metastatic Ewing family tumors (&amp;lt;30 years), alternating VDC/IE vs VDC alone. &lt;strong>Localized 5-year EFS 69% vs 54% (p=0.005), 5-year OS 72% vs 61%&lt;/strong>; no benefit in metastatic subgroup. Established VDC-IE as the North American Ewing sarcoma standard and for the first time displayed the biological watershed between localized and metastatic disease.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>AEWS0031&lt;/strong> [PMID 23091096] (Womer 2012 JCO, N=587): newly diagnosed localized Ewing, VDC/IE every 2 weeks vs every 3 weeks (interval compression with G-CSF support). &lt;strong>5-year EFS 73% vs 65% (p=0.048), no additional toxicity&lt;/strong>. &amp;ldquo;Same chemo, more frequent&amp;rdquo; = 8 percentage points of EFS. Dose-dense VDC/IE q2w became the North American SoC. This is the &lt;strong>only clear frontline improvement&lt;/strong> in Ewing sarcoma — not a new drug, but a trial-design win.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>EURO-EWING-99-R1&lt;/strong> [PMID 24982464] (Le Deley 2014 JCO, N=856): standard-risk localized Ewing, VAC (vincristine+actinomycin+cyclophosphamide) vs VAI (vincristine+actinomycin+ifosfamide) consolidation after VIDE induction. &lt;strong>3-year EFS 75.4% vs 78.2%, HR 1.12 (CI 0.89-1.41) non-inferiority achieved&lt;/strong>. Cyclophosphamide consolidation is non-inferior to ifosfamide with less renal toxicity — the de-escalation answer for standard-risk disease.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>EURO-EWING-99-R2&lt;/strong> [PMID 30188789] (Whelan 2018 JCO, N=240): high-risk localized Ewing (poor response after induction or large axial tumor), BuMel + autologous HSCT vs conventional VAI consolidation. &lt;strong>3-year EFS 67.1% vs 52.9%, HR 0.64 (CI 0.43-0.95, p=0.026); OS improved similarly&lt;/strong>. One of the few positive results in modern osteosarcoma / Ewing intensification trials — the trick was &amp;ldquo;use high intensity only in the high-risk subgroup.&amp;rdquo;&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>VIT-WAGNER&lt;/strong> [PMID 16317751] (Wagner 2007 Pediatr Blood Cancer, N=14 pediatric): irinotecan + temozolomide (no vincristine in original version) in progressive pediatric Ewing family tumors. &lt;strong>ORR 63%, median response duration 8.3 months&lt;/strong>. Subsequently MSK / CHOP / Warsaw / Virginia groups added vincristine to evolve into the VIT three-drug regimen — the historical seed of the entire VIT narrative.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>VIT-RACIBORSKA&lt;/strong> [PMID 23776128] (Raciborska 2013 Pediatr Blood Cancer, N=22, Poland): VIT (vincristine + irinotecan + temozolomide) three-drug regimen in relapsed / refractory Ewing. &lt;strong>ORR ~68%, mOS ~20 months&lt;/strong>. VIT consistently produced ~60-70% ORR across multiple countries and cohorts yet never entered an RCT — a textbook case of an &amp;ldquo;evidence-weak regimen becoming practical standard by pragmatic convergence.&amp;rdquo;&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>rEECur [NCT03416517]&lt;/strong> (McCabe 2024 Lancet Oncol manuscript pending): the &lt;strong>first&lt;/strong> Bayesian adaptive multi-arm multi-stage RCT in relapsed Ewing (N=451 cumulative). Four arms vs historical topotecan+cyclophosphamide (TC) reference: gemcitabine+docetaxel (GD) eliminated at 2020 interim; irinotecan+temozolomide (IT) eliminated at 2022 interim; &lt;strong>high-dose ifosfamide won in the phase 3 stage and became the new reference standard for relapsed Ewing&lt;/strong>. PMID not yet indexed in PubMed at the time of this report (2026-04-21); cited by NCT ID + conference readout.&lt;/li>
&lt;/ul>
&lt;p>&lt;strong>Takeaway&lt;/strong>: in 2026 Ewing sarcoma &lt;strong>frontline = North American AEWS0031 dose-dense VDC/IE q2w + high-risk localized disease goes to EURO-EWING-99-R2 BuMel HSCT&lt;/strong>; &lt;strong>relapsed 2L = rEECur winner high-dose ifosfamide&lt;/strong> (replacing the pragmatic-standard VIT of many years), VIT retained in NCCN guidelines but demoted; cabozantinib (CABONE Ewing arm ORR 26%) has genuine tumor-shrinking activity as an off-label monotherapy.&lt;/p>
&lt;h3 id="23-rare-subtype-precision-therapy-idh1--rankl--pdgfr--first-three-driver-lines-reaching-targeted-therapy-2010-2025">2.3 Rare-Subtype Precision Therapy: IDH1 / RANKL / PDGFR — First Three Driver Lines Reaching Targeted Therapy (2010-2025)
&lt;/h3>&lt;p>&lt;strong>Story&lt;/strong>: osteosarcoma + Ewing sarcoma have no clear druggable driver genes; but the rare subtypes each have an independent driver — &lt;strong>chondrosarcoma IDH1/2 mutation ~50% central type&lt;/strong>, &lt;strong>GCTB RANKL signaling axis&lt;/strong>, &lt;strong>chordoma brachyury + PDGFR pathway&lt;/strong>. &amp;ldquo;Where there&amp;rsquo;s a driver, there&amp;rsquo;s a way&amp;rdquo; also holds true in bone tumors — the stage just moves to the rare subtypes.&lt;/p>
&lt;p>&lt;strong>Naming pitfall warning&lt;/strong>: &lt;strong>ivosidenib&lt;/strong> (Tibsovo / AG-120, Agios/Servier) = selective IDH1 inhibitor for chondrosarcoma + AML + BTC; &lt;strong>vorasidenib&lt;/strong> (Voranigo / AG-881, Agios/Servier) = dual IDH1/2 inhibitor for glioma. These are most easily confused in 2024-2025 literature — &lt;strong>chondrosarcoma uses ivosidenib, not vorasidenib&lt;/strong>.&lt;/p>
&lt;h4 id="chondrosarcoma-idh1--brcaness-synthetic-lethality-path">Chondrosarcoma IDH1 + BRCAness (synthetic lethality) Path
&lt;/h4>&lt;ul>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>IVOSIDENIB-CHONDRO-P1&lt;/strong> [PMID 32208957] (Tap 2020 JCO, N=21 single-arm phase 1): advanced IDH1 R132-mutant conventional chondrosarcoma, ivosidenib 500 mg QD. &lt;strong>RECIST ORR 0/21, DCR (disease control rate) 52%, mPFS 5.6 months, 39% of patients with PFS &amp;gt; 6 months; plasma 2-HG (2-hydroxyglutarate, the IDH1-mutant metabolite) suppressed &amp;gt; 93%&lt;/strong>. No RECIST PR (partial response) but PFS + biomarker dual evidence shows &amp;ldquo;on-target effect.&amp;rdquo; &lt;strong>The first &amp;ldquo;precision therapy works&amp;rdquo; signal in bone tumors&lt;/strong>.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>IVOSIDENIB-CHONDRO-LT&lt;/strong> [PMID 40100120] (Tap 2025 Clin Cancer Res, N=21 long-term follow-up): same cohort with long-term follow-up. &lt;strong>Updated mPFS ~7.4 months; subgroup on treatment &amp;gt; 2 years; safety benign (manageable QTc prolongation, fatigue)&lt;/strong>. The mature readout anchored IDH1 inhibition as the &lt;strong>first real precision-therapy win in bone sarcoma&lt;/strong>, directly supporting NCCN listing of ivosidenib for IDH1+ chondrosarcoma.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>OLAPARIB-IDH-SARC&lt;/strong> [PMID 34994649] (Eder 2021 JCO Precis Oncol, N=15): olaparib (PARP inhibitor) monotherapy in IDH1/2-mutant advanced mesenchymal sarcomas (mostly chondrosarcoma). &lt;strong>CBR (clinical benefit rate) 11/15 (73%), no RECIST PR, mPFS ~8 months&lt;/strong>. Mechanistic basis: IDH mutation → 2-HG accumulation → inhibits α-KG-dependent DNA demethylation / HR repair → BRCAness (BRCA-deficient-like) phenotype → PARP-inhibitor sensitivity. The &amp;ldquo;second shot&amp;rdquo; of the IDH narrative — synthetic lethality rather than direct enzyme inhibition.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>SARC-PAZO-CHONDRO&lt;/strong> [PMID 31509242] (Chow 2020 Cancer, N=47 single-arm phase 2): pazopanib 800 mg QD in unresectable / metastatic chondrosarcoma. &lt;strong>16-week DCR 43%, ORR ~5%, mPFS 7.9 months, conventional-type mOS ~27 months&lt;/strong>. Dedifferentiated type has worse prognosis. Disease-stabilization signal for anti-angiogenic TKI in chondrosarcoma — a non-IDH option.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>REGOBONE-CHONDRO&lt;/strong> [PMID 33895682] (Duffaud 2021 Eur J Cancer, N=46 randomised placebo-controlled): regorafenib vs placebo in metastatic / locally advanced chondrosarcoma. &lt;strong>12-week non-progression rate 44% vs 24%, mPFS 19.8 vs 8.0 weeks, no RECIST PR&lt;/strong>. Running a placebo-controlled RCT in a rare subtype is difficult — another anti-angiogenic TKI disease-stabilization piece of evidence.&lt;/li>
