Local and Systemic Therapy of Recurrent Medulloblastomas in Children and Adolescents: Results of the P-HIT-REZ 2005 Study

  • Christine Gaab
  • Jonas E Adolph
  • Stephan Tippelt
  • Ruth Mikasch
  • Denise Obrecht
  • Martin Mynarek
  • Stefan Rutkowski
  • Stefan M Pfister
  • Till Milde
  • Olaf Witt
  • Brigitte Bison
  • Monika Warmuth-Metz
  • Rolf-Dieter Kortmann
  • Stefan Dietzsch
  • Torsten Pietsch
  • Beate Timmermann
  • Ronald Sträter
  • Udo Bode
  • Andreas Faldum
  • Robert Kwiecien
  • Gudrun Fleischhack

Abstract

Recurrent medulloblastomas are associated with survival rates <10%. Adequate multimodal therapy is being discussed as having a major impact on survival. In this study, 93 patients with recurrent medulloblastoma treated in the German P-HIT-REZ 2005 Study were analyzed for survival (PFS, OS) dependent on patient, disease, and treatment characteristics. The median age at the first recurrence was 10.1 years (IQR: 6.9-16.1). Median PFS and OS, at first recurrence, were 7.9 months (CI: 5.7-10.0) and 18.5 months (CI: 13.6-23.5), respectively. Early relapses/progressions (<18 months, n = 30/93) found mainly in molecular subgroup 3 were associated with markedly worse median PFS (HR: 2.34) and OS (HR: 3.26) in regression analyses. A significant survival advantage was found for the use of volume-reducing surgery as well as radiotherapy. Intravenous chemotherapy with carboplatin and etoposide (ivCHT, n = 28/93) showed improved PFS and OS data and the best objective response rate (ORR) was 66.7% compared to oral temozolomide (oCHT, n = 47/93) which was 34.8%. Intraventricular (n = 43) as well as high-dose chemotherapy (n = 17) at first relapse was not related to a significant survival benefit. Although the results are limited due to a non-randomized study design, they may serve as a basis for future treatment decisions in order to improve the patients' survival.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummer471
ISSN2072-6694
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 18.01.2022
PubMed 35158738