Adjuvant chemotherapy in average-risk adult medulloblastoma patients improves survival: a long term study

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 diseas...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMC cancer 2020-08, Vol.20 (1), p.755-6, Article 755
Hauptverfasser: Franceschi, E., Minichillo, S., Mura, A., Tosoni, A., Mascarin, M., Tomasello, C., Bartolini, S., Brandes, A. A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung: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. Methods We analyzed 48 average-risk patients according to Chang classification diagnosed from 1988 to 2016. Results Median age was 29 years (range 16-61). Based on histological subtypes, 15 patients (31.3%) had classic, 15 patients (31.3%) had desmoplastic, 5 patients (10.4%) had extensive nodularity and 2 patients (4.2%) had large cells/anaplastic medulloblastoma. Twenty-four patients (50%) received adjuvant radiotherapy alone and 24 (50%) received radiotherapy and chemotherapy. After a median follow-up of 12.5 years, we found that chemotherapyincreases progression-free survival (PFS-15 82.3 +/- 8.0% in patients treated with radiotherapy and chemotherapyvs. 38.5% +/- 13.0% in patients treated with radiotherapy alonep = 0.05) and overall survival (OS-15 89.3% +/- 7.2% vs. 52.0% +/- 13.1%,p = 0.02). Among patients receiving chemotherapy, the reported grade >= 3 adverse events were: 9 cases of neutropenia (6 cases of G3 neutropenia [25%] and 3 cases of G4 neutropenia [13%]), 1 case of G3 thrombocytopenia (4%) and 2 cases of G3 nausea (8%). Conclusions Our study with a long follow up period suggests that adding adjuvant chemotherapy to radiotherapy might improve PFS and OS in average-risk adult medulloblastoma patients.
ISSN:1471-2407
1471-2407
DOI:10.1186/s12885-020-07237-x