Literature DB >> 30515559

Radiosurgery or hypofractionated stereotactic radiotherapy after craniospinal irradiation in children and adults with medulloblastoma and ependymoma.

Aleksandra Napieralska1, Iwona Brąclik2, Michał Radwan2, Marek Mandera3, Sławomir Blamek4.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To assess the results and tolerance of radiosurgery/hypofractionated stereotactic radiotherapy performed after craniospinal irradiation for recurrent tumor.
METHODS: Fourteen patients aged 3-46 years, diagnosed with medulloblastoma (10), anaplastic ependymoma (3), and primitive neuroectodermal tumor (1). All patients had craniospinal irradiation (CSI) with the total dose of 30.6-36 Gy and boost to 53.9-60 Gy either during primary or during second-line treatment. Twelve patients were irradiated with a single dose of 6-15 Gy (median 14.5 Gy). One received three fractions of 5 Gy and one six fractions of 5 Gy. In statistical analysis, the Kaplan-Meier method and log-rank test were used. The overall survival was calculated from the date of the end of stereotactic radiosurgery to the date of death or last contact.
RESULTS: Recurrences were diagnosed after the median time of 16 months after the end of primary treatment. Eleven patients died during the follow-up. The follow-up for the 3 patients still alive was 6.7, 40.5, and 41.4 months, respectively. One- and 2-year overall survival (OS) was 70% and 39%. Patients who had ECOG performance status of 0 at the time of diagnosis of the disease trended to have better 2-year OS compared to those evaluated as ECOG 1 (p = 0.057). Treatment results were evaluable in 12 patients. Local control (stabilization or regression of the lesion) was achieved in 9 (75%). Overall disease progression was 67%. No patient developed radiation-induced necrosis. The treatment was well tolerated and no serious adverse effects were observed. Eleven patients were given steroids as a prevention of brain edema and four of them needed continuation of this treatment afterwards. In 7 patients, symptoms of brain edema were observed during the first weeks after reirradiation.
CONCLUSIONS: Stereotactic radiosurgery or hypofractionated stereotactic radiotherapy is an effective treatment method of the local recurrence after CSI and can be performed safely in heavily pre-treated patients.

Entities:  

Keywords:  CSI; Radiotherapy; Recurrence; Reirradiation

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30515559      PMCID: PMC6351705          DOI: 10.1007/s00381-018-4010-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Childs Nerv Syst        ISSN: 0256-7040            Impact factor:   1.475


Introduction

Medulloblastoma is one of the most common primary brain tumors in children and one of the rarest in adults [1, 2]. In the recent years, the results of the treatment have significantly improved by the use of combined therapy–surgery, craniospinal irradiation with dose escalation to the tumor bed or residual tumor, and, in children, chemotherapy [1-4]. The role of chemotherapy in the first-line treatment in adults is less clear due to increased risk of toxicity of systemic treatment. Recent studies of Rare Cancer Network Group showed that this group of patients may also benefit from systemic therapy [5]. But still, in this group it is used less frequently, usually in selected high-risk patients [2, 6]. Five-year progression-free survival (PFS) in standard-risk patients is within the range of 57 to 82%, and the 5-year overall survival (OS) varies between 80 and 87%, both in children and in young adult patients [1-6]. Despite the advances in treatment of patients with medulloblastoma and anaplastic ependymoma, there are still no clear guidelines concerning treatment of recurrence. The outcome is poor, irrespective of the implemented treatment methods (surgery, chemotherapy, combined in some cases with bone marrow transplantation, brachytherapy, radiosurgery, or hypofractionated stereotactic radiotherapy). So far, only two authors reported 5-year OS of 55–65% [7-25]. Publications on the reirradiation of patients after radiotherapy of cerebrospinal axis are scarce, and radiotherapy is often not considered a salvage treatment because of its potential toxicity (including radiation necrosis of the brain), young age of patients, and uncertain effectiveness [5, 10–25]. We present a series of patients reirradiated in a single center and evaluate the treatment results and tolerance of radiosurgery (SRS)/hypofractionated stereotactic radiotherapy (SRT) implemented after craniospinal irradiation (CSI) in patients with a recurrent tumor.

