Literature DB >> 23526749

Magnetic resonance imaging is the preferred method to assess treatment-related skeletal changes in children with brain tumors.

Sue C Kaste1, Robert A Kaufman, Amar Gajjar, Alberto Broniscer.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To evaluate the growing skeleton for potential altered skeletalgenesis associated with antiangiogenesis therapy. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Knee radiographs and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were prospectively obtained on patients enrolled on two consecutive clinical trials using vandetanib, a potent oral (VEGF receptor 2) VEGFR-2 inhibitor alone or combined with dasatinib, a multiple tyrosine kinase inhibitor, in children with newly diagnosed diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG).
RESULTS: Fifty-nine patients (32 females) underwent 119 MRIs; 51 patients underwent 89 radiographs of the knees. The median age at enrollment was 6.2 years (range, 2.4-17.6 years). The dose of vandetanib ranged from 50 to 145 mg/m(2) /day. The median treatment duration was 205 days. Only two patients have not experienced disease progression after 18 and 60 months from diagnosis. MRI identified clinically significant premature physeal fusion in both knees of one patient, focal physeal thickening in one, osteonecrosis in eight patients (present at enrollment in one), and bony spicules crossing the physis in two patients (bilateral in one). MRI follow-up period averaged 5.3 months (range, 0-25.5 months; median, 3.5 months). Radiographs delineated normally fused physes in two patients but no cases of premature physeal fusion, osteonecrosis or bony spicules.
CONCLUSIONS: As MRI provided greater information than radiographs, and thus would be a more sensitive test to assess skeletalgenesis in pediatric patients.
Copyright © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  VEGF; antiangiogenesis agents; chemotherapy; magnetic resonance imaging; pediatric brain tumors; skeletalgenesis

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23526749      PMCID: PMC4309017          DOI: 10.1002/pbc.24536

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatr Blood Cancer        ISSN: 1545-5009            Impact factor:   3.167


  36 in total

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  2 in total

1.  Growth plate abnormalities in pediatric cancer patients undergoing phase 1 anti-angiogenic therapy: a report from the Children's Oncology Group Phase I Consortium.

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2.  Phase I trial, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of vandetanib and dasatinib in children with newly diagnosed diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma.

Authors:  Alberto Broniscer; Sharyn D Baker; Cynthia Wetmore; Atmaram S Pai Panandiker; Jie Huang; Andrew M Davidoff; Arzu Onar-Thomas; John C Panetta; Thomas K Chin; Thomas E Merchant; Justin N Baker; Sue C Kaste; Amar Gajjar; Clinton F Stewart
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