43 results on '"Potepan P"'
Search Results
2. Consideration of image guidance in patterns of failure analyses of intensity-modulated radiotherapy for head and neck cancer: a systematic review.
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Mackeprang, Paul-Henry, Bryjova, Katarina, Heusel, Astrid E., Henzen, Dominik, Scricciolo, Melissa, and Elicin, Olgun
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INTENSITY modulated radiotherapy ,HEAD & neck cancer ,FAILURE analysis ,NASOPHARYNX cancer ,SQUAMOUS cell carcinoma - Abstract
Background: Intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) is considered standard of care for head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). Improved conformity of IMRT and smaller margins, however, have led to concerns of increased rates of marginal failures. We hypothesize that while patterns of failure (PoF) after IMRT for HNSCC have been published before, the quality of patient positioning and image guided radiotherapy (IGRT) have rarely been taken into account, and their importance remains unclear. This work provides a systematic review of the consideration of IGRT in PoF studies after IMRT for HNSCC. Materials and methods: A systematic literature search according to PRISMA guidelines was performed on PubMed for HNSCC, IMRT and PoF terms and conference abstracts from ESTRO and ASTRO 2020 and 2021 were screened. Studies were included if they related PoF of HNSCC after IMRT to the treated volumes. Data on patient and treatment characteristics, IGRT, treatment adaptation, PoF and correlation of PoF to IGRT was extracted, categorized and analyzed. Results: One-hundred ten studies were included. The majority (70) did not report any information on IGRT. The remainder reported daily IGRT (18), daily on day 1–3 or 1–5, then weekly (7), at least weekly (12), or other schemes (3). Immobilization was performed with masks (78), non-invasive frames (4), or not reported (28). The most common PoF classification was "in-field/marginal/out-of-field", reported by 76 studies. Only one study correlated PoF in nasopharyngeal cancer patients to IGRT. Conclusion: The impact of IGRT on PoF in HNSCC is severely underreported in existing literature. Only one study correlated PoF to IGRT measures and setup uncertainty. Further, most PoF studies relied on outdated terminology ("in/out-of-field"). A clearly defined and up-to-date PoF terminology is necessary to evaluate PoFs properly, as is systematic and preferably prospective data generation. PoF studies should consistently and comprehensively consider and report on IGRT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Review and update on pediatric ependymoma.
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Boop, Scott H., Shimony, Nir, and Boop, Frederick A.
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EPENDYMOMA ,TUMOR classification ,CENTRAL nervous system cancer ,DISEASE management ,INDIVIDUALIZED medicine ,RADIOTHERAPY ,SURGICAL excision - Abstract
Since our last Special Annual Issue dedicated to the topic of ependymoma in 2009, critical advancements have been made in the understanding of this disease which is largely confined to childhood. In the era of molecular profiling, the prior classification of ependymoma based on histology has become largely irrelevant, with multiple new subtypes of this disease now being described in the newest 2021 WHO CNS Tumor Classification System. Despite our advancements in understanding the underlying biology of these tumors, the mainstays of treatment—gross total surgical resection followed by confocal radiation therapy—have continued to yield the best treatment results across multiple studies and centers. Here, we provide an update on our understanding of the advancements made in tumor biology, surgical, and oncologic management of this disease. As we move into an era of more personalized medicine, it is critical to reflect on our historical understanding of different disease entities, to better understand the future directions of our treatments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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4. Molecular Biology and Therapeutic Targets of Primitive Tracheal Tumors: Focus on Tumors Derived by Salivary Glands and Squamous Cell Carcinoma.