Material/methods

Group characteristics

Study inclusion criteria were as follows: the diagnosis of a central nervous tumor, CSI as part of initial or second-line treatment, and treatment with SRS/SRT implemented after CSI. Fourteen consecutive patients (8 females, 6 males, median age at diagnosis of the disease was 22 years), diagnosed with medulloblastoma (MB, 10 patients), anaplastic ependymoma (AE, 3 patients), and primitive neuroectodermal tumor (PNET, 1 patient), met the inclusion criteria and were enrolled into the analysis. All patients received SRS or SRT as part of the treatment of recurrence after CSI. Information on patients and treatment details was collected retrospectively from patients’ charts and treatment planning system archives.

Primary treatment

All patients were treated with radical intent. Before and during the primary treatment, all patients were in good performance status (ECOG 0–50%, ECOG 1–50% of patients). Surgery was the primary treatment modality in all of them (in 63%, gross total resection was performed, and in 3, partial resection). Primary tumor was located in posterior cranial fossa in 10 patients (MB patients); in 3, in frontal lobe; and in 1, in temporal lobe. Six patients (43%) received adjuvant chemotherapy (5 with medulloblastoma, one with PNET). In 12 patients, CSI was a part of the primary treatment. Patients were irradiated with fraction dose of 1.5 to 1.8 Gy (median spinal fraction dose of 1.5 Gy, median cranial fraction dose of 1.8 Gy) to deliver the total dose of 30.6–36 Gy (median 36 Gy) with boost to the tumor/tumor bed up to 53.9–60 Gy (median 54 Gy). Additional unplanned surgery was performed in one patient after CSI due to aggravation of neurological symptoms. After the treatment, all patients were followed up in regional oncology centers. Patients had checkup visits every 3 to 6 months during the first 2 years after the primary treatment and every 6 months during the next years. Imaging was performed with similar consistency. Additional visits or imaging was performed when patient presented symptoms of tumor progression. The details of the primary treatment employed in particular patients are presented in Table 1.
Table 1

Primary treatment in particular patients

PatientHistopathologyPrimary tumor locationAgeSurgeryCTHCSITotal dose
1MBPosterior cranial fossa3Non-radical surgeryYesNo
2MBPosterior cranial fossa4Radical surgeryYesYes36 Gy/craniospinal axis, 54 Gy/tumor bed boost
3MBPosterior cranial fossa9Non-radical surgeryYesYes35.1 Gy/craniospinal axis, 55.1 Gy/tumor boost
4MBPosterior cranial fossa10Non-radical surgeryYesYes35.1 Gy/craniospinal axis, 55.1 Gy/tumor boost
5MBPosterior cranial fossa22Non-radical surgeryYes36 Gy/craniospinal axis, 60 Gy/tumor boost
6MBPosterior cranial fossa30Radical surgeryNo
7MBPosterior cranial fossa31Radical surgeryYes36 Gy/craniospinal axis, 54 Gy/tumor bed boost
8MBPosterior cranial fossa46Non-radical surgeryYes30.6 Gy/craniospinal axis, 53.9 Gy/tumor boost
9AEFrontal lobe19Radical surgeryYes36 Gy/craniospinal axis, 60 Gy/tumor bed boost
10AEFrontal lobe34Radical surgeryYes36 Gy/craniospinal axis, 60 Gy/tumor bed boost
11PNETFrontal lobe32Non-radical surgeryYesYes36 Gy/craniospinal axis, 54 Gy/tumor boost
12AETemporal lobe22Non-radical surgeryYes36 Gy/craniospinal axis, 60 Gy/tumor boost
13MBPosterior cranial fossa33Radical surgeryYesYes36 Gy/craniospinal axis, 54 Gy/tumor bed boost
14MBPosterior cranial fossa20Radical surgeryYes36 Gy/craniospinal axis, 54 Gy/tumor bed boost

AE anaplastic ependymoma, CSI craniospinal irradiation, CTH chemotherapy, MB medulloblastoma, PNET primitive neuroectodermal tumor, RTH radiotherapy

Primary treatment in particular patients AE anaplastic ependymoma, CSI craniospinal irradiation, CTH chemotherapy, MB medulloblastoma, PNET primitive neuroectodermal tumor, RTH radiotherapy