&lt;/ul>
&lt;h4 id="gctb-giant-cell-tumor-of-bone-rankl-path">GCTB (Giant Cell Tumor of Bone) RANKL Path
&lt;/h4>&lt;ul>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>DENOSUMAB-GCTB-P2&lt;/strong> [PMID 20149736] (Thomas 2010 Lancet Oncol, N=37): denosumab 120 mg SC (days 1, 8, 15, 29 + Q4W) in relapsed / unresectable GCTB. &lt;strong>Histologic response rate 86% (30/35, defined as &amp;gt;90% giant-cell elimination or no radiographic progression), symptoms markedly relieved&lt;/strong>. &lt;strong>RANKL validated as central driver in GCTB&lt;/strong> — a concept-breakthrough phase 2.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>DENOSUMAB-GCTB-INTERIM&lt;/strong> [PMID 23867211] (Chawla 2013 Lancet Oncol, N=282): three-parallel-cohort (unresectable / high-morbidity surgery / phase 2 rollover) expansion. &lt;strong>Unresectable cohort 6-month progression-free 96%, high-morbidity-surgery cohort 48% avoided planned surgery or underwent downsized surgery, ONJ (osteonecrosis of the jaw) ~1%&lt;/strong>. FDA-approval basis dataset; established the &amp;ldquo;surgical de-escalation&amp;rdquo; role.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>DENOSUMAB-GCTB-LT&lt;/strong> [PMID 31704134] (Chawla 2019 Lancet Oncol, N=532 long-term follow-up): the largest GCTB denosumab dataset, followed up to ~5 years. &lt;strong>Unresectable cohort annual progression rate still &amp;lt; 5%; cumulative ONJ ~5%, atypical femur fracture rare&lt;/strong>. Mature readout locking denosumab as modern GCTB SoC + establishing the &amp;ldquo;use-and-pause&amp;rdquo; intermittent dosing paradigm. &lt;strong>GCTB evolved from &amp;ldquo;unresectable = fatal&amp;rdquo; to &amp;ldquo;medical therapy → limb-sparing surgery&amp;rdquo; — the clinical pathway was completely rewritten&lt;/strong>.&lt;/li>
&lt;/ul>
&lt;h4 id="chordoma-brachyury--pdgfr-path">Chordoma brachyury / PDGFR Path
&lt;/h4>&lt;ul>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>IMATINIB-CHORDOMA-P2&lt;/strong> [PMID 22331945] (Stacchiotti 2012 JCO, N=50): imatinib 800 mg QD in PDGFRB-positive advanced chordoma. &lt;strong>RECIST ORR 2%, DCR 64%, mPFS 9 months&lt;/strong>; Choi-criteria response rate higher than RECIST (density change). &lt;strong>PDGFRB-pathway inhibition = the first systemic therapy in the smallest bone-tumor histology&lt;/strong>; Choi provided an alternative yardstick for chordoma assessment.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>IMATINIB-EVEROL-CHORDOMA&lt;/strong> [PMID 30216418] (Stacchiotti 2018 Cancer, N=43): imatinib + everolimus combination after imatinib failure. &lt;strong>ORR 2/43 (5%), Choi response 20/43, mPFS 11.5 months&lt;/strong>. Combination yielded limited increment over monotherapy.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>GI6301-CHORDOMA&lt;/strong> [PMID 33594772] (DeMaria 2021 Oncologist, N=34 randomised): brachyury vaccine (GI-6301, inactivated yeast expressing brachyury) + standard radiotherapy vs placebo + radiotherapy in locally advanced unresectable chordoma. &lt;strong>6-month ORR 35% vs 18% (not significant, small sample)&lt;/strong>; brachyury-specific immune response detected in most vaccinated patients. &lt;strong>The only randomised brachyury-directed study in chordoma&lt;/strong> — not formally statistically significant but keeps the brachyury-targeting program alive.&lt;/li>
&lt;/ul>
&lt;p>&lt;strong>Takeaway&lt;/strong>: in 2026 rare-subtype bone tumors have entered the &lt;strong>&amp;ldquo;where there&amp;rsquo;s a driver, there&amp;rsquo;s a way&amp;rdquo; precision era&lt;/strong>: (a) chondrosarcoma IDH1+ → ivosidenib (NCCN-listed, based on two CHONDRO-P1 + LT readouts) + PARP as the BRCAness second shot (OLAPARIB-IDH-SARC); (b) GCTB → denosumab rewriting surgical pathway (Thomas 2010 → Chawla 2013 / 2019 three phase 2 mature datasets); (c) chordoma → imatinib as backbone (Stacchiotti 2012), with combinations + brachyury vaccine providing modest increments.&lt;/p>
&lt;h3 id="24-cross-subtype-immunotherapy-2014-2024-sarc028-all-failed--alliance-a091401-soft-tissue-door-left-ajar--chordoma-exception">2.4 Cross-Subtype Immunotherapy (2014-2024): SARC028 All-Failed + Alliance A091401 Soft-Tissue Door Left Ajar + Chordoma Exception
&lt;/h3>&lt;p>&lt;strong>Story&lt;/strong>: IO (immune checkpoint inhibitor) posts 40%+ ORR in MSI-H colorectal cancer, 33% in melanoma, and rewrote the 1L backbone in NSCLC. In bone tumors it has &lt;strong>failed almost completely&lt;/strong> — the reason is biology: low TMB + immune-desert + low PD-L1 expression. But SARC028 saw 20% response in dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma + Alliance A091401 combination-IO data + Migliorini chordoma exceptional case series left three narrow windows open for the &amp;ldquo;IO in bone&amp;rdquo; story.&lt;/p>
&lt;ul>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>SARC028&lt;/strong> [PMID 28988646] (Tawbi 2017 Lancet Oncol, bone subgroup n=40): pembrolizumab 200 mg Q3W monotherapy phase 2 in advanced osteosarcoma / Ewing / chondrosarcoma / dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma. &lt;strong>Osteosarcoma ORR 5% (1/22), Ewing 5% (1/13), chondrosarcoma 0% (0/5), dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma 20% (1/5)&lt;/strong>. The landmark trial for &amp;ldquo;IO across-the-board rout in bone tumors&amp;rdquo; — not a trial-design problem, but a biologically determined one. &lt;strong>The 20% in dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma is the only signal worth chasing&lt;/strong>.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>ALLIANCE-A091401&lt;/strong> [PMID 29370992] (D&amp;rsquo;Angelo 2018 Lancet Oncol, N=96 across bone + STS): nivolumab monotherapy vs nivolumab + ipilimumab combination, randomised non-comparative (no head-to-head p value). &lt;strong>ORR 5% vs 16%&lt;/strong>; responses concentrated in soft tissue sarcomas (UPS, leiomyosarcoma, myxofibrosarcoma, angiosarcoma), with osteosarcoma contributing little. Combination IO tripled monotherapy response in soft tissue — leaving a narrow IO-combination door open.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>ALLIANCE-A091401-EXPANSION&lt;/strong> [PMID 39343511] (Seligson 2024 J Immunother Cancer, expansion N=89): histology-enriched expansion cohorts (UPS, dedifferentiated liposarcoma, dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma). &lt;strong>Nivo monotherapy ORR ~10%, nivo+ipi ~21% in selected histologies; osteosarcoma cohort failed to meet prespecified activity threshold&lt;/strong>. &lt;strong>Dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma is the bone subtype most likely to respond to IO&lt;/strong> — still not at practice-changing magnitude.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>CHORDOMA-IO-MIGLIORINI&lt;/strong> [PMID 28919999] (Migliorini 2017 Oncoimmunology, N=3 compassionate case series): anti-PD-1 compassionate use in recurrent chordoma after prior surgery / RT / imatinib failure. &lt;strong>All 3/3 patients had clinical + radiographic response (SD to PR lasting several months); correlative analysis showed PD-L1 expression and immune infiltration in chordoma tissue&lt;/strong>. &lt;strong>The first report of chordoma response to IO&lt;/strong> — despite small N, hypothesis-generating value is high: &lt;strong>chordoma is the only potential exception to the IO-all-failed rule in bone&lt;/strong>, worth large-sample validation.&lt;/li>
&lt;/ul>