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Marchioni, Alessandro, Tonelli, Roberto, Samarelli, Anna Valeria, Cappiello, Gaia Francesca, Andreani, Alessandro, Tabbì, Luca, Livrieri, Francesco, Bosi, Annamaria, Nori, Ottavia, Mattioli, Francesco, Bruzzi, Giulia, Marchioni, Daniele, and Clini, Enrico
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SQUAMOUS cell carcinoma ,MOLECULAR biology ,SALIVARY glands ,ADENOID cystic carcinoma ,NANOMEDICINE ,DRUG target ,TUMORS - Abstract
Primary tracheal tumors are rare, constituting approximately 0.1–0.4% of malignant diseases. Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) and adenoid cystic carcinoma (ACC) account for about two-thirds of these tumors. Despite most primary tracheal cancers being eligible for surgery and/or radiotherapy, unresectable, recurrent and metastatic tumors may require systemic treatments. Unfortunately, the poor response to available chemotherapy as well as the lack of other real therapeutic alternatives affects the quality of life and outcome of patients suffering from more advanced disease. In this condition, target therapy against driver mutations could constitute an alternative to chemotherapy, and may help in disease control. The past two decades have seen extraordinary progress in developing novel target treatment options, shifting the treatment paradigm for several cancers such as lung cancer. The improvement of knowledge regarding the genetic and biological alterations, of major primary tracheal tumors, has opened up new treatment perspectives, suggesting the possible role of biological targeted therapies for the treatment of these rare tumors. The purpose of this review is to outline the state of knowledge regarding the molecular biology, and the preliminary data on target treatments of the main primary tracheal tumors, focusing on salivary-gland-derived cancers and squamous cell carcinoma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. Side Effects of Radiation Therapy in Patients with Head and Neck Cancer According to the Late Effects of Normal Tissues-Subjective Objective Management and Analytic Questionnaire.
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Hashemipour, Maryam Asadat, Ezadi, Ali, Roshani, Ava, and Nassab, Amir Reza Gandjalikhan
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HEAD & neck cancer treatment ,CANCER radiotherapy ,XEROSTOMIA ,PAIN management ,QUESTIONNAIRES - Abstract
Copyright of Meandros Medical & Dental Journal is the property of Galenos Yayinevi Tic. LTD. STI and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2023
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6. The Interplay between Age and Viral Status in EBV-Related Nasopharyngeal and HPV-Related Oropharyngeal Carcinoma Patients.
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Cavalieri, Stefano, Bossi, Paolo, Infante, Gabriele, Miceli, Rosalba, Iacovelli, Nicola Alessandro, Ivaldi, Eliana, Locati, Laura Deborah, Bergamini, Cristiana, Resteghini, Carlo, Nuzzolese, Imperia, Alfieri, Salvatore, Colombo, Elena, Ingargiola, Rossana, Franceschini, Marzia, Calareso, Giuseppina, Licitra, Lisa, and Orlandi, Ester
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NASOPHARYNX cancer ,AGE distribution ,CANCER chemotherapy ,OROPHARYNGEAL cancer ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,CANCER patients ,TUMOR classification ,EPSTEIN-Barr virus ,RADIOTHERAPY ,PROGRESSION-free survival ,SMOKING ,COMORBIDITY - Abstract
Simple Summary: We analyzed 324 patients affected by loco-regionally advanced virus- and non-virus-related head and neck cancers treated with curative intent. We aimed at assessing the interplay between age and viral status on outcome (disease-free- and overall survivals) in these patients. We found that old patients had more comorbidities, and received less intensive treatments when compared to younger subjects. OS and DFS were shorter in older patients. However, after adjusting the models for stage, smoking, comorbidities, treatment strategy and dose intensity, no significant differences in terms of survival were observed according to age. Therefore, factors such as comorbidities, treatment intensity and stage have a prognostic role with differential impact on both virus and non-virus related tumors. Age should be considered as the expression of an array of host- and tumor-related features rather than an independent prognostic factor. Background. The aim of this work was to analyze the interplay between age and viral status on the outcomes in loco-regionally advanced oropharyngeal and nasopharyngeal cancer patients treated with radiotherapy and different chemotherapy combinations. Methods. A retrospective (2006–2017) analysis was performed on non-metastatic loco-regionally advanced oropharyngeal (both HPV+ and HPV−) and EBV+ nasopharyngeal cancer patients (young: <65 years vs. elderly: ≥65 years) treated with radiotherapy with or without chemotherapy. The impact of age and viral status on overall (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS) were studied with multivariable models, which were adjusted for smoking, stage, comorbidities, chemotherapy dose intensity and treatment strategy. Results. We analyzed 324 patients (146 HPV+ oropharynx, 63 HPV−, 115 nasopharynx). Elderly patients had more comorbidities, and received less intensive treatments when compared to younger subjects. Although OS and DFS were shorter in older patients, after adjustment for stage, smoking, comorbidities, treatment strategy and dose intensity, no significant differences in terms of survival were observed according to age (65 vs. 50 years of age: HR 1.89, 95% CI 0.45–7.84 for HPV+ OPC; HR 0.91, 95% CI 0.29–2.89 for HPV− OPC; HR 1.99, 95% CI 0.9–4.39 for NPC; p = 0.395). Conclusions. Several potential age-related (comorbidities, treatment intensity) and disease-related (stage) confounding factors play a prognostic role with differential impacts on both virus and non-virus-related tumors. In HPV+ oropharyngeal cancer and in EBV+ nasopharyngeal cancer patients, age should be considered as the expression of an array of host- and tumor-related features rather than an independent prognostic factor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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7. Long-Term Outcomes of Reduced High-Risk Clinical Target Volume Margin for Intensity-Modulated Radiotherapy in Locally Advanced Head and Neck Cancers.