Recurrence of the disease

Recurrence of the disease occurred after the median time of 16 months (range 3 to 78 months) after the end of primary treatment. In all patients, diagnosis of the recurrence was based on MRI. The most common location of the recurrent tumor was primary site. Recurrent tumor was located in posterior cranial fossa in postoperative bed in 5 patients; in 5, in frontal lobe (in one of them in postoperative bed); in 2, in temporal lobe (in postoperative bed in one); and in 2, close to the postoperative bed in parietal lobe and cribriform plate. Three patients were diagnosed with dissemination of the tumor (one in spinal canal), but all of them received chemotherapy afterwards and at the time of radiosurgery, no disease apart from the treated lesions was observed (MRI of craniospinal axis was performed to confirm that). One patient was treated for two lesions (both in the postoperative bed, close to each other, of 1.54 cc and 0.76 cc volume). The majority of patients (93%) were in good general condition at the time of diagnosis of the recurrence (ECOG 0 or 1), and 42% of them had no clinical symptoms of the recurrence. Headaches were the most commonly reported symptom (29%). In 5 cases (36%), resection of the recurrent tumor was performed. Six patients received systemic therapy. In two patients, conventional radiotherapy with fraction dose of 2 Gy to total dose of 20 (10 fractions) and 30 Gy (15 fractions), respectively, was delivered. In one of them, with AE, the surgical cavity after resection of the recurrent tumor was irradiated with 30 Gy. During the follow-up, a small lesion in the parietal region was found. Patient was referred to a neurosurgeon who did not decide to perform another surgery. Due to small size of the lesion (less than 2 cm), the interdisciplinary board decided to treat the patient with SRS. The other patient, with PNET, was diagnosed with recurrence of the tumor in the ethmoid and nasal cavity. Due to large volume of the recurrent tumor, the first radiotherapy was delivered with conventional fractionation. Very good response to the first radiotherapy (regression of the irradiated lesion) led to the decision to additionally perform SRS. Another two patients received CSI at the time of recurrence (they did not receive that treatment before) after which they were qualified to radiosurgical treatment.

Radiosurgery

All patients received SRS or SRT as part of the treatment of the recurrence (two after CSI, as a boost on the recurrence site). Time between CSI and SRS/SRT of recurrence ranged from 1.1 to 75.6 months (median 6.2 months). During SRS/SRT, all patients were immobilized with individualized thermoplastic masks covering head and shoulder region. Masks were fixed to the treatment couch during the treatment delivery in order to reduce patient’s motion. Treatment planning was done with the BrainLab software and pencil beam optimization algorithm was used. All patients were treated with conventional linear accelerators equipped with a micro-multileaf collimator. Radiation was delivered with conformal beam (10 patients) or intensity-modulated radiosurgery (IMRS; 4 patients) technique with 5 to 12 fields. The dose was normalized at the isocenter and planned to cover 98% of the target volume with 95% of the prescribed dose. Six to 20 MV photons were used. Twelve patients received a single dose of 6–15 Gy (median 14.5 Gy). One patient received three fractions of 5 Gy and one six fractions of 5 Gy. The youngest two patients (5 and 6 years old at the time of SRS) received short general anesthetic for the time of treatment delivery. In all cases, recurrence was diagnosed based on MRI and clinicians engaged in the treatment of patients were able to use MRI to aid treatment planning. In all patients, the first radiotherapy treatment plans were reviewed in order to evaluate doses delivered to critical structures. This data was taken into account during the second course of irradiation. In 13 of 14 patients (including the four after resection), a recurrent tumor was visible on MRI and gross tumor volume (GTV) was defined as the contrast-enhancing lesion in T1-weighted images. In one patient, total resection of the recurrent tumor was performed and irradiated region covered the postoperative bed. There was no margin added and the planning target volume (PTV) was in fact GTV except the one patient mentioned above. PTV ranged from 0.54 to 27.04 cc (median 1.36, mean 6.42). In case of hypofractionated stereotactic radiotherapy, the target volume definition did not differ from that used for single fraction treatment. Treatment of the recurrence in particular patients is presented in Table 2.
Table 2

