| Literature DB >> 26255071 |
David I Sandberg1,2, Michael Rytting3, Wafik Zaky3, Marcia Kerr4, Leena Ketonen5, Uma Kundu6, Bartlett D Moore3, Grace Yang3, Ping Hou7, Clark Sitton8, Laurence J Cooper3,9, Vidya Gopalakrishnan3, Dean A Lee3, Peter F Thall10, Soumen Khatua3.
Abstract
We hypothesize that chemotherapy can be safely administered directly into the fourth ventricle to treat recurrent malignant brain tumors in children. For the first time in humans, methotrexate was infused into the fourth ventricle in children with recurrent, malignant brain tumors. A catheter was surgically placed into the fourth ventricle and attached to a ventricular access device. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) flow was confirmed by CINE MRI postoperatively. Each cycle consisted of 4 consecutive daily methotrexate infusions (2 milligrams). Disease response was monitored with serial MRI scans and CSF cytologic analysis. Trough CSF methotrexate levels were sampled. Five patients (3 with medulloblastoma and 2 with ependymoma) received 18, 18, 12, 9, and 3 cycles, respectively. There were no serious adverse events or new neurological deficits attributed to methotrexate. Two additional enrolled patients were withdrawn prior to planned infusions due to rapid disease progression. Median serum methotrexate level 4 h after infusion was 0.04 µmol/L. Range was 0.02-0.13 µmol/L. Median trough CSF methotrexate level 24 h after infusion was 3.18 µmol/L (range 0.53-212.36 µmol/L). All three patients with medulloblastoma had partial response or stable disease until one patient had progressive disease after cycle 18. Both patients with ependymoma had progressive disease after 9 and 3 cycles, respectively. Low-dose methotrexate can be infused into the fourth ventricle without causing neurological toxicity. Some patients with recurrent medulloblastoma experience a beneficial anti-tumor effect both within the fourth ventricle and at distant sites.Entities:
Keywords: Ependymoma; Fourth ventricle; Intraventricular chemotherapy; Medulloblastoma; Methotrexate
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26255071 PMCID: PMC4592494 DOI: 10.1007/s11060-015-1878-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurooncol ISSN: 0167-594X Impact factor: 4.130
Fig. 1Artist’s illustration demonstrating surgical placement of catheter into the fourth ventricle of the brain attached to subcutaneous reservoir
Fig. 2Preoperative and postoperative MRI images from patient 2. a Preoperative sagittal T1-weighted MRI with gadolinium demonstrating recurrent, enhancing tumor filling fourth ventricle. b Postoperative sagittal T1-weighted MRI with gadolinium demonstrating subtotal resection of tumor. A small amount of tumor adherent to the floor of the fourth ventricle was purposefully left behind. c Postoperative T2-weighted sagittal MRI demonstrating catheter position within the fourth ventricle. The catheter, as shown by the arrow, is positioned in a trajectory such that injury to the brainstem and cerebellum are avoided and all catheter holes are within the fourth ventricle
Assessment of disease response
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| Target lesions were measured in 2 dimensions: the longest diameter and perpendicular to the longest diameter. Response criteria were assessed based on the product of the longest diameter and its longest perpendicular diameter |
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Overall Response Assesment values are in bold
Patient data and treatment responses
| Patienta | Age/sex | Diagnosis | Recurrent disease sites at time of enrollment | Extent of resectionb | # of cycles | Treatment responsec |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 19/M | Medulloblastoma | 4th ventricle, cerebellar folia, posterior fossa cisterns, supratentorial, spine | Biopsy | 18 | SD |
| 2 | 9/M | Anaplastic Ependymoma | 4th ventricle, leptomeninges of brainstem and cervical spine | Subtotal resection | 9 | SD |
| 4 | 12/M | Medulloblastoma | Spinal subarachnoid space | None | 12 | PR |
| 5 | 16/F | Medulloblastoma | Right and Left lateral ventricles | None | 18 | PR |
| 7 | 8/M | Anaplastic Ependymoma | 4th ventricle | Subtotal resection | 3 | PD |
SD Stable disease, PR partial response, PD progressive disease, N/A not applicable
aPatients 3 and 6 are not included in this Table because they were enrolled and underwent fourth ventricle catheter/reservoir placement but never received treatment
bIn addition to fourth ventricle catheter/reservoir placement
cBest treatment response
Fig. 3MRI scans demonstrating treatment response in patients 1 and 4. a Fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) MRI scans in patient 1 at baseline (top row, images A1, B1, and C1) and after 15 cycles of intraventricular methotrexate (bottom row, figures A2, B2, and C2), 10 months after initiation of the first cycle. There has been a considerable decrease in disease burden in the lateral ventricles, cerebellar folia, fourth ventricle, and cerebellopontine angles. FLAIR sequences are demonstrated because the majority of the tumor burden in the brain was non-enhancing and best visualized on FLAIR. b T1-weighted MRI of the spine with gadolinium in patient 4 at baseline (left, image 3B1) and after 15 cycles of intraventricular methotrexate (right, image 3B2). Two small metastatic spine lesions (demonstrated by arrows) have disappeared. c Axial FLAIR sequences in patient 5 at baseline (image 3C1) and after 18 cycles (image 3C2) of intraventricular methotrexate. FLAIR sequences are demonstrated because both were non-enhancing lesions best visualized on FLAIR. There has been a considerable decrease in the lesions, both of which have nearly resolved