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Title: | Risk-adapted therapy for young children with medulloblastoma (SJYC07): therapeutic and molecular outcomes from a multicentre, phase 2 trial | Authors: | Pfister, S. M. Orr, B. A. Korbel, J. O. Jones, D. T. W. Sharma, T. Lichter, P. Kool, M. Korshunov, A. Northcott, P. A. Gilbertson, R. J. Sanders, R. P. Onar-Thomas, A. Ellison, D. W. Gajjar, A. Robinson, G. W. Rudneva, V. A. Buchhalter, I. Billups, C. A. Waszak, S. M. Smith, K. S. Bowers, D. C. Bendel, A. Fisher, P. G. Partap, S. Crawford, J. R. Hassall, T. Indelicato, D. J. Boop, F. Klimo, P. Sabin, N. D. Patay, Z. Merchant, T. E. Stewart, C. F. |
Issue Date: | 2018 | Source: | 19, (6), 2018, p. 768-784 | Pages: | 768-784 | Journal: | The Lancet Oncology | Abstract: | Background: Young children with medulloblastoma have a poor overall survival compared with older children, due to use of radiation-sparing therapy in young children. Radiotherapy is omitted or reduced in these young patients to spare them from debilitating long-term side-effects. We aimed to estimate event-free survival and define the molecular characteristics associated with progression-free survival in young patients with medulloblastoma using a risk-stratified treatment strategy designed to defer, reduce, or delay radiation exposure. Methods: In this multicentre, phase 2 trial, we enrolled children younger than 3 years with newly diagnosed medulloblastoma at six centres in the USA and Australia. Children aged 3–5 years with newly diagnosed, non-metastatic medulloblastoma without any high-risk features were also eligible. Eligible patients were required to start therapy within 31 days from definitive surgery, had a Lansky performance score of at least 30, and did not receive previous radiotherapy or chemotherapy. Patients were stratified postoperatively by clinical and histological criteria into low-risk, intermediate-risk, and high-risk treatment groups. All patients received identical induction chemotherapy (methotrexate, vincristine, cisplatin, and cyclophosphamide), with high-risk patients also receiving an additional five doses of vinblastine. Induction was followed by risk-adapted consolidation therapy: low-risk patients received cyclophosphamide (1500 mg/m2 on day 1), etoposide (100 mg/m2 on days 1 and 2), and carboplatin (area under the curve 5 mg/mL per min on day 2) for two 4-week cycles; intermediate-risk patients received focal radiation therapy (54 Gy with a clinical target volume of 5 mm over 6 weeks) to the tumour bed; and high-risk patients received chemotherapy with targeted intravenous topotecan (area under the curve 120–160 ng-h/mL intravenously on days 1–5) and cyclophosphamide (600 mg/m2 intravenously on days 1–5). After consolidation, all patients received maintenance chemotherapy with cyclophosphamide, topotecan, and erlotinib. The coprimary endpoints were event-free survival and patterns of methylation profiling associated with progression-free survival. Outcome and safety analyses were per protocol (all patients who received at least one dose of induction chemotherapy); biological analyses included all patients with tissue available for methylation profiling. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00602667, and was closed to accrual on April 19, 2017. Findings: Between Nov 27, 2007, and April 19, 2017, we enrolled 81 patients with histologically confirmed medulloblastoma. Accrual to the low-risk group was suspended after an interim analysis on Dec 2, 2015, when the 1-year event-free survival was estimated to be below the stopping rule boundary. After a median follow-up of 5·5 years (IQR 2·7–7·3), 5-year event-free survival was 31·3% (95% CI 19·3–43·3) for the whole cohort, 55·3% (95% CI 33·3–77·3) in the low-risk cohort (n=23) versus 24·6% (3·6–45·6) in the intermediate-risk cohort (n=32; hazard ratio 2·50, 95% CI 1·19–5·27; p=0·016) and 16·7% (3·4–30·0) in the high-risk cohort (n=26; 3·55, 1·66–7·59; p=0·0011; overall p=0·0021). 5-year progression-free survival by methylation subgroup was 51·1% (95% CI 34·6–67·6) in the sonic hedgehog (SHH) subgroup (n=42), 8·3% (95% CI 0·0–24·0%) in the group 3 subgroup (n=24), and 13·3% (95% CI 0·0–37·6%) in the group 4 subgroup (n=10). Within the SHH subgroup, two distinct methylation subtypes were identified and named iSHH-I and iSHH-II. 5-year progression-free survival was 27·8% (95% CI 9·0–46·6; n=21) for iSHH-I and 75·4% (55·0–95·8; n=21) for iSHH-II. The most common adverse events were grade 3–4 febrile neutropenia (48 patients [59%]), neutropenia (21 [26%]), infection with neutropenia (20 [25%]), leucopenia (15 [19%]), vomiting (15 [19%]), and anorexia (13 [16%]). No treatment-related deaths occurred. Interpretation: The risk-adapted approach did not im rove event-free survival in young children with medulloblastoma. However, the methylation subgroup analyses showed that the SHH subgroup had improved progression-free survival compared with the group 3 subgroup. Moreover, within the SHH subgroup, the iSHH-II subtype had improved progression-free survival in the absence of radiation, intraventricular chemotherapy, or high-dose chemotherapy compared with the iSHH-I subtype. These findings support the development of a molecularly driven, risk-adapted, treatment approach in future trials in young children with medulloblastoma. Funding: American Lebanese Syrian Associated Charities, St Jude Children's Research Hospital, NCI Cancer Center, Alexander and Margaret Stewart Trust, Sontag Foundation, and American Association for Cancer Research.L20007744222018-05-28 | DOI: | 10.1016/S1470-2045(18)30204-3 | Resources: | https://www.embase.com/search/results?subaction=viewrecord&id=L2000774422&from=exporthttp://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1470-2045(18)30204-3 | | Keywords: | diarrhea;DNA methylation;drug megadose;drug safety;event free survival;fatigue;febrile neutropenia;induction chemotherapy;infection;intermediate risk patient;irritability;Lansky score;lethargy;leukopenia;limb pain;low risk patient;lymphocytopenia;maintenance chemotherapy;major clinical study;malaise;male;medulloblastoma;motor neuropathy;mucosa inflammation;multicenter study;multiple cycle treatment;nausea;neurogenic bladder;neutropenia;otitis;overall survival;phase 2 clinical trial;pneumonia;preschool child;priority journal;progression free survival;pulmonary aspiration;rash;seizure;sepsis;side effect;skin exfoliation;stomatitis;thrombocytopenia;United States;urine retention;vomiting;respiratory tract disease;female;fever;functional status assessment;hearing impairment;hematoma;high risk patient;human;hypertransaminasemia;hypocalcemia;hypoglycemia;hypokalemia;hypotension;hypoxia;NCT00602667alanine aminotransferase;antineoplastic agent;aspartate aminotransferase;carboplatin;cisplatin;cyclophosphamide;erlotinib;etoposide;methotrexate;sonic hedgehog protein;topotecan;vinblastine;vincristine;abdominal pain;anemia;anorexia;article;asthenia;ataxia;Australia;bleeding;body weight loss;cancer radiotherapy;catheter infection;cellulitis;child;colitis;consolidation chemotherapy;craniospinal irradiation;cystitis;dehydration;dermatitis | Type: | Article |
Appears in Sites: | Children's Health Queensland Publications |
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