Literature DB >> 9126900

Hydroxyurea for treatment of unresectable and recurrent meningiomas. II. Decrease in the size of meningiomas in patients treated with hydroxyurea.

U M Schrell1, M G Rittig, M Anders, U H Koch, R Marschalek, F Kiesewetter, R Fahlbusch.   

Abstract

In this paper the authors present the first evidence that meningiomas respond to treatment with hydroxyurea. Hydroxyurea was administered as an adjunct chemotherapeutic treatment in patients with recurrent and unresectable meningiomas. Hydroxyurea was used because experimental data demonstrated that it inhibits growth of cultured human meningioma cells and meningioma transplants in nude mice by inducing apoptosis. The authors therefore treated four selected patients with hydroxyurea. All patients had undergone multiple gross resections and all except one received radiotherapy. Three patients with recurrent Grade I meningiomas assessed according to World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines received hydroxyurea because of an increased tumor growth rate, documented by magnetic resonance (MR) imaging, within a 6- or 12-month interval. A fourth patient with a malignant meningioma (WHO Grade III) began a course of treatment with hydroxyurea immediately after his sixth palliative operation without waiting for another relapse to be demonstrated on MR imaging. Because of their location and invasive growth behavior none of the meningiomas could have been removed completely by surgical intervention. All patients received hydroxyurea at a dosage level of 1000 to 1500 mg/day (approximately 20 mg/kg/day). In a man with a large sphenoid wing meningioma invading the right cavernous sinus and the temporal base, the intracranial tumor mass was reduced by 60% during 6 months of treatment. A woman with a large ball-shaped meningioma of the right sphenoid wing invading the cavernous sinus exhibited a 74% decrease of the initial tumor volume in 10 months of treatment with oral hydroxyurea. Serial MR images obtained monthly revealed that the process of size reduction was continuous and proportionate. The shrinkage of the tumor was accompanied by a complete remission of symptomatic trigeminal neuralgia after 2 months and by improved abducent paresis after 5 months. The third patient had a slowly growing meningioma that exhibited a 15% reduction in mass when reassessed after 5 months of hydroxyurea treatment. The fourth patient with the malignant meningioma in the left cerebellopontine angle has had no recurrence for 24 months. Long-term treatment with hydroxyurea may result in full remission of tumors in meningioma patients. The preliminary data indicate that hydroxyurea provides true medical treatment in patients with unresectable and recurrent meningiomas, replacing palliative surgery and radiotherapy in the management of this disease.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9126900     DOI: 10.3171/jns.1997.86.5.0840

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosurg        ISSN: 0022-3085            Impact factor:   5.115


  51 in total

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Authors:  David A Reardon; Andrew D Norden; Annick Desjardins; James J Vredenburgh; James E Herndon; April Coan; John H Sampson; Sridharan Gururangan; Katherine B Peters; Roger E McLendon; Julie A Norfleet; Eric S Lipp; Jan Drappatz; Patrick Y Wen; Henry S Friedman
Journal:  J Neurooncol       Date:  2011-09-22       Impact factor: 4.130

2.  Non-resectable slow-growing meningiomas treated by hydroxyurea.

Authors:  David Loven; Ruth Hardoff; Zvi Bar Sever; Adam P Steinmetz; Michael Gornish; Zvi H Rappaport; Eyal Fenig; Zvi Ram; Aaron Sulkes
Journal:  J Neurooncol       Date:  2004 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 4.130

Review 3.  Update on meningiomas.

Authors:  Santosh Saraf; Bridget J McCarthy; J Lee Villano
Journal:  Oncologist       Date:  2011-10-25

4.  Bevacizumab therapy for adults with recurrent/progressive meningioma: a retrospective series.

Authors:  Emil Lou; Ashley L Sumrall; Scott Turner; Katherine B Peters; Annick Desjardins; James J Vredenburgh; Roger E McLendon; James E Herndon; Frances McSherry; Julie Norfleet; Henry S Friedman; David A Reardon
Journal:  J Neurooncol       Date:  2012-04-26       Impact factor: 4.130

Review 5.  New prospects for management and treatment of inoperable and recurrent skull base meningiomas.

Authors:  Mahlon D Johnson; Burak Sade; Michael T Milano; Joung H Lee; Steven A Toms
Journal:  J Neurooncol       Date:  2007-07-12       Impact factor: 4.130

6.  Multiplatform profiling of meningioma provides molecular insight and prioritization of drug targets for rational clinical trial design.

Authors:  Richard G Everson; Yuuri Hashimoto; Jacob L Freeman; Tiffany R Hodges; Jason Huse; Shouhao Zhou; Joanne Xiu; David Spetzler; Nader Sanai; Lyndon Kim; Santosh Kesari; Andrew Brenner; Franco De Monte; Amy Heimberger; Shaan M Raza
Journal:  J Neurooncol       Date:  2018-05-30       Impact factor: 4.130

Review 7.  Historical benchmarks for medical therapy trials in surgery- and radiation-refractory meningioma: a RANO review.

Authors:  Thomas Kaley; Igor Barani; Marc Chamberlain; Michael McDermott; Katherine Panageas; Jeffrey Raizer; Leland Rogers; David Schiff; Michael Vogelbaum; Damien Weber; Patrick Wen
Journal:  Neuro Oncol       Date:  2014-02-04       Impact factor: 12.300

8.  Extreme drug resistance in primary brain tumors: in vitro analysis of 64 resection specimens.

Authors:  Raymond I Haroun; Richard E Clatterbuck; M Christopher Gibbons; Peter C Burger; Ricardo Parker; John P Fruehauf; Henry Brem
Journal:  J Neurooncol       Date:  2002-06       Impact factor: 4.130

9.  Re-evaluation of cytostatic therapies for meningiomas in vitro.

Authors:  Annette Wilisch-Neumann; Doreen Pachow; Maren Wallesch; Astrid Petermann; Frank D Böhmer; Elmar Kirches; Christian Mawrin
Journal:  J Cancer Res Clin Oncol       Date:  2014-05-11       Impact factor: 4.553

10.  Phase II study of imatinib mesylate for recurrent meningiomas (North American Brain Tumor Consortium study 01-08).

Authors:  Patrick Y Wen; W K Alfred Yung; Kathleen R Lamborn; Andrew D Norden; Timothy F Cloughesy; Lauren E Abrey; Howard A Fine; Susan M Chang; H Ian Robins; Karen Fink; Lisa M Deangelis; Minesh Mehta; Emmanuelle Di Tomaso; Jan Drappatz; Santosh Kesari; Keith L Ligon; Ken Aldape; Rakesh K Jain; Charles D Stiles; Merrill J Egorin; Michael D Prados
Journal:  Neuro Oncol       Date:  2009-12       Impact factor: 12.300

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