| Literature DB >> 32787805 |
E Franceschi1, S Minichillo2, A Mura2, A Tosoni2, M Mascarin3, C Tomasello4, S Bartolini2, A A Brandes2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Medulloblastoma is extremely rare in adults. The role of chemotherapy for average-risk adult patients remains controversial. Surgery and radiotherapy provide a significant disease control and a good prognosis, but about 25% of average-risk patients have a relapse and die because of disease progression. No data in average-risk adult patients are available to compareradiotherapy alone and radiotherapyfollowed byadjuvant chemotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: Average-risk; Chemotherapy; Medulloblastoma; Survival
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32787805 PMCID: PMC7425050 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-020-07237-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Patients’ characteristics
| Chemotherapy | No Chemotherapy | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| N | 24 | 24 | 48 |
| Mean Age | 29 (range: 16-61) | 31 (range: 16-57) | 30 (range: 16-61) |
| M/F | 13/11 | 13/11 | 26/22 |
| Histology | |||
| - Classic | 7 (29.2%) | 8 (33.3%) | 15 (31.3%) |
| - Desmoplastic | 6 (25.0%) | 9 (37.5%) | 15 (31.3%) |
| - Extensive Nodularity | 3 (12.5%) | 2 (8.3%) | 5 (10.4%) |
| - LCA | 1 (4.2%) | 1 (4.2%) | 2 (4.2%) |
| - Unknown | 7 (29.2%) | 4 (16.7%) | 11 (22.9%) |
PFS and OS rates at 5, 10, 15, 20 years between patients treated with RT + CT and RT alone
| RT+CT | RT | |
|---|---|---|
| 86.9% ± 7.1% | 87.3% ± 6.9% | |
| 82.3% ± 8.0% | 46.2% ± 13.1% | |
| 82.3% ± 8.0% | 38.5% ± 13.0% | |
| 82.3% ± 8.0% | 38.5% ± 13.0% | |
| 95.2% ± 4.6% | 95.7% ± 4.3% | |
| 89.3% ± 7.2% | 74.1% ± 10.3% | |
| 89.3% ± 7.2% | 52.0% ± 13.1% | |
| 89.3% ± 7.2% | 41.6% ± 14.0% |
Fig. 1PFS according to treatment
Fig. 2OS according to treatment
Main studies about the treatment of average risk medulloblastoma patients
| Study | Therapy | Results |
|---|---|---|
| Packer et al | reduced-dose craniospinal radiation therapy (23.4 Gy) and 55.8 Gy of local radiation therapy plus concomitant vincristine chemotherapy and adjuvant lomustine, vincristine, and cisplatin chemotherapy | PFS 86% ± 4% at 3 years and 79% ± 7% at 5 years |
| Padovani et al | radiotherapy vs radio + chemotherapy | standard-risk disease could be treated with radiochemotherapy, reducing doses of RT |
| Greenberg et al | radiotherapy + POG protocol/Packer protocol | adults on POG protocol seemed to have less nonhematologic toxicity; on the Packer protocol appeared to have shorter median survival and greater toxicity than did children |
| Friedrich et al | radiotherapy + chemotherapy with lomustine, vincristine and cisplatin | EFS4 and OS4 were 68% ± 7% and 89% ± 5%. Peripheral neuropathy (74%) and haematotoxicity (55%) during maintenance chemotherapy appear to be more common in adults than in children |
| Beier et al (NOA-07) | craniospinal irradiation with vincristine, followed by 8 cycles of cisplatin, lomustine, and vincristine | radio-polychemotherapy did lead to considerable toxicity and a high amount of dose reductions |
| Kortmann et al | ARM 1: neoadjuvant chemotherapy with ifosfamide, etoposide, intravenous high-dose methotrexate, cisplatin, and cytarabine before radiotherapy ARM 2: immediate postoperative radiotherapy, with concomitant vincristine followed by 8 cycles of maintenance chemotherapy consisting of cisplatin, CCNU, and vincristine | maintenance chemotherapy would seem to be more effective in low-risk medulloblastoma Neoadjuvant chemotherapy was accompanied by increased myelotoxicity of the subsequent radiotherapy |