| Literature DB >> 34298664 |
Peter Hau1,2, Didier Frappaz3, Elizabeth Hovey4,5, Martin G McCabe6, Kristian W Pajtler7,8, Benedikt Wiestler9, Clemens Seidel10, Stephanie E Combs11, Linda Dirven12,13, Martin Klein14,15, Antoinette Anazodo5,16,17, Elke Hattingen18, Silvia Hofer19, Stefan M Pfister7,8, Claus Zimmer9, Rolf-Dieter Kortmann10, Marie-Pierre Sunyach20, Ronan Tanguy20, Rachel Effeney21, Andreas von Deimling22,23, Felix Sahm22,23, Stefan Rutkowski24, Anna S Berghoff25, Enrico Franceschi26, Estela Pineda27, Dagmar Beier28, Ellen Peeters29, Thierry Gorlia29, Maureen Vanlancker29, Jacoline E C Bromberg30, Julien Gautier31, David S Ziegler16,17,32, Matthias Preusser25, Wolfgang Wick33,34, Michael Weller19.
Abstract
Medulloblastoma is a rare brain malignancy. Patients after puberty are rare and bear an intermediate prognosis. Standard treatment consists of maximal resection plus radio-chemotherapy. Treatment toxicity is high and produces disabling long-term side effects. The sonic hedgehog (SHH) subgroup is highly overrepresented in the post-pubertal and adult population and can be targeted by smoothened (SMO) inhibitors. No practice-changing prospective randomized data have been generated in adults. The EORTC 1634-BTG/NOA-23 trial will randomize patients between standard-dose vs. reduced-dosed craniospinal radiotherapy and SHH-subgroup patients between the SMO inhibitor sonidegib (OdomzoTM, Sun Pharmaceuticals Industries, Inc., New York, USA) in addition to standard radio-chemotherapy vs. standard radio-chemotherapy alone to improve outcomes in view of decreased radiotherapy-related toxicity and increased efficacy. We will further investigate tumor tissue, blood, and cerebrospinal fluid as well as magnetic resonance imaging and radiotherapy plans to generate information that helps to further improve treatment outcomes. Given that treatment side effects typically occur late, long-term follow-up will monitor classic side effects of therapy, but also health-related quality of life, cognition, social and professional outcome, and reproduction and fertility. In summary, we will generate unprecedented data that will be translated into treatment changes in post-pubertal patients with medulloblastoma and will help to design future clinical trials.Entities:
Keywords: adult; cerebrospinal fluid; chemotherapy; clinical trial; magnetic resonance imaging; medulloblastoma; radiotherapy; randomized; subgrouping; targeted therapy
Year: 2021 PMID: 34298664 DOI: 10.3390/cancers13143451
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639