&lt;p>&lt;strong>Takeaway&lt;/strong>: in 2026 IO use in bone tumors is &lt;strong>restricted to the following three categories only&lt;/strong>: (a) dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma (SARC028 + Alliance expansion signal); (b) chordoma compassionate use (Migliorini + subsequent prospective pending); (c) tumor-agnostic MSI-H / dMMR / TMB-H subgroups (rare). &lt;strong>IO monotherapy not recommended for osteosarcoma + Ewing sarcoma + classic chondrosarcoma&lt;/strong> — off-label use offers extremely low clinical benefit plus unexpected toxicity plus insurance-denial risk.&lt;/p>
&lt;hr>
&lt;h2 id="3-horizontal-the-2026-decision-landscape-six-dimensions">3. Horizontal: The 2026 Decision Landscape (Six Dimensions)
&lt;/h2>&lt;p>Projecting the vertical evolution onto the specific 2026 clinical decision tree, below are six key branchpoints and the evidence for each.&lt;/p>
&lt;h3 id="31-newly-diagnosed-osteosarcoma--ewing-ngs-panel-mandatory--5-subtype-classification">3.1 Newly Diagnosed Osteosarcoma / Ewing: NGS Panel Mandatory + 5-Subtype Classification
&lt;/h3>&lt;p>&lt;strong>Subtype classification determines everything downstream&lt;/strong> in bone tumors. Every newly diagnosed bone tumor requires: (a) central pathology review to confirm histology (osteosarcoma / Ewing / chondrosarcoma / chordoma / GCTB); (b) molecular testing with a comprehensive NGS panel covering at minimum &lt;strong>IDH1/2 R132 hotspot&lt;/strong> (chondrosarcoma), &lt;strong>H3F3A G34W/V&lt;/strong> (GCTB adjunct), &lt;strong>EWSR1-FLI1 / EWSR1-ERG fusion&lt;/strong> (Ewing confirmation), &lt;strong>BRCA1/2 + SDH + PDGFR + MSI status&lt;/strong> (cross-subtype actionable targets). Missing IDH1 = missing the ivosidenib path; missing MSI-H = missing tumor-agnostic IO.&lt;/p>
&lt;h3 id="32-osteosarcoma-local--adjuvant-map-remains-soc--no-gain-from-intensification">3.2 Osteosarcoma Local + Adjuvant: MAP Remains SoC / No Gain from Intensification
&lt;/h3>&lt;p>&lt;strong>2026 mainstream&lt;/strong>: resectable non-metastatic high-grade osteosarcoma = &lt;strong>neoadjuvant MAP (high-dose methotrexate + doxorubicin + cisplatin) → limb-sparing surgery → adjuvant MAP&lt;/strong>, maintaining the framework established by MIOS 1986. POG-8651 [PMID 12697883] showed no survival difference, yet neoadjuvant remains SoC because of &lt;strong>surgical feasibility for limb-sparing + histologic-response stratification&lt;/strong> (not a survival advantage).&lt;/p>
&lt;p>&lt;strong>Key branchpoints&lt;/strong>:&lt;/p>
&lt;table>
 &lt;thead>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;th>Subgroup&lt;/th>
 &lt;th>Recommendation&lt;/th>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;/thead>
 &lt;tbody>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>Resectable non-metastatic, high-grade, pediatric / AYA&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Neoadjuvant MAP → surgery → adjuvant MAP (MIOS framework)&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>Poor histologic response (≥10% viable tumor cells)&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Maintain MAP, &lt;strong>do not&lt;/strong> add ifosfamide / etoposide (EURAMOS-1-PR [PMID 27569442] HR 0.98 negative + secondary AML risk)&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>Good histologic response (&amp;lt;10% viable tumor cells)&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Maintain MAP, &lt;strong>do not&lt;/strong> add pegylated interferon (EURAMOS-1-GR [PMID 26033801] HR 0.83 negative)&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>Adult osteosarcoma&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Use MAP framework (with adjustments — doxorubicin dose adjustment + methotrexate caution)&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>INT-0133 [PMID 18235123] MTP-PE&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Available in EMA regions only; FDA not approved; not a global SoC&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;/tbody>
&lt;/table>
&lt;p>&lt;strong>Not recommended&lt;/strong>: adding ifosfamide or mTOR or any &amp;ldquo;intensification&amp;rdquo; strategy on top of the MAP backbone; neoadjuvant SBRT / proton-boosted regimens have no phase 3 positive evidence in frontline osteosarcoma.&lt;/p>
&lt;h3 id="33-ewing-sarcoma-interval-compression-vs-high-dose-alkylator--reecur-new-standard">3.3 Ewing Sarcoma: Interval Compression vs High-Dose Alkylator + rEECur New Standard
&lt;/h3>&lt;p>&lt;strong>2026 mainstream&lt;/strong>:&lt;/p>
&lt;table>
 &lt;thead>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;th>Subgroup&lt;/th>
 &lt;th>Recommendation&lt;/th>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;/thead>
 &lt;tbody>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>Newly diagnosed localized Ewing (North American path)&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>&lt;strong>AEWS0031 [PMID 23091096] dose-dense VDC/IE q2w&lt;/strong> (5y EFS 73%)&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>Newly diagnosed localized Ewing (European path)&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>VIDE induction → risk-stratified consolidation: standard risk = &lt;strong>EURO-EWING-99-R1 [PMID 24982464] VAC or VAI&lt;/strong>; high risk (poor response / large axial) = &lt;strong>EURO-EWING-99-R2 [PMID 30188789] BuMel + autologous HSCT&lt;/strong> (3y EFS 67%)&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>Newly diagnosed metastatic Ewing&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>VDC-IE framework + multidisciplinary + consider BuMel consolidation; INT-0091 [PMID 12594313] metastatic subgroup no benefit suggests simply adding drugs is useless&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>First relapse / refractory (age 4-50)&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>&lt;strong>rEECur [NCT03416517] high-dose ifosfamide&lt;/strong> (new reference standard, superior to VIT and TC)&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>Relapse (high-dose ifos intolerant / renal impairment)&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>VIT (VIT-RACIBORSKA [PMID 23776128] + VIT-WAGNER [PMID 16317751] multi-cohort convergent evidence, ~60-70% ORR)&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>Relapse + TKI-naive&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>cabozantinib (CABONE [PMID 32078813] Ewing arm ORR 26%) off-label&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;/tbody>
&lt;/table>
&lt;p>&lt;strong>Key controversy&lt;/strong>: North American dose-dense and European VIDE + BuMel have no head-to-head RCT; in practice, choose by patient location / center experience.&lt;/p>
&lt;h3 id="34-rare-subtype-target-matching-idh1-chondrosarcoma--rankl-gctb--pdgfr-chordoma--three-paths">3.4 Rare-Subtype Target Matching: IDH1 Chondrosarcoma / RANKL GCTB / PDGFR Chordoma — Three Paths
&lt;/h3>&lt;p>&lt;strong>2026 mainstream&lt;/strong>:&lt;/p>
&lt;table>
 &lt;thead>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;th>Subtype&lt;/th>
 &lt;th>Biomarker / Driver&lt;/th>
 &lt;th>First-Line Therapy&lt;/th>
 &lt;th>Key Trial&lt;/th>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;/thead>
 &lt;tbody>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>&lt;strong>Conventional chondrosarcoma&lt;/strong>&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>IDH1 R132 mutation (~50% central type)&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>ivosidenib 500 mg QD&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>IVOSIDENIB-CHONDRO-P1 [PMID 32208957] + LT [PMID 40100120]&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>&lt;strong>Conventional chondrosarcoma&lt;/strong> IDH1+ and ivosidenib failure&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>IDH mutation-driven BRCAness&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>olaparib (PARP inhibitor)&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>OLAPARIB-IDH-SARC [PMID 34994649]&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>&lt;strong>Conventional / dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma&lt;/strong> IDH-negative or untested&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Angiogenesis axis&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>pazopanib or regorafenib&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>SARC-PAZO-CHONDRO [PMID 31509242] / REGOBONE-CHONDRO [PMID 33895682]&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>&lt;strong>GCTB&lt;/strong> unresectable / high-morbidity surgery&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>RANKL signaling&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>&lt;strong>denosumab 120 mg SC Q4W (with use-and-pause intermittent dosing)&lt;/strong>&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>DENOSUMAB-GCTB-P2 [PMID 20149736] + INTERIM [PMID 23867211] + LT [PMID 31704134]&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>&lt;strong>Chordoma&lt;/strong> local therapy exhausted&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>PDGFRB pathway&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>imatinib 800 mg QD&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>IMATINIB-CHORDOMA-P2 [PMID 22331945]&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>&lt;strong>Chordoma&lt;/strong> progression after imatinib&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>mTOR combination&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>imatinib + everolimus&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>IMATINIB-EVEROL-CHORDOMA [PMID 30216418]&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>&lt;strong>Chordoma&lt;/strong> locally advanced unresectable + radiotherapy&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>brachyury&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>GI-6301 vaccine + standard radiotherapy (clinical trial / compassionate only)&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>GI6301-CHORDOMA [PMID 33594772]&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;/tbody>
&lt;/table>
&lt;h3 id="35-io-use-restrictions-io-monotherapy-not-recommended-in-osteosarcoma--ewing--classic-chondrosarcoma">3.5 IO Use Restrictions: IO Monotherapy Not Recommended in Osteosarcoma + Ewing + Classic Chondrosarcoma
&lt;/h3>&lt;p>&lt;strong>2026 mainstream&lt;/strong>:&lt;/p>
&lt;ul>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Osteosarcoma + Ewing sarcoma + classic chondrosarcoma&lt;/strong> → &lt;strong>Not recommended&lt;/strong> any IO monotherapy (SARC028 [PMID 28988646] three subtypes ORR 0-5%)&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma&lt;/strong> → SARC028 + Alliance A091401 expansion [PMID 39343511] signal supports consideration of nivolumab + ipilimumab; still not practice-changing&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Chordoma&lt;/strong> → Migliorini [PMID 28919999] 3-case positive signal; compassionate use or prospective trial; not casual off-label use&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Tumor-agnostic MSI-H / dMMR / TMB-H&lt;/strong> (rare in bone tumors, &amp;lt; 1-2%) → pembrolizumab / nivolumab based on cross-tumor basket data&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Alliance A091401 [PMID 29370992]&lt;/strong> supports nivo + ipi combination &amp;gt; monotherapy in soft tissue, &lt;strong>but did not deliver significant improvement in the osteosarcoma subgroup&lt;/strong>&lt;/li>
&lt;/ul>
&lt;p>&lt;strong>Key principle&lt;/strong>: the low-TMB + immune-desert biology of bone tumors means IO is not a &amp;ldquo;haven&amp;rsquo;t-found-the-right-drug problem&amp;rdquo; but a &amp;ldquo;biology doesn&amp;rsquo;t support it&amp;rdquo; problem. Off-label use requires careful assessment of insurance coverage + toxicity + futility risk.&lt;/p>
&lt;h3 id="36-relapse-setting-all-existing-regimens-are-marginal--clinical-trial-priority">3.6 Relapse Setting: All Existing Regimens Are Marginal + Clinical Trial Priority
&lt;/h3>&lt;p>&lt;strong>2026 mainstream&lt;/strong>:&lt;/p>
&lt;table>
 &lt;thead>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;th>Subtype&lt;/th>
 &lt;th>Relapse 2L+ First Choice&lt;/th>
 &lt;th>Alternatives&lt;/th>
 &lt;th>Notes&lt;/th>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;/thead>
 &lt;tbody>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>&lt;strong>Osteosarcoma&lt;/strong>&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>regorafenib (SARC024 [PMID 31013172] + REGOBONE [PMID 30477937])&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>cabozantinib (CABONE [PMID 32078813] osteosarcoma arm PFR 33% + ORR 12%) / pazopanib (PAZO-OSTEO [PMID 35075361]) / sorafenib monotherapy&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>All VEGFR TKIs in the same PFS band, none have changed OS&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>&lt;strong>Ewing sarcoma&lt;/strong>&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>high-dose ifosfamide (rEECur)&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>VIT triplet / cabozantinib (CABONE Ewing arm ORR 26%) / high-dose alkylator + HSCT&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>rEECur first RCT-level 2L answer&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>&lt;strong>Chondrosarcoma&lt;/strong>&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>IDH1+ goes to ivosidenib / PARP; IDH- goes to pazopanib or regorafenib&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Clinical trial&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Rare subtype, phase 3 lacking&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>&lt;strong>GCTB&lt;/strong>&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Long-term denosumab (Chawla LT)&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Surgery / radiotherapy local salvage&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Global SoC&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>&lt;strong>Chordoma&lt;/strong>&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>imatinib ± everolimus&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>IO compassionate (Migliorini) / proton re-irradiation / brachyury vaccine&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Small histology, multidisciplinary-led&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;/tbody>
&lt;/table>
&lt;p>&lt;strong>Universal principle&lt;/strong>: &lt;strong>all existing regimens for relapsed bone tumors deliver marginal PFS benefit — none cure&lt;/strong>. Every newly diagnosed relapsed osteosarcoma / Ewing / chondrosarcoma patient should be evaluated first for clinical trial enrollment — ADC (antibody-drug conjugate, e.g., TROP-2), adoptive cell therapy (TIL / CAR-T), novel targets (anti-TIGIT / anti-LAG3) are the main directions.&lt;/p>
&lt;hr>
&lt;h2 id="4-research-gaps-ten-unresolved-clinical-questions">4. Research Gaps: Ten Unresolved Clinical Questions
&lt;/h2>&lt;p>This report identifies the following gaps, all &lt;strong>definable specific questions&lt;/strong> (not &amp;ldquo;more research needed&amp;rdquo; boilerplate):&lt;/p>
&lt;ol>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Biological explanation for 40-year MAP / VDC-IE unsurpassability in osteosarcoma + Ewing&lt;/strong>: after EURAMOS-1 both arms + COSS-86 + INT-0091, every intensification strategy has failed — is MAP / VDC-IE already at the &amp;ldquo;chemo ceiling,&amp;rdquo; or do osteosarcoma / Ewing have unidentified resistance pathways? The molecular basis of intrinsic chemoresistance has not been systematically characterized.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Biomarkers for IO failure (TMB / PD-L1 / MHC)&lt;/strong>: in SARC028 [PMID 28988646] bone subgroup ORR 5% — is this uniformly low or does it hide responders? TMB / PD-L1 / HLA loss / neoantigen prediction models lack prospective validation; the mechanism of the 20% responder rate in dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma is unclear.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>IDH1-selective inhibition vs pan-inhibitor in chondrosarcoma&lt;/strong>: ivosidenib (IDH1-only, AG-120) in CHONDRO-P1 + LT — ORR 0% + DCR 52%; vorasidenib (IDH1/2 dual inhibitor, AG-881, glioma indication) has no prospective chondrosarcoma data — do selective vs dual-inhibition strategies have different activity in bone tumors?&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>GCTB denosumab post-discontinuation relapse risk&lt;/strong>: denosumab-GCTB-LT [PMID 31704134] confirmed long-term control, but the rebound risk after discontinuation and the biology of relapse (RANKL-signaling restoration vs de novo osteoclast generation) is not systematically characterized; the optimal use-and-pause intermittent rhythm has no RCT.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Chordoma PDGFR monotherapy vs combination + integration with proton radiotherapy&lt;/strong>: imatinib [PMID 22331945] → imatinib + everolimus [PMID 30216418] combination delivers limited increment; optimal sequencing / concurrent use with proton / heavy-ion radiotherapy has no prospective data.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Role of neoadjuvant SBRT / proton in rare subtypes&lt;/strong>: proton / carbon-ion therapy is standard for local control in chondrosarcoma / chordoma, but its integration with systemic therapy (ivosidenib / denosumab / imatinib) — concurrent / sandwich / sequential — lacks RCTs.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Pediatric vs adult osteosarcoma biology differences&lt;/strong>: pediatric / AYA osteosarcoma MAP cure rate ~60%, while adult (&amp;gt; 40 years) cure rate is significantly lower — is this &amp;ldquo;cannot tolerate full-dose MAP&amp;rdquo; or &amp;ldquo;adult osteosarcoma is a different subtype&amp;rdquo;? Genomic classification has yet to answer.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Genomic / transcriptomic subtype stratification&lt;/strong>: osteosarcoma is highly heterogeneous (MYC / CDK4 amplification, TP53 complex rearrangements, gene-signature subtypes), yet classification has not yet driven treatment selection; STAG2 / TP53 / CDKN2A co-mutation subtypes in Ewing have not entered stratification.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>High-dose ifosfamide cardiotoxicity / renal-toxicity sequelae in relapsed Ewing&lt;/strong>: rEECur established high-dose ifosfamide, but long-term safety of high cumulative ifosfamide dosing in pediatric / AYA — long-term renal / cardiac function / secondary tumor risk — requires registry-based long-term follow-up.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Early phase 1 signals of ADC / CAR-T / TIL in bone tumors&lt;/strong>: TROP-2 ADC, B7-H3 CAR-T, GD2 CAR-T, TIL — all have anecdotal early activity in osteosarcoma / Ewing phase 1; but due to rare-case + pediatric-trial complexity, phase 2 confirmatory progress is slow.&lt;/li>
&lt;/ol>
&lt;hr>
&lt;h2 id="5-2024-2026-latest-developments">5. 2024-2026 Latest Developments
&lt;/h2>&lt;h3 id="51-fda--nmpa-new-approvals--guideline-expansion">5.1 FDA / NMPA New Approvals / Guideline Expansion
&lt;/h3>&lt;ul>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>ivosidenib bone tumor extension&lt;/strong>: FDA first approved ivosidenib in 2021 for IDH1+ AML and BTC; &lt;strong>NCCN Bone V2.2026 formally lists ivosidenib as a recommended option for IDH1+ conventional chondrosarcoma&lt;/strong> — based on CHONDRO-P1 [PMID 32208957] + CHONDRO-LT [PMID 40100120] two readouts. The chondrosarcoma indication &lt;strong>is not a standalone indication on the FDA label&lt;/strong>, but NCCN-guideline-level recommendation is in place.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>denosumab GCTB update&lt;/strong>: FDA approved denosumab for GCTB in 2013 (based on Chawla INTERIM [PMID 23867211]); after 2019 LT [PMID 31704134] data, prescribing information was updated for long-term safety (ONJ ~5%, atypical femur fracture monitoring).&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>No new osteosarcoma approvals&lt;/strong>: &lt;strong>no&lt;/strong> osteosarcoma / Ewing systemic therapy received new FDA approval in 2024-2026. Denosumab&amp;rsquo;s AOST1321 [PMID 41159913] 2026 negative readout in osteosarcoma explicitly refuted extending denosumab to osteosarcoma as antitumor therapy.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>China NMPA&lt;/strong>: domestic TKI (anlotinib) is outside NCCN but used in Chinese practice off-label for relapsed soft tissue sarcoma + osteosarcoma; no large-scale phase 3 osteosarcoma data.&lt;/li>
&lt;/ul>
&lt;h3 id="52-key-conference-readouts-2024-2025-weighted-lower">5.2 Key Conference Readouts (2024-2025, Weighted Lower)
&lt;/h3>&lt;p>The following entries serve as candidate pool &lt;strong>only before formal peer review&lt;/strong>; they do not enter the main library. Those with a PMID have been promoted to the main library.&lt;/p>
&lt;ul>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>rEECur phase 3 winner (McCabe 2024 ESMO / 2024 Lancet Oncol manuscript pending)&lt;/strong>: &lt;strong>high-dose ifosfamide won&lt;/strong> as the new reference standard for relapsed Ewing sarcoma; full manuscript still not indexed on PubMed as of 2026-04. Cited by NCT03416517 + conference readout.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>AOST1321 2026 readout&lt;/strong>: [PMID 41159913] fresh publication (Janeway 2026 Clin Cancer Res); denosumab as antitumor therapy in osteosarcoma negative in both cohorts — explicitly refutes the &amp;ldquo;hijacking osteoclast biology&amp;rdquo; hypothesis in osteosarcoma.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>IVOSIDENIB-CHONDRO-LT 2025 readout&lt;/strong>: [PMID 40100120] long-term follow-up confirming durability of CHONDRO-P1 PFS + biomarker signal; included as NCCN Bone V2.2026 reference.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Alliance A091401 Expansion 2024&lt;/strong>: [PMID 39343511] histology-enriched expansion cohorts reconfirming dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma as the bone subtype most likely to respond to IO, with osteosarcoma still inactive.&lt;/li>
&lt;/ul>
&lt;h3 id="53-ongoing-phase-iii--early-signals-selected">5.3 Ongoing Phase III / Early Signals (Selected)
&lt;/h3>&lt;ul>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Adoptive cell therapy (TIL / CAR-T) in osteosarcoma&lt;/strong>: B7-H3 CAR-T, GD2 CAR-T have anecdotal response signals in pediatric / AYA osteosarcoma / Ewing phase 1; Stanford / MSK / COG multicenter phase 2 accrual ongoing.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>TROP-2 ADC (sacituzumab govitecan / datopotamab deruxtecan)&lt;/strong> early signals in osteosarcoma / Ewing basket trials; no phase 3 yet.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>SARC032&lt;/strong> (pembrolizumab + radiotherapy) primarily designed for soft tissue sarcoma — bone-related subgroup data to watch.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Anti-TIGIT / anti-LAG3 combination IO&lt;/strong> has no positive signals in bone tumors to date.&lt;/li>
&lt;/ul>
&lt;hr>
&lt;h2 id="6-synthesis-and-judgment">6. Synthesis and Judgment
&lt;/h2>&lt;h3 id="61-vertical--horizontal-the-2026-bone-tumor-landscape-is-shaped-by-three-dual-track-resonances">6.1 Vertical × Horizontal: The 2026 Bone Tumor Landscape Is Shaped by Three &amp;ldquo;Dual-Track Resonances&amp;rdquo;
&lt;/h3>&lt;p>Overlaying vertical paradigm evolution on the horizontal current decision landscape reveals that the 2026 bone tumor landscape exhibits &lt;strong>&amp;ldquo;dual-track resonances&amp;rdquo; completely different from NSCLC / BTC&lt;/strong>:&lt;/p>
&lt;ol>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Mainstream major subtypes (osteosarcoma + Ewing) 40-year stagnation vs rare subtypes (chondrosarcoma + GCTB + chordoma) precision breakthroughs in parallel&lt;/strong>: osteosarcoma MIOS 1986 MAP backbone unchanged for 40 years, all intensification failed (EURAMOS-1 both arms / COSS-86 / MTP-PE contested / all relapse TKIs marginal); meanwhile in the same period, chondrosarcoma IDH1 → ivosidenib, GCTB → denosumab, chordoma → imatinib all delivered phase 2-level positive signals. &lt;strong>&amp;ldquo;Biology determines outcomes&amp;rdquo; — mainstream major subtypes lack clear druggable drivers, while rare subtypes each have an independent driver&lt;/strong>. This is the &amp;ldquo;anti-scale phenomenon&amp;rdquo; unique to bone tumors (the commonest histologies have the most resources yet are hardest to break through).&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>IO cross-subtype all-failure + three narrow windows left open&lt;/strong>: SARC028 osteosarcoma / Ewing / classic chondrosarcoma ORR 0-5% confirms IO is not a cure-all; but dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma (SARC028 + Alliance expansion) + chordoma (Migliorini + PD-L1 expression evidence) + MSI-H (rare but tumor-agnostic effective) three narrow windows remain. &lt;strong>&amp;ldquo;Biology gate-keeps&amp;rdquo; rather than &amp;ldquo;haven&amp;rsquo;t tried the right drug&amp;rdquo; — low TMB + immune-desert keep the IO monotherapy ceiling very low in osteosarcoma / Ewing&lt;/strong>.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Trial-design innovation vs new-drug approvals ratio inversion&lt;/strong>: in bone tumors, &lt;strong>the most valuable frontline improvements in the past 25 years came from trial design, not new drugs&lt;/strong> — AEWS0031 compressed VDC/IE q3w to q2w grabbing 8 percentage points of EFS; EURO-EWING-99-R2 used high-risk-stratified BuMel HSCT to grab 14 percentage points; rEECur used Bayesian adaptive design to give relapsed Ewing its first RCT answer. This &amp;ldquo;design beats new drug&amp;rdquo; phenomenon is almost unseen in NSCLC (driver era) / BTC (biomarker era).&lt;/li>
&lt;/ol>
&lt;p>These three resonances together explain a clinical phenomenon: &lt;strong>for a newly diagnosed bone tumor patient in 2026, the core branchpoint in the decision tree is not &amp;ldquo;which newest drug to pick&amp;rdquo; but &amp;ldquo;first confirm the subtype + driver diagnosis → follow mainstream chemo backbone or rare-subtype precision → IO mostly hands-off&amp;rdquo;&lt;/strong>.&lt;/p>
&lt;h3 id="62-clinical-decision-takeaways-for-junior-mid-oncologists">6.2 Clinical Decision Takeaways (for Junior-Mid Oncologists)
&lt;/h3>&lt;ol>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>&amp;ldquo;Confirm subtype first, then decide&amp;rdquo; is an iron rule&lt;/strong>: five bone tumor subtypes (osteosarcoma / Ewing / chondrosarcoma / chordoma / GCTB) have completely different treatments. Any non-specialist center receiving a case should immediately arrange central pathology review + an NGS panel covering at minimum IDH1/2 / EWSR1 fusion / H3F3A / SDH / PDGFR / MSI. Missing IDH1 = missing the chondrosarcoma ivosidenib path; missing H3F3A = missing GCTB confirmation.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Do not add drugs to the osteosarcoma MAP backbone casually&lt;/strong>: the MIOS [PMID 3520317] 1986 framework has been undefeated for 40 years. EURAMOS-1 both arms (poor responder + good responder) negative [PMID 27569442 + 26033801] explicitly tell us: adding ifosfamide / interferon on top of MAP is useless — only more toxicity.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Dose-dense is a free win in Ewing&lt;/strong>: AEWS0031 [PMID 23091096] compressed q3w to q2w grabbing 8 percentage points of EFS — no new drug, no extra toxicity. This is the single most important frontline decision in Ewing sarcoma.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>High-risk localized Ewing goes BuMel&lt;/strong>: EURO-EWING-99-R2 [PMID 30188789] high-risk subgroup BuMel + autologous HSCT delivers 3-year EFS 67% vs 53%, a rare positive modern osteosarcoma / Ewing intensification RCT — prerequisite is correctly identifying &amp;ldquo;high risk&amp;rdquo; (poor induction response or large axial tumor).&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>IDH1 testing mandatory in chondrosarcoma&lt;/strong>: IDH1+ chondrosarcoma goes to ivosidenib (IVOSIDENIB-CHONDRO-P1 + LT [PMID 32208957 + 40100120]), with olaparib BRCAness second shot [PMID 34994649] after failure. &lt;strong>ivosidenib is not vorasidenib&lt;/strong> — chondrosarcoma uses AG-120, glioma uses AG-881 — do not confuse them when prescribing.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>GCTB = denosumab is SoC&lt;/strong>: Thomas 2010 [PMID 20149736] + Chawla 2013 [PMID 23867211] + 2019 LT [PMID 31704134] three progressive phase 2 datasets lock it in — GCTB changed from &amp;ldquo;unresectable = fatal&amp;rdquo; to &amp;ldquo;medical therapy → limb-sparing surgery.&amp;rdquo; Note &lt;strong>long-term ONJ ~5% + atypical femur fracture&lt;/strong> monitoring + use-and-pause intermittent dosing.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Chordoma = multidisciplinary + proton + imatinib&lt;/strong>: chordoma prefers proton / heavy-ion radiotherapy + surgery; when systemic therapy is exhausted, imatinib [PMID 22331945] serves as backbone, with everolimus combination [PMID 30216418] or brachyury vaccine clinical trial after failure.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>IO is not a cure-all&lt;/strong>: osteosarcoma + Ewing + classic chondrosarcoma (non-dedifferentiated) — &lt;strong>not recommended&lt;/strong> to empirically use IO monotherapy (SARC028 [PMID 28988646]). Off-label use combines triple negatives: extremely low clinical benefit + unexpected toxicity + insurance-denial risk.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Rational expectations for relapse 2L&lt;/strong>: relapsed osteosarcoma regorafenib / cabozantinib / pazopanib — all VEGFR TKIs — offer 4-6 month PFS marginal wins, none curative; relapsed Ewing high-dose ifosfamide was just established as the new standard by rEECur; relapsed chondrosarcoma goes by IDH classification or anti-angiogenic TKI. &lt;strong>Clinical trial enrollment (ADC / CAR-T / TIL / novel targets) is the benefit-window opportunity&lt;/strong>.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Lesson from AOST1321 denosumab osteosarcoma negative&lt;/strong>: the same drug (denosumab) is landscape-changing in GCTB and inactive in osteosarcoma [PMID 41159913]. &lt;strong>Five-subtype bone tumor heterogeneity is far greater than one imagines&lt;/strong> — do not casually extrapolate one subtype&amp;rsquo;s success to another.&lt;/li>
&lt;/ol>
&lt;hr>
&lt;h2 id="7-information-sources">7. Information Sources
&lt;/h2>&lt;p>Metadata for the 35 trials in this report was independently verified through PubMed and ClinicalTrials.gov. Every &lt;code>[PMID xxxxxxxx]&lt;/code> in the text can be verified directly in PubMed.&lt;/p>
&lt;ul>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Published trials&lt;/strong>: 34, covering 1986-2026 (PMIDs verifiable)&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Ongoing / primary manuscript pending&lt;/strong>: 1 (rEECur phase 3 McCabe 2024 ESMO readout, NCT03416517, primary publication not yet PubMed-indexed)&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>NCCN guideline citations&lt;/strong>: 27/35 (77%) directly hit NCCN Bone Cancer V2.2026 reference section; the remaining 8 are expected misses within NCCN literature-scope limits (Alliance A091401 IO series, Migliorini chordoma compassionate 3 cases, AOST1321 just-published in 2026, MIOS 1986 historical, etc.)&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Key 2024-2026 new data&lt;/strong>: 3 (AOST1321 [PMID 41159913], IVOSIDENIB-CHONDRO-LT [PMID 40100120], Alliance-A091401-Expansion [PMID 39343511])&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Research gaps&lt;/strong>: 10&lt;/li>
&lt;/ul>
&lt;h3 id="71-in-text-citation-list-by-pmid-ascending">7.1 In-Text Citation List (by PMID Ascending)
&lt;/h3>&lt;p>The following table is the bracket-cited PMID list in this report text — each can be clicked through to PubMed URL for verification.&lt;/p>
&lt;table>
 &lt;thead>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;th>PMID&lt;/th>
 &lt;th>Trial / Paper&lt;/th>
 &lt;th>Year&lt;/th>
 &lt;th>Journal&lt;/th>
 &lt;th>Text Location&lt;/th>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;/thead>
 &lt;tbody>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>3520317&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>MIOS&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>1986&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>N Engl J Med&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.1 osteosarcoma MAP / §6.2&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>9789613&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>COSS-86&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>1998&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Ann Oncol&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.1&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>12594313&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>INT-0091&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2003&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>N Engl J Med&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.2 Ewing / §3.3&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>12697883&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>POG-8651&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2003&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>J Clin Oncol&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.1 / §3.2&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>16317751&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>VIT-WAGNER&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2007&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Pediatr Blood Cancer&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.2 / §3.3&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>18235123&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>INT-0133&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2008&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>J Clin Oncol&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.1 / §3.2&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>20149736&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>DENOSUMAB-GCTB-P2 (Thomas)&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2010&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Lancet Oncol&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.3 GCTB / §3.4 / §6.2&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>21527590&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>SORAFENIB-ISG&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2012&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Ann Oncol&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.1&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>22331945&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>IMATINIB-CHORDOMA-P2&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2012&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>J Clin Oncol&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.3 chordoma / §3.4 / §6.2&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>23091096&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>AEWS0031&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2012&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>J Clin Oncol&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.2 / §3.3 / §6.2&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>23776128&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>VIT-RACIBORSKA&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2013&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Pediatr Blood Cancer&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.2 / §3.3&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>23867211&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>DENOSUMAB-GCTB-INTERIM (Chawla)&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2013&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Lancet Oncol&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.3 / §3.4 / §6.2&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>24982464&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>EURO-EWING-99-R1&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2014&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>J Clin Oncol&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.2 / §3.3&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>25498219&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>SORAFENIB-EVEROLIMUS&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2015&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Lancet Oncol&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.1&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>26033801&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>EURAMOS-1 Good Responders&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2015&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>J Clin Oncol&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.1 / §3.2 / §6.2&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>27569442&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>EURAMOS-1 Poor Responders&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2016&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Lancet Oncol&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.1 / §3.2 / §6.2&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>28919999&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>CHORDOMA-IO-MIGLIORINI&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2017&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Oncoimmunology&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.4 IO / §3.5&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>28988646&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>SARC028&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2017&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Lancet Oncol&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.4 / §3.5 / §6.2&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>29370992&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>ALLIANCE-A091401&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2018&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Lancet Oncol&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.4 / §3.5&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>30188789&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>EURO-EWING-99-R2&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2018&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>J Clin Oncol&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.2 / §3.3 / §6.2&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>30216418&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>IMATINIB-EVEROL-CHORDOMA&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2018&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Cancer&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.3 / §3.4 / §6.2&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>30477937&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>REGOBONE&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2019&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Lancet Oncol&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.1 / §3.6&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>31013172&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>SARC024&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2019&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>J Clin Oncol&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.1 / §3.6&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>31509242&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>SARC-PAZO-CHONDRO&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2020&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Cancer&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.3 / §3.4&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>31704134&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>DENOSUMAB-GCTB-LT (Chawla)&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2019&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Lancet Oncol&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.3 / §3.4 / §4 / §6.2&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>32078813&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>CABONE&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2020&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Lancet Oncol&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.1 / §3.3 / §3.6&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>32208957&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>IVOSIDENIB-CHONDRO-P1 (Tap)&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2020&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>J Clin Oncol&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.3 / §3.4 / §4 / §6.2&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>33594772&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>GI6301-CHORDOMA&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2021&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Oncologist&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.3 / §3.4&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>33895682&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>REGOBONE-CHONDRO&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2021&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Eur J Cancer&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.3 / §3.4&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>34994649&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>OLAPARIB-IDH-SARC&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2021&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>JCO Precis Oncol&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.3 / §3.4 / §6.2&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>35075361&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>PAZO-OSTEO&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2022&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>J Oncol&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.1 / §3.6&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>39343511&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>ALLIANCE-A091401-EXPANSION&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2024&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>J Immunother Cancer&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.4 / §3.5 / §5.2&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>40100120&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>IVOSIDENIB-CHONDRO-LT (Tap)&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2025&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Clin Cancer Res&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.3 / §3.4 / §5.2 / §6.2&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;tr>
 &lt;td>41159913&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>AOST1321&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>2026&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>Clin Cancer Res&lt;/td>
 &lt;td>§2.1 / §5.1 / §5.2 / §6.2&lt;/td>
 &lt;/tr>
 &lt;/tbody>
&lt;/table>
&lt;p>(The rEECur phase 3 primary manuscript is cited by NCT03416517 + McCabe 2024 ESMO readout; PMID will be added to the table once indexed.)&lt;/p>
&lt;h3 id="72-verification-conventions">7.2 Verification Conventions
&lt;/h3>&lt;ul>
&lt;li>Every PMID can be accessed directly via &lt;code>https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/{PMID}/&lt;/code> for verification&lt;/li>
&lt;li>Every NCT id can be accessed via &lt;code>https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/{NCT_id}/&lt;/code>&lt;/li>
&lt;li>Conference abstracts (ASCO / ESMO / CTOS) are searched through official conference systems; &lt;strong>all conference citations in this report are &amp;ldquo;weighted lower&amp;rdquo;&lt;/strong> — not peer-reviewed, final data defers to journal publication&lt;/li>
&lt;li>After rEECur manuscript publication, the corresponding PMID will be updated&lt;/li>
&lt;li>If you find a discrepancy between a PMID&amp;rsquo;s trial name / year / conclusion in this report and PubMed, corrections are welcome&lt;/li>
&lt;/ul>
&lt;hr>
&lt;h2 id="clinical-trial-timeline-is-here">Clinical Trial Timeline Is Here
&lt;/h2>&lt;p>&lt;strong>Chinese&lt;/strong>: &lt;a class="link" href="https://csilab.net/trials/bone/" >/trials/bone/&lt;/a>
&lt;strong>English&lt;/strong>: &lt;a class="link" href="https://csilab.net/en/trials/bone/" >/en/trials/bone/&lt;/a>&lt;/p>
&lt;p>Each trial has an independent detail page, including:&lt;/p>
&lt;ul>
&lt;li>Complete intervention / comparator regimen&lt;/li>
&lt;li>Primary endpoint values + 95% CI&lt;/li>
&lt;li>Key findings + clinical significance&lt;/li>
&lt;li>Clickable links to PMID / NCT originals&lt;/li>
&lt;/ul>
&lt;p>&lt;strong>35 trials · 5 subtypes · 1986 to 2026 · synced with NCCN Bone Cancer V2.2026&lt;/strong>.&lt;/p>
&lt;hr>
&lt;h2 id="closing">Closing
&lt;/h2>&lt;p>Bone tumors over the past 40 years are the oncology field with the strongest &lt;strong>&amp;ldquo;dual-track reality&amp;rdquo;&lt;/strong> flavor — &lt;strong>the mainstream major subtypes (osteosarcoma + Ewing) held the MAP / VDC-IE backbone undefeated for 40 years, with all intensification failed&lt;/strong>; &lt;strong>in the same period, the rare subtypes (chondrosarcoma + GCTB + chordoma) each leveraged an independent driver gene to achieve precision-therapy breakthroughs&lt;/strong>; &lt;strong>IO at the cross-subtype level failed almost completely, leaving three narrow windows (dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma, chordoma, rare MSI-H subgroups) open&lt;/strong>.&lt;/p>
&lt;p>This landscape of &amp;ldquo;mainstream stagnation + rare breakthroughs + IO failure&amp;rdquo; forms a sharp contrast with NSCLC&amp;rsquo;s &amp;ldquo;5-paradigm leaps + 10 drivers all entering 1L + IO rewriting the backbone.&amp;rdquo; The driver behind it is not resource investment (osteosarcoma / Ewing have far more global decades of RCT resources than chordoma), but &lt;strong>biology&lt;/strong> — mainstream major subtypes lack clear druggable drivers, while rare subtypes each have independent drivers; low TMB + immune-desert in bone tumors keep the IO ceiling low. &lt;strong>This is a domain where &amp;ldquo;biology determines the treatment ceiling,&amp;rdquo; not a &amp;ldquo;haven&amp;rsquo;t-found-the-drug yet&amp;rdquo; problem&lt;/strong>.&lt;/p>
&lt;p>For a newly diagnosed bone tumor patient in 2026, the core branchpoints in the decision tree are not &amp;ldquo;which newest drug to pick&amp;rdquo; but &amp;ldquo;&lt;strong>confirm subtype first → follow mainstream chemo backbone or rare-subtype precision → IO mostly hands-off → relapse prioritizes clinical trial&lt;/strong>.&amp;rdquo;&lt;/p>
&lt;p>The value of this report lies not in &amp;ldquo;exhaustively listing all trials&amp;rdquo; (PubMed can do that), but in &lt;strong>compressing 40 years of evolution + current decisions + unresolved gaps into a single reading bandwidth&lt;/strong>. Next time you face a newly diagnosed bone tumor patient, every branchpoint in the decision tree has this map to consult — checkable, traceable, debatable.&lt;/p>
&lt;p>&lt;strong>Clinician × AI = Research Superpower + Clinical Decision Amplifier&lt;/strong>&lt;/p>
&lt;p>—— Dual Brain Lab · 2026-04-21&lt;/p></description></item></channel></rss>