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The intensified pediatric HIT2000 protocol appeared feasible and safe for the treatment of adult patients with metastatic medulloblastoma, according to study results.
Limited knowledge exists regarding the effects of intensified chemotherapy and radiotherapy on adult patients with metastatic medulloblastoma due to the relative scarcity of adults with the disease.
André O. von Bueren, MD, PhD, of the department of pediatric hematology and oncology at University Medical Center Goettingen in Germany, and colleagues registered adults with disseminated medulloblastoma as observational patients in the HIT2000 clinical trial for children and adolescents.
The trial included 23 adult patients (median age, 30.7 years).
The researchers assigned patients to treatment with the sandwich strategy MET-HIT2000AB4 (n = 14) — which consisted of postoperative chemotherapy, hyperfractionated craniospinal radiotherapy and maintenance chemotherapy — or the HIT’91 maintenance strategy (n = 9), which consisted of postoperative craniospinal radiotherapy and maintenance chemotherapy.
Eighteen patients survived initial treatment. The median follow-up for surviving patients was 3.99 years (range, 1.04-7.69).
Surviving patients had a 4-year EFS rate of 52% ± 12% and a 4-year OS rate of 91% ± 6%. Researchers reported similar survival rates in both treatment groups.
Results showed improved survival among adults with classic medulloblastoma (n = 11; EFS = 71% ± 14%; OS = 91% ± 9%) and desmoplastic medulloblastoma (n = 10; EFS = 48% ± 16%; OS = 100%) than patients with large cell/anaplastic medulloblastoma (n = 2; EFS = 0%; OS = 0%; P for OS= .033).
Eleven patients experienced tumor progression at a median time of 1.26 years (range, 0.25-4.91) after primary surgery. Relapsed patients treated with the HIT2000AB4 protocol (n = 7) experienced a median time to progression of 0.47 years (range, 0.25-3.85), whereas relapsed patients in the HIT’91 cohort (n = 4) had a median time to progression of 1.92 years (range, 1.02-4.91), similar to previous study findings in children and adolescents.
Fifty percent of patients experienced treatment-related neurotoxicity. The researchers had access to professional data from 10 survivors, of whom six definitively stopped working, three worked adapted jobs after treatment and one worked with no employment modification.
“Our results confirm that the treatment of adults with metastatic medulloblastoma according to the pediatric protocol HIT2000 is possible,” the researchers wrote. “Toxicity [is] acceptable, and EFS rates achieved by both strategies are similar and appear to be inferior to the EFS in older children and adolescents with metastatic disease.
“Because metastatic medulloblastoma in adulthood is rare, prospective randomized multicenter trials seem not to be feasible. Due to the rarity, we recommend central review of the diagnostic procedures [and] treatment according to the guidelines of large registries in order to increase the standard of care and learn more about treatment efficiency and toxicity in adults.” – by Cameron Kelsall
Disclosure: The researchers report no relevant financial disclosures.
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