Risk-adapted craniospinal radiotherapy followed by high-dose chemotherapy and stem-cell rescue in children with newly diagnosed medulloblastoma (St Jude Medulloblastoma-96): long-term results from a prospective, multicentre trial

Current treatment for medulloblastoma, which includes postoperative radiotherapy and 1 year of chemotherapy, does not cure many children with high-risk disease. We aimed to investigate the effectiveness of risk-adapted radiotherapy followed by a shortened period of dose-intense chemotherapy in child...

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Veröffentlicht in:The lancet oncology 2006-10, Vol.7 (10), p.813-820
Hauptverfasser: Gajjar, Amar, Chintagumpala, Murali, Ashley, David, Kellie, Stewart, Kun, Larry E, Merchant, Thomas E, Woo, Shaio, Wheeler, Greg, Ahern, Valerie, Krasin, Matthew J, Fouladi, Maryam, Broniscer, Alberto, Krance, Robert, Hale, Gregory A, Stewart, Clinton F, Dauser, Robert, Sanford, Robert A, Fuller, Christine, Lau, Ching, Boyett, James M, Wallace, Dana, Gilbertson, Richard J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Current treatment for medulloblastoma, which includes postoperative radiotherapy and 1 year of chemotherapy, does not cure many children with high-risk disease. We aimed to investigate the effectiveness of risk-adapted radiotherapy followed by a shortened period of dose-intense chemotherapy in children with medulloblastoma. After resection, patients were classified as having average-risk medulloblastoma (≤1·5 cm 2 residual tumour and no metastatic disease) or high-risk medulloblastoma (>1·5 cm 2 residual disease or metastatic disease localised to neuraxis) medulloblastoma. All patients received risk-adapted craniospinal radiotherapy (23·4 Gy for average-risk disease and 36·0–39·6 Gy for high-risk disease) followed by four cycles of cyclophosphamide-based, dose-intensive chemotherapy. Patients were assessed regularly for disease status and treatment side-effects. The primary endpoint was 5-year event-free survival; we also measured overall survival. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00003211. Of 134 children with medulloblastoma who underwent treatment (86 average-risk, 48 high-risk), 119 (89%) completed the planned protocol. No treatment-related deaths occurred. 5-year overall survival was 85% (95% CI 75–94) in patients in the average-risk group and 70% (54–84) in those in the high-risk group (p=0·04); 5-year event-free survival was 83% (73–93) and 70% (55–85), respectively (p=0·046). For the 116 patients whose histology was reviewed centrally, histological subtype correlated with 5-year event-free survival (p=0·04): 84% (74–95) for classic histology, 77% (49–100) for desmoplastic tumours, and 57% (33–80) for large-cell anaplastic tumours. Risk-adapted radiotherapy followed by a shortened schedule of dose-intensive chemotherapy can be used to improve the outcome of patients with high-risk medulloblastoma.
ISSN:1470-2045
1474-5488
DOI:10.1016/S1470-2045(06)70867-1