Treatment of the recurrence in particular patients

PatientTime to recurrence (months)Location of recurrenceECOG at recurrenceSurg.CTHRT*TD RT (Gy)SRS/SRT TD (Gy)Treatment effectFollow-up (months)Last control status
110.1Temporal lobe, out-of-field of initial RT boost1Yes (3 types)Yes36 Gy on craniospinal axis + 54 Gy tumor boost10.0CR13.3Dead
26.2Frontal lobe, out-of-field of initial RT boost1Yes (1 type)15.0SD15.2Dead
331.4Frontal lobe, out-of-field of initial RT boost1Yes (4 types)15.0N/A3.8Dead
417.3Frontal lobe, out-of-field of initial RT boost1Yes (3 types)8.0N/A13.0Dead
528.5Posterior cranial fossa, in-field of initial RT boost014.0CR77.1Dead
610.5Posterior cranial fossa, in-field of initial RT boost1YesYes36 Gy on craniospinal axis + 54 Gy tumor boost10.0SD26.5Dead
73.4Posterior cranial fossa, in-field of initial RT boost012.0CR41.4Alive
816.0Frontal lobe, out-of-field of initial RT boost115.0SD7.7Dead
934.2Frontal lobe, in-field of initial RT boost0Yes15.0PD40.5Alive
1027.9Parietal lobe, close to the field of initial RT boost1YesYes30.0 in 2 Gy fractions15.0SD30.0Dead
114.9Cribriform plate, close to the field of initial RT boost2Yes (2 types)Yes20.0 in 2 Gy fractions6.0SD17.4Dead
1210.0Temporal lobe, in-field of initial RT boost0Yes15.0PD11.4Dead
138.9Posterior cranial fossa, in-field of initial RT boost0YesYes (1 type)15.0/3 fxPD2.9Dead
1477.7Posterior cranial fossa, in-field of initial RT boost030.0/6 fxCR6.7Alive

CR complete regression, CTH chemotherapy, ECOG performance status, fx fraction, N/A data not available, SD stable disease, SRS radiosurgery, PD progression of the disease, RT conventional radiotherapy, Surg. surgery, TD total dose

*RT—four patients received conventionally fractionated radiotherapy as part of the treatment of recurrence (two of them, who were not irradiated previously, CSI) before SRS/SRT

Treatment of the recurrence in particular patients CR complete regression, CTH chemotherapy, ECOG performance status, fx fraction, N/A data not available, SD stable disease, SRS radiosurgery, PD progression of the disease, RT conventional radiotherapy, Surg. surgery, TD total dose *RT—four patients received conventionally fractionated radiotherapy as part of the treatment of recurrence (two of them, who were not irradiated previously, CSI) before SRS/SRT After the radiosurgery, 12 patients were systematically followed up (2 did not come for planned checkup visit). Patients had checkup visits every 3 to 6 months during the first 2 years after the SRS/SRT and every 6 months during the next years. Imaging was performed with similar consistency. Additional visits or imaging was performed when patient presented symptoms of tumor progression. In all of them, treatment effect was assessed with diagnostic imaging (all patients had MRI and some of them CT but none of them had CT as a sole follow-up modality).

Statistical analysis

Statistica 12.0 was used for statistical analysis. The Kaplan-Meier method and log-rank test were used in statistical analysis. p value of less than 0.05 was considered statistically significant. Follow-up was calculated from the date of the end of radiosurgery/hypofractionated stereotactic radiotherapy of the recurrent tumor to the date of death or (in case of alive patients) last contact. Progression was defined as the occurrence of a new lesion or progression of the irradiated tumor based on MRI imaging, and the date of MRI was defined as the date of progression. Progression-free survival was defined as a period of time without tumor progression or death. Data on the date of death were obtained from the National Cancer Registry.