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Pasha, Tanvir, Krishna, Uday, Loni, Rahul, Kumar, Anil, Chandraraj, Varatharaj, Chavan, Purushottam, Shenoy, Ashok, Jacob, Linu Abraham, Naveen, Thimmaiah, and Vishwanath, Lokesh
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HEAD & neck cancer ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,CANCER patients ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,CHEMORADIOTHERAPY ,DOSE-response relationship (Radiation) ,RADIATION doses ,KAPLAN-Meier estimator ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RADIOTHERAPY - Abstract
Background: Long-term outcomes of intensity modulated radiotherapy with reduced high-risk clinical target volume (HRCTV) margin for radical chemoradiation of locally advanced head and neck cancers (LAHNSCC). Method: The present retrospective study involved 83 LAHNSCC patients treated with chemoradiation. HRCTV was created with uniform margins of 5 mm around the primary tumor- gross tumor volume (GTV), and the nodal tumor GTV, edited at bone and air interface. The first echelon nodal station in N0 neck and that harboring disease in N+ neck was taken as intermediate-risk clinical target volume (IR-CTV). The remaining nodal stations were taken as low-risk CTV. High-, intermediate-, and low-risk regions were prescribed 70, 63, and 56 Gy, respectively, in 35 fractions, five to six fractions per week over six to seven weeks. 63 patients received five fractions and 20 patients received six fractions per week. Acute toxicities were assessed using CTCAE version 4.0 and the survival analysis was performed via Kaplan Meier method. Results: Acute toxicities were grade 1 dermatitis in 77%, grade 3 mucositis in 35%, and xerostomia was predominantly grade 1 in 68.6%. Moreover, 10% required the placement of nasogastric tube during radiation therapy due to grade 3 dysphagia. Complete clinical and radiological response (CR) of respectively 89.1% and 85.5% was observed in primary and nodal disease at the end of the treatment and 100% and 94% at three months, respectively, after chemo radiation therapy. At a median follow-up of 48.1 months, the five-year overall survival was 63.2%. Conclusion: Reduced HRCTV margin of 5 mm was found to be efficient and had good compliance with tolerable acute toxicities, reduced overall treatment time, and reas onable long-term outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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8. Particle Beam Radiation Therapy for Adenoid Cystic Carcinoma of the Nasal Cavity and Paranasal Sinuses.
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Hu, Weixu, Hu, Jiyi, Huang, Qingting, Gao, Jing, Yang, Jing, Qiu, Xianxin, Kong, Lin, and Lu, Jiade J.
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ADENOID cystic carcinoma ,PARANASAL sinuses ,NASAL cavity ,PARTICLE beams ,RADIOTHERAPY ,PROTON therapy - Abstract
Background: Sinonasal adenoid cystic carcinoma (SNACC) presents a challenge to oncologists due to its complex anatomy and poor prognosis. Although radiation therapy, either definitive or adjuvant to surgery, is an important part of the multidisciplinary management of SNACC, photon-based radiotherapy yielded suboptimal local control. The purpose of this study was to report the clinical results of a large patient cohort treated with particle beam radiation therapy. Methods: Patients with SNACC that received proton beam therapy (PBT), carbon-ion radiotherapy (CIRT) or a combination of CIRT and PBT between May 2015 and May 2019 were included in the analysis. Three patients were treated with PBT, 17 with CIRT and 18 received PBT and a CIRT boost. Overall survival (OS), progression-free survival (PFS), local control (LC), regional control (RC), and distant metastasis-free (DMF) rates were calculated using the Kaplan-Meier method. Toxicities were reported using the CTCAE (version 4.03). Results: A total of 38 patients were included in this analysis. Of these patients, 12 had recurrent disease, including 10 whose previous photon-based RT had failed. The most common primary tumor site was the maxillary sinus. Thirty-six patients (94.7%) suffered from locally advanced disease (T3-4). After a median follow-up of 27.2 months, the 3-year OS, PFS, LC, RC, and DMF rates were 96.7, 80.6, 90.0, 100, and 88.7%, respectively. No acute toxicities of grade 3 or above were observed. Two patients experienced grade 3 xerostomia or vision decreased, and one patient died of hemorrhage. Conclusion: PBT, CIRT or a combination of CIRT and PBT appeared to be a promising treatment option for SNACC and produced satisfactory local control and toxicity profile. Longer follow-up is needed to verify the long-term benefit of particle-beam radiation therapy (PBRT) for patients with SNACC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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9. Mixed-beam approach in locally advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma: IMRT followed by proton therapy boost versus IMRT-only. Evaluation of toxicity and efficacy.
