| Literature DB >> 35814457 |
Lara Chavaz1,2, Geert O Janssens3,4, Stephanie Bolle5, Henry Mandeville6, Monica Ramos-Albiac7, Karen Van Beek8, Helen Benghiat9, Bianca Hoeben3,4, Andres Morales La Madrid10, Clemens Seidel11, Rolf-Dieter Kortmann11, Darren Hargrave12, Lorenza Gandola13, Emilia Pecori13, Dannis G van Vuurden4,14, Veronica Biassoni15, Maura Massimino15, Christof M Kramm16, Andre O von Bueren1,2.
Abstract
Purpose: The aim of this study is to investigate the spectrum of neurological triad improvement in patients with diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) treated by re-irradiation (re-RT) at first progression.Entities:
Keywords: adolescent; child; diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG); radiotherapy; re-irradiation (re-RT)
Year: 2022 PMID: 35814457 PMCID: PMC9259094 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2022.926196
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 5.738
Figure 1Study diagram and analyses performed.
Figure 2DIPG triad symptom evolution after re-RT.
Demographic and disease characteristics of patients grouped according to the clinical response to re-RT.
| Characteristics | Responding ( | Non-responding ( | All patients ( | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||||||||||
| Gender | ||||||||||||||
| Male | 11 | 46% | 3 | 43% | 14 | 45% | ||||||||
| Female | 13 | 54% | 4 | 57% | 17 | 56% | ||||||||
| Age (years) | ||||||||||||||
| Median | 8 | 6 | 6 | |||||||||||
| Range | 3 to 16 | 2 to 13 | 2 to 16 | |||||||||||
| ≤6 yo | 11 | 46% | 5 | 71% | 16 | 52% | ||||||||
| >6 yo | 13 | 54% | 2 | 29% | 15 | 48% | ||||||||
| PFS (days) | ||||||||||||||
| Median | 245,5 | 236 | 245 | |||||||||||
| Range | 112 to 374 | 168 to 952 | 112 to 952 | |||||||||||
| Interval RT to re-RT (days) | ||||||||||||||
| Median | 225.5 | 209 | 217 | |||||||||||
| Range | 103 to 363 | 112 to 930 | 103 to 930 | |||||||||||
| Survival time (days) | ||||||||||||||
| Median | 150 | 90 | 146 | |||||||||||
| Range | 67 to 325 | 21 to 297 | 21 to 325 | |||||||||||
|
| ||||||||||||||
| Second line treatment | ||||||||||||||
| RT | 12 | 50% | 4 | 43% | 16 | 52% | ||||||||
| RT + chemo | 12 | 50% | 3 | 57% | 15 | 48% | ||||||||
| re-RT dose given (Gy) | ||||||||||||||
| Median | 20 | 19,8 | 20 | |||||||||||
| Range | 18 to 30 | 18 to 30 | 18 to 30 | |||||||||||
| < 20 Gy | 10 | 42% | 4 | 57% | 14 | 45% | ||||||||
| ≥ 20 Gy | 14 | 58% | 3 | 43% | 17 | 55% | ||||||||
PFS, progression-free survival. yo, years old. Interval RT to re-RT, interval of time from the last day of RT and the first day of re-RT. Survival time, survival from start of re-RT to death/last follow-up. Chemo, chemotherapy (part of the second-line treatment in addition to re-RT: nimotuzumab–vinorelbine based, n = 9; etoposide, n = 1; sirolimus, n = 2; valproic acid + celecoxib, n = 1; valproic acid + temsirolimus + irinotecan, n = 1; bevacizumab, n = 1).
Figure 3Kaplan–Meier curves with survival from the start of second-line treatment for responding (n = 24, in blue) and non-responding (n = 7, in purple) patients (log-rank test, p-value = 0.871). Cumulative proportion surviving at the end of the interval by a step of 50 days between the two groups.
Global clinical benefits following re-irradiation (re-RT) of all patients (n = 31; Mann–Whitney U test p-value = 0.671) and the detailed clinical benefits of well-documented patients (n = 25) grouped according to the re-RT dose given (<20 Gy versus ≥20 Gy).
| Re-RT dose given (Gy) Clinical benefits | < 20 ( | ≥ 20 ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Responding | 10 | 71% | 14 | 82% | |
| Non-responding | 4 | 29% | 3 | 18% | |
| < 20 ( | ≥ 20 ( | ||||
|
| |||||
| Cranial nerve | 7 | 4 | |||
| Long tract | 6 | 4 | |||
| Cerebellar | 3 | 8 | |||
| Fatigue | 1 | 5 | |||
| Headaches | 2 | 3 |
A difference appears to exist (23% versus 67%, chi-square p-value = 0.028) in improvement of cerebellar signs between the two groups (<20 Gy versus ≥20 Gy).