Results

Local control (stabilization or regression of the lesion) was achieved in 9 patients (75%)—in 4, complete regression, and in 5 patients, the size of the irradiated tumor was stable. Progression of the irradiated lesions was observed in 3 patients. Radiation-induced changes of surrounding healthy brain tissues (edema, vascular changes) were observed in all patients, but none of them developed radiation necrosis. The treatment was well tolerated and no serious adverse effects were observed. Eleven patients were given steroids during hospitalization for SRS/SRT as a prevention of brain edema. Among them, four needed continuation of this treatment afterwards. In seven patients, headaches and symptoms of brain edema were observed during first weeks after reirradiation. All of them received steroids and in majority of them (except two with progression of the disease after SRS), the symptoms subsided. No seizures correlated with SRS were observed, and patients who previously suffered from epilepsy did not require modification of their standard treatment. No anesthetic complications or infections were observed. The majority of patients had no deterioration in performance status (ECOG 0 or 1–82% during FU after SRS compared to 91% before SRS). During follow-up, eight patients had disease progression within or outside the irradiated region (overall disease progression rate was 67%, Fig. 1). Three patients had another surgery, five received systemic treatment, and four received radiotherapy. Fraction dose ranged from 2 to 6 Gy and total dose was within 9 to 18 Gy. One patient received 3 fractions of 3 Gy (total dose, TD 9 Gy), two 3 fractions of 6 Gy (TD 18 Gy), and one was irradiated with fraction dose of 2 Gy to TD of 18 Gy.
Fig. 1

Overall survival and progression-free survival

Overall survival and progression-free survival During the study period, eleven patients died. The follow-up for the 3 patients still alive was 6.7, 40.5, and 41.4 months, respectively. One- and 2-year overall survival (OS) was 70% and 39% (Fig. 1). Unfortunately, neither National Cancer Registry nor Regional Civil Registry offices provide with the information about the cause of death, and we decided not to call families of the patients due to ethical reasons. Patients in ECOG performance status of 0 at the time of diagnosis of the disease tended to have better 2-year OS compared to patients in ECOG performance status 1–68% vs. 14% (p = 0.057, Fig. 2). Patients in ECOG 0 at the time of diagnosis of the recurrence tended to have better OS compared to those in ECOG 1, but the difference was not statistically significant (p = 0.09, Fig. 3).
Fig. 2

Survival curves according to patients’ performance status at the time of diagnosis of the disease

Fig. 3

Survival curves according to patients’ performance status at the time of diagnosis of the recurrence

Survival curves according to patients’ performance status at the time of diagnosis of the disease Survival curves according to patients’ performance status at the time of diagnosis of the recurrence

Discussion

CNS reirradiation, especially in children, is rarely used due to concerns of its possible toxicity [10, 26–28]. It is not a standard treatment, but in patients with recurrent MB after multimodal therapy (surgery, CSI, CTH), there is a lack of established standards [16]. The results of recent studies on patients with recurrence who received various multidrug chemotherapies, high-dose chemotherapy with bone marrow transplantation combined with surgery, or other treatment options are still poor, and cure is rare [7–9, 16, 22, 23]. The number of publications concerning reirradiation after CSI is small, and the number of patients described in all the reports does not exceed 300 cases [12-25]. Studies on reirradiation of patients who received radiotherapy of cerebrospinal axis as the first-line treatment are shown in Table 3.
Table 3

Publications on reirradiation after craniospinal irradiation [10–23, 25]

StudyNumber of patientsDoses applied in salvage treatment5-year overall survivalToxicity of salvage treatment
Rao AD et al. [25]6718.6–70.1 Gy (median 53.1), median fd 1.8 GyMedian OS MB, 8.4 months; ependymoma, 20.5 months; whole group 5-year OS, 35%1 case of radionecrosis
Wetmore et al. [16]38Mean TD of 38 Gy (range 18–54 Gy)5-year OS, 55% ± 14%; 10-year OS, 33% ± 16% (from the date of recurrence)Increased incidence of necrosis
Bakst et al. [15]13TD 30 Gy, fd 1.5 Gy5-year OS 65% (from the date of recurrence), 12 patients received CTH; median OS 37 months1 case of asymptomatic, in-field necrosis
Saran et al. [17]14TD 30–40 Gy in 6–8 fractions5-year OS, 20%; median OS, 29 monthsNo toxicity.
Abe et al. [11]12Median peripheral TD 20 Gy (normalization on isodose 50%)2-year OS, 33% ± 14%; 3-year OS, 25% ± 13% (all patients received CTH after SRT, 5 + PBSCT); median OS, 19 months1 case of brainstem edema, 1 patient died due to toxicity of CTH
Massimino et al. [23]177 patients TD 20.2 Gy, fd 1.3 Gy, 3 patients TD 50 Gy10/17 received RT, all HD CTH ± PBSCT; for whole group: 5-year OS 20%, median OS 41 monthsNot reported for RT
Bauman et al. [10]14Not specified for MBMedian OS 11.5 monthsNo radiation necrosis
Chojnacka et al. [19]6TD 40 Gy, fd 2 GyMedian OS 17.5 months, 1 death during FU (83% alive)No grade 3–5 toxicity
Milker-Zabel et al. [20]20Mean TD 24 Gy (SRT) or 15 Gy (SRS)6-year OS, 35%; median OS, 73 monthsNo late toxicity
Patrice et al. [12]14Median min. TD 12 Gy2-year OS 45%, 13 patients received CTH; median OS 10 monthsNo radiation necrosis
Padovani et al. [22]5TD 28 Gy, fd 1.8 GyAll: concomitant temozolomide, 80% alive after mean FU of 25 monthsNo neurologic toxicity
Bugulione et al. [13]1TD 52.8 Gy, fd 1.2 Gy/twice a dayAlive after 18 monthsNo radiation necrosis
Keshavarzi et al. [18]1TD 14 Gy in 1 fractionAlive after 12 monthsNo toxicity
Privitera et al. [21]1TD 24 GyCTH + bevacizumab died with disease after 35 monthsNo radiation necrosis
Cieślak et al. [14]1TD 45 Gy, fd 1.8 GyAlive after 15 monthsNo toxicity