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Alterio, Daniela, D'Ippolito, Emma, Vischioni, Barbara, Fossati, Piero, Gandini, Sara, Bonora, Maria, Ronchi, Sara, Vitolo, Viviana, Mastella, Edoardo, Magro, Giuseppe, Franco, Pierfrancesco, Ricardi, Umberto, Krengli, Marco, Ivaldi, Giovanni, Ferrari, Annamaria, Fanetti, Giuseppi, Comi, Stefania, Tagliabue, Marta, Verri, Elena, and Ricotti, Rosalinda
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CANCER chemotherapy ,CHI-squared test ,CLINICAL trials ,FISHER exact test ,NASOPHARYNX cancer ,RADIATION doses ,RADIOTHERAPY ,DATA analysis software ,ADVERSE health care events ,XEROSTOMIA ,PROTON therapy ,MUCOSITIS ,CHEMORADIOTHERAPY - Abstract
Objective: To compare radiation-induced toxicity and dosimetry parameters in patients with locally advanced nasopharyngeal cancer (LANPC) treated with a mixed-beam (MB) approach (IMRT followed by proton therapy boost) with an historic cohort of patients treated with a full course of IMRT-only. Material and methods: Twenty-seven patients with LANPC treated with the MB approach were compared to a similar cohort of 17 patients treated with IMRT-only. The MB approach consisted in a first phase of IMRT up to 54–60 Gy followed by a second phase delivered with a proton therapy boost up to 70–74 Gy (RBE). The total dose for patients treated with IMRT-only was 69.96 Gy. Induction chemotherapy was administrated to 59 and 88% and concurrent chemoradiotherapy to 88 and 100% of the MB and IMRT-only patients, respectively. The worst toxicity occurring during the entire course of treatment (acute toxicity) and early-late toxicity were registered according to the Common Terminology Criteria Adverse Events V4.03. Results: The two cohorts were comparable. Patients treated with MB received a significantly higher median total dose to target volumes (p =.02). Acute grade 3 mucositis was found in 11 and 76% (p =.0002) of patients treated with MB and IMRT-only approach, respectively, while grade 2 xerostomia was found in 7 and 35% (p =.02) of patients treated with MB and IMRT-only, respectively. There was no statistical difference in late toxicity. Local progression-free survival (PFS) and progression-free survival curves were similar between the two cohorts of patients (p =.17 and p =.40, respectively). Local control rate was 96% and 81% for patients treated with MB approach and IMRT-only, respectively. Conclusions: Sequential MB approach for LANPC patients provides a significantly lower acute toxicity profile compared to full course of IMRT. There were no differences in early-late morbidities and disease-related outcomes (censored at two-years) but a longer follow-up is required to achieve conclusive results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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10. The Slippery Role of Induction Chemotherapy in Head and Neck Cancer: Myth and Reality.
