BACKGROUND: Chemotherapy is used as an alternative to irradiation or to minimize the irradiation exposure among infants with medulloblastoma or other CNS embryonal tumors. Adjuvant chemotherapy is commonly used in older children with high-risk medulloblastoma to improve survival or to allow a reduction in the craniospinal irradiation dose in standard-risk patients. However, optimal multimodality therapy, including the precise role of chemotherapy, has not been defined for these groups of patients. The objective of the present study is to assess the efficacy and toxicity of four postoperative courses of carboplatin, etoposide, and high-dose methotrexate in newly diagnosed children with medulloblastoma or other CNS embryonal tumors. PROCEDURE: Twenty-eight children, aged from 0.3 to 15.9 years (median, 6.2 years) with post-operative measurable residual CNS embryonal tumors were enrolled, comprising medulloblastoma (n = 19), supratentorial PNET (n = 7), and pineoblastoma (n = 2). Post-operative chemotherapy comprised carboplatin 350 mg/m(2) and etoposide 100 mg/m(2) on Days 1 & 2, and methotrexate 8 g/m(2) on Day 3, repeated at 21-28-day intervals for a total of four courses. Therapy following completion of the initial Phase II study was influenced by patient age and investigator preference. RESULTS: The combined complete response rate (CR, 7/19) and partial response rate (PR, 7/19) was 74% in patients with medulloblastoma, 89% for patients with PNET/pineoblastoma (CR, 2/9 and PR, 6/9), and for all patients it was 79%. Patients aged < 3 years at diagnosis had a combined PR and CR rate of 71% compared to 81% in patients aged > 3 years. Treatment was well tolerated although myelosuppression and thrombocytopenia were common. CONCLUSIONS: The combination of carboplatin, etoposide, and high-dose methotrexate is highly active in pediatric patients with CNS embryonal tumors. Copyright 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
BACKGROUND: Chemotherapy is used as an alternative to irradiation or to minimize the irradiation exposure among infants with medulloblastoma or other CNS embryonal tumors. Adjuvant chemotherapy is commonly used in older children with high-risk medulloblastoma to improve survival or to allow a reduction in the craniospinal irradiation dose in standard-risk patients. However, optimal multimodality therapy, including the precise role of chemotherapy, has not been defined for these groups of patients. The objective of the present study is to assess the efficacy and toxicity of four postoperative courses of carboplatin, etoposide, and high-dose methotrexate in newly diagnosed children with medulloblastoma or other CNS embryonal tumors. PROCEDURE: Twenty-eight children, aged from 0.3 to 15.9 years (median, 6.2 years) with post-operative measurable residual CNS embryonal tumors were enrolled, comprising medulloblastoma (n = 19), supratentorial PNET (n = 7), and pineoblastoma (n = 2). Post-operative chemotherapy comprised carboplatin 350 mg/m(2) and etoposide 100 mg/m(2) on Days 1 & 2, and methotrexate 8 g/m(2) on Day 3, repeated at 21-28-day intervals for a total of four courses. Therapy following completion of the initial Phase II study was influenced by patient age and investigator preference. RESULTS: The combined complete response rate (CR, 7/19) and partial response rate (PR, 7/19) was 74% in patients with medulloblastoma, 89% for patients with PNET/pineoblastoma (CR, 2/9 and PR, 6/9), and for all patients it was 79%. Patients aged < 3 years at diagnosis had a combined PR and CR rate of 71% compared to 81% in patients aged > 3 years. Treatment was well tolerated although myelosuppression and thrombocytopenia were common. CONCLUSIONS: The combination of carboplatin, etoposide, and high-dose methotrexate is highly active in pediatric patients with CNS embryonal tumors. Copyright 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
Authors: Michael S Roberts; Nicholas S Selvo; Jessica K Roberts; Vinay M Daryani; Thandranese S Owens; K Elaine Harstead; Amar Gajjar; Clinton F Stewart Journal: J Liq Chromatogr Relat Technol Date: 2016-10-10 Impact factor: 1.312
Authors: Stephen W Gilheeney; Ali Saad; Susan Chi; Christopher Turner; Nicole J Ullrich; Liliana Goumnerova; R Michael Scott; Karen Marcus; Leslie Lehman; Umberto De Girolami; Mark W Kieran Journal: J Neurooncol Date: 2008-04-16 Impact factor: 4.130
Authors: Federica Saletta; Carol Wadham; David S Ziegler; Glenn M Marshall; Michelle Haber; Geoffrey McCowage; Murray D Norris; Jennifer A Byrne Journal: BBA Clin Date: 2014-06-28