CTH chemotherapy, fd fraction dose, FU follow-up, HD high dose, min. minimum, OS overall survival, PBSCT peripheral blood stem cell transplantation, RT radiotherapy, SRS stereotactic radiosurgery, SRT stereotactic radiotherapy, TD total dose

Publications on reirradiation after craniospinal irradiation [10–23, 25] CTH chemotherapy, fd fraction dose, FU follow-up, HD high dose, min. minimum, OS overall survival, PBSCT peripheral blood stem cell transplantation, RT radiotherapy, SRS stereotactic radiosurgery, SRT stereotactic radiotherapy, TD total dose The group of patients treated in our center is small, although comparable to the groups described in the literature. Some patients presented in publications concerning reirradiation of CNS received conventional radiotherapy, and the doses used were within the range of 18 to 70 Gy (1.2–2.0 Gy per fraction). Patients who received radiosurgery or hypofractionated stereotactic radiotherapy were treated with the total dose of 12–24 Gy (radiosurgery) to 24–40 Gy (stereotactic radiotherapy) [12-23]. Total doses used in our hospital were similar to those reported in the literature and were within the range of 6 to 30 Gy (median 15 Gy). With introduction of new WHO Classification of Central Nervous System Tumors in 2017, primitive neuroectodermal tumors are no longer recognized [29]. The patient with PNET in our series was diagnosed in 2005 and died in 2008, and we were not able to reevaluate histopathologic samples according to the new system. As optimal integration of this newly developed system into clinical care is still a matter of active debate and the purpose of the study was the evaluation of efficacy and toxicity of reirradiation in patients who previously underwent craniospinal irradiation, we included that patient into analysis. Meta-analysis concerning reradiation of patients with recurrent glial tumors showed that in case of irradiation to the normalized total dose of less than 100 Gy, the risk of radiation necrosis of the brain is very low [30]. The results of radiobiological research on cells of the nervous system suggested that partial repair of radiation damage can occur in the central nervous system. Publications concerning neurotoxicity indicate that factors such as maximum tumor diameter, general condition, dose delivered to the tumor, or use of chemotherapy have an effect on its occurrence [10, 30]. These data suggest that reirradiation may be considered in carefully selected patients without increased risk of complications. The published reports describe lack or low toxicity of reirradiation and good tolerance of the treatment itself [11–22, 26–28]. Necrosis in the irradiated field, observed by Bakst, is in fact not an undesirable event if area of the necrosis is within the tumor and does not encompass the uninvolved brain [15]. Nevertheless, no patient in our series developed radiation necrosis after radiosurgery, which is consistent with observations of other researches. Results of our study suggesting that patients in better performance status at the time of diagnosis of the disease tended to have better overall survival could be a valuable information of possible outcome. In the available literature, 5-year OS of patients who underwent reirradiation after CSI ranged from 20 to 65% and median OS is within the range of 10 to 73 months [11-23]. These data are, however, difficult to interpret because some researchers reported their results in relation to the date of recurrence and part in relation to the date of salvage therapy. The described treatment regimens vary widely, like in our series, and some of the patients were given concurrent or adjuvant systemic therapy. The results of our study, i.e., 2-year OS of 39% in comparison to the reported 2-year OS of approximately 25%, showed that some patients might benefit from reirradiation [23]. Also, Dunkel et al. reported an improvement in local control when radiotherapy was added to the treatment of the recurrence [8]. Similar observations could be noticed in our series—more than 70% of patients achieved local control in the irradiated volume. The patients with MB, especially children, are more likely to receive chemotherapy than patients with ependymoma, and the biology of those two tumors differs. What is more, pediatric oncologists are more willing to give another course of chemotherapy than to refer second radiotherapy. As a result, some of the patients in our series received even up to 3 different types of systemic treatment before salvage radiotherapy. Undoubtedly, with more aggressive and less responsive to the treatment disease, even with very precise SRS, the results will be poor. Whether gaining local control with radiosurgery implemented first and chemotherapy used as an adjuvant treatment would give better results than irradiation after exhaustion of possibilities of systemic treatment remains an open question. There are several limitations of our study: heterogeneous histopathological diagnoses (MB, AE), lack of histopathologic and molecular feature description, and heterogeneous patient population (children and adults) who received SRS/SRT during the long period of 13 years. Furthermore, the recommendation of treatment of anaplastic ependymoma changed in the last years and CSI is no longer standard of treatment in those patients.

Conclusions

Stereotactic radiosurgery or hypofractionated stereotactic radiotherapy is an effective treatment method of the local recurrence after CSI. It allows for achieving good local response and can be performed safely in heavily pre-treated patients.
  30 in total

1.  Reirradiation for recurrent medulloblastoma.

Authors:  Richard L Bakst; Ira J Dunkel; Stephen Gilheeney; Yasmin Khakoo; Oren Becher; Mark M Souweidane; Suzanne L Wolden
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2011-04-14       Impact factor: 6.860

Review 2.  Shedding light on adult medulloblastoma: current management and opportunities for advances.

Authors:  Alba A Brandes; Enrico Franceschi
Journal:  Am Soc Clin Oncol Educ Book       Date:  2014

3.  Efficacy of high-dose chemotherapy and autologous stem cell transplantation in patients with relapsed medulloblastoma: a report on the Korean Society for Pediatric Neuro-Oncology (KSPNO)-S-053 study.

Authors:  Jun Eun Park; Joseph Kang; Keon Hee Yoo; Ki Woong Sung; Hong Hoe Koo; Do Hoon Lim; Hyung Jin Shin; Hyoung Jin Kang; Kyung Duk Park; Hee Young Shin; Il Han Kim; Byung-Kyu Cho; Ho Joon Im; Jong Jin Seo; Hyeon Jin Park; Byung-Kiu Park; Hyo Seop Ahn
Journal:  J Korean Med Sci       Date:  2010-07-21       Impact factor: 2.153

4.  Reirradiation for Recurrent Pediatric Central Nervous System Malignancies: A Multi-institutional Review.

Authors:  Avani D Rao; Arif S Rashid; Qinyu Chen; Rosangela C Villar; Daria Kobyzeva; Kristina Nilsson; Karin Dieckmann; Alexey Nechesnyuk; Ralph Ermoian; Sara Alcorn; Shannon M MacDonald; Matthew M Ladra; Eric C Ford; Brian A Winey; Maria Luisa S Figueiredo; Michael J Chen; Stephanie A Terezakis
Journal:  Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys       Date:  2017-07-29       Impact factor: 7.038

5.  Very late relapse of medulloblastoma.

Authors:  Ewa Cieślak; Lucyna Kepka; Jacek Fijuth; Andrzej Marchel; Halina Kroh
Journal:  Folia Neuropathol       Date:  2004       Impact factor: 2.038

6.  Reirradiation of recurrent medulloblastoma: does clinical benefit outweigh risk for toxicity?

Authors:  Cynthia Wetmore; Danielle Herington; Tong Lin; Arzu Onar-Thomas; Amar Gajjar; Thomas E Merchant
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2014-07-30       Impact factor: 6.860