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Ferrari, Daris, Ghi, Maria Grazia, Franzese, Ciro, Codecà, Carla, Gau, Max, and Fayette, Jerome
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MEDICAL personnel ,HEAD & neck cancer ,CHEMORADIOTHERAPY ,CANCER chemotherapy ,MYTH - Abstract
Chemoradiotherapy as an alternative to surgery can be offered to patients affected by loco-regionally advanced head and neck cancer (HNC). Induction chemotherapy is a valid option, supported by few positive trials, but its real efficacy is still a matter of debate. The standard regimen for induction chemotherapy in Europe is a combination of docetaxel (75 mg/m
2 ) and reduced dose doses of cisplatin (75 mg/m2 ) and 5-fluorouracil (750 mg/m2 day, for five consecutive days) (TPF). It is less toxic and more effective than the historical therapy PF (cisplatin 100 mg/m2 and fluorouracil 1,000 mg/m2 /day for five consecutive days). However, in some studies treatment-related mortality has been reported to be as high as 6%. Therefore, some less toxic combinations, such as a modified TPF regimen and the combination of carboplatin plus paclitaxel have been studied. These regimens are showing promising results but deserve further validation in comparative trials. Furthermore, several trials are underway in order to enhance TPF with immune checkpoints inhibitors. Compared to chemoradiotherapy, induction chemotherapy followed by chemoradiation was shown to be non-inferior, and it could decrease the distant metastatic progression, especially in high-risk populations. For selected patients, induction chemotherapy could be a strong option. The chemoselective process that leads to immediate surgery for non-responders, the high response rate (complete responses are sometimes observed), and the survival data, are all arguments in favor of induction chemotherapy, if performed in experienced centers involving health professionals in the context of a skilled multidisciplinary team. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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11. Parotid gland carcinoma: 32 years' experience from a single institute.
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Nakano, T, Yasumatsu, R, Kogo, R, Hashimoto, K, Asai, K, Ohga, S, Yamamoto, H, Nakashima, T, and Nakagawa, T
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ACADEMIC medical centers ,CANCER patients ,CANCER relapse ,MEDICAL records ,ORAL surgery ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,PAROTID gland tumors ,RADIOTHERAPY ,SURVIVAL ,TUMOR classification ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,ACQUISITION of data methodology ,TUMOR grading - Abstract
Background: Parotid gland carcinoma is a rare and complicated histopathological classification. Therefore, assembling a sufficient number of cases with long-term outcomes in a single institute can present a challenge. Method: The medical records of 108 parotid gland carcinoma patients who were treated at Kyushu University Hospital, Fukuoka, Japan, between 1983 and 2014 were reviewed. The survival outcomes were analysed according to clinicopathological findings. Results: Forty-six patients had low clinical stage tumours (I–II), and 62 patients had high clinical stage tumours (III–IV). Fifty-two, 10 and 46 patients had low-, intermediate- and high-grade tumours, respectively. Twenty-seven of 65 cases had positive surgical margins. In high clinical stage and intermediate- to high-grade tumours, adjuvant radiation therapy was correlated with local recurrence-free survival (p = 0.0244). Intermediate- to high-grade tumours and positive surgical margins were significantly associated with disease-specific survival in multivariate analysis (p = 0.0002 and p = 0.0058). Conclusion: The results of this study show that adjuvant radiation therapy is useful for improved local control in patients with high clinical stage and intermediate- to high-grade tumours. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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12. Nimotuzumab and radiotherapy for treatment of newly diagnosed diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG): a phase III clinical study.
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Fleischhack, G., Massimino, M., Warmuth-Metz, M., Khuhlaeva, E., Janssen, G., Graf, N., Rutkowski, S., Beilken, A., Schmid, I., Biassoni, V., Gorelishev, S. K., Kramm, C., Reinhard, H., Schlegel, P. G., Kortmann, R.-D., Reuter, D., Bach, F., Iznaga-Escobar, N. E., and Bode, U.
- Abstract
Background: Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) is a devastating cancer of childhood and adolescence. Methods: The study included patients between 3 and 20 years with clinically and radiologically confirmed DIPG. Primary endpoint was 6-month progression-free survival (PFS) following administration of nimotuzumab in combination with external beam radiotherapy (RT). Nimotuzumab was administered intravenously at 150 mg/m
2 weekly for 12 weeks. Radiotherapy at total dose of 54 Gy was delivered between week 3 and week 9. Response was evaluated based on clinical features and MRI findings according to RECIST criteria at week 12. Thereafter, patients continued to receive nimotuzumab every alternate week until disease progression/unmanageable toxicity. Adverse events (AE) were evaluated according to Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTC-AE) Version 3.0 (CTC-AE3). Results: All 42 patients received at least one dose of nimotuzumab in outpatient settings. Two patients had partial response (4.8%), 27 had stable disease (64.3%), 10 had progressive disease (23.8%) and 3 patients (7.1%) could not be evaluated. The objective response rate (ORR) was 4.8%. Median PFS was 5.8 months and median overall survival (OS) was 9.4 months. Most common drug-related AEs were alopecia (14.3%), vomiting, headache and radiation skin injury (7.1% each). Therapy-related serious adverse events (SAEs) were intra-tumoral bleeding and acute respