Abstract
Rhabdomyosarcoma is a small round-cell soft tissue tumor that occurs mainly in pediatric and adolescent/young adult (AYA) patients but also rarely in adults. Multidisciplinary treatments including multidrug therapy and local therapy (surgery and/or radiation) are the current standard of care, and treatment strategies are determined according to the estimated risk based on the patient's age, site of onset, and histologic type, as well as the disease stage. New treatment developments in recent years have been based on risk; lower cumulative doses of alkylating agents to reduce late toxicity for low-risk patients are being studied, and long-term maintenance therapy or the addition of new drugs inhibitors to standard multidisciplinary therapy for intermediate- to high-risk patients have been investigated. For high-risk and metastatic patients, novel molecular targeted drug candidates are being evaluated. The target candidates for rhabdomyosarcoma have included the RAS-signaling pathway, ALK, NTRK, FGFR, and MSI-High. In addition, fusion genes (e.g., PAX3/7-FOXO1), which play an important role in diagnostic and prognostic factors, are also being investigated as potential therapeutic targets as their underlying backgrounds are gradually becoming clear. This review summarizes the overall picture of the development of novel therapies for rhabdomyosarcoma and discusses the direction that should be taken in the future.