7.  Results of three-dimensional stereotactically-guided radiotherapy in recurrent medulloblastoma.

Authors:  Stefanie Milker-Zabel; Angelika Zabel; Christoph Thilmann; Ivan Zuna; Angelika Hoess; Michael Wannenmacher; Jürgen Debus
Journal:  J Neurooncol       Date:  2002-12       Impact factor: 4.130

8.  MR spectroscopic evaluation of brain tissue damage after treatment for pediatric brain tumors.

Authors:  Sławomir Blamek; Dawid Larysz; Kornelia Ficek; Maria Sokół; Leszek Miszczyk; Rafał Tarnawski
Journal:  Acta Neurochir Suppl       Date:  2010

9.  Hyperfractionated versus conventional radiotherapy followed by chemotherapy in standard-risk medulloblastoma: results from the randomized multicenter HIT-SIOP PNET 4 trial.

Authors:  Birgitta Lannering; Stefan Rutkowski; Francois Doz; Barry Pizer; Göran Gustafsson; Aurora Navajas; Maura Massimino; Roel Reddingius; Martin Benesch; Christian Carrie; Roger Taylor; Lorenza Gandola; Thomas Björk-Eriksson; Jordi Giralt; Foppe Oldenburger; Torsten Pietsch; Dominique Figarella-Branger; Keith Robson; Marco Forni; Steven C Clifford; Monica Warmuth-Metz; Katja von Hoff; Andreas Faldum; Véronique Mosseri; Rolf Kortmann
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2012-07-30       Impact factor: 44.544

10.  Initial clinical experience with frameless optically guided stereotactic radiosurgery/radiotherapy in pediatric patients.

Authors:  Sassan Keshavarzi; Hal Meltzer; Sharona Ben-Haim; Charles Benjamin Newman; Joshua D Lawson; Michael L Levy; Kevin Murphy
Journal:  Childs Nerv Syst       Date:  2009-03-27       Impact factor: 1.475

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Journal:  In Vivo       Date:  2020 May-Jun       Impact factor: 2.155

2.  Re-irradiation for children with recurrent medulloblastoma in Toronto, Canada: a 20-year experience.

Authors:  Derek S Tsang; Nasim Sarhan; Vijay Ramaswamy; Liana Nobre; Ryan Yee; Michael D Taylor; Cynthia Hawkins; Ute Bartels; Annie Huang; Uri Tabori; David C Hodgson; Eric Bouffet; Normand Laperriere
Journal:  J Neurooncol       Date:  2019-08-29       Impact factor: 4.130

Review 3.  Relapsed Medulloblastoma in Pre-Irradiated Patients: Current Practice for Diagnostics and Treatment.

Authors:  Rebecca M Hill; Sabine L A Plasschaert; Beate Timmermann; Christelle Dufour; Kristian Aquilina; Shivaram Avula; Laura Donovan; Maarten Lequin; Torsten Pietsch; Ulrich Thomale; Stephan Tippelt; Pieter Wesseling; Stefan Rutkowski; Steven C Clifford; Stefan M Pfister; Simon Bailey; Gudrun Fleischhack
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2021-12-28       Impact factor: 6.575

4.  Intramedullary Spinal Cord Lesions: A Single-Center Experience.

Authors:  Vincent Jecko; Paul Roblot; Lorenzo Mongardi; Morgan Ollivier; Natalia Delgado Piccoli; Thomas Charleux; Thomas Wavasseur; Edouard Gimbert; Dominique Liguoro; Guillaume Chotard; Jean-Rodolphe Vignes
Journal:  Neurospine       Date:  2022-03-31

5.  Two-Session Radiosurgery for Large Primary Tumors Affecting the Brain.

Authors:  Eduardo E Lovo; Kaory C Barahona; Fidel Campos; Victor Caceros; Carlos Tobar; William A Reyes
Journal:  Cureus       Date:  2020-04-27

6.  Polish Multi-Institutional Study of Children with Ependymoma-Clinical Practice Outcomes in the Light of Prospective Trials.

Authors:  Aleksandra Napieralska; Agnieszka Mizia-Malarz; Weronika Stolpa; Ewa Pawłowska; Małgorzata A Krawczyk; Katarzyna Konat-Bąska; Aneta Kaczorowska; Arkadiusz Brąszewski; Maciej Harat
Journal:  Diagnostics (Basel)       Date:  2021-12-14
  6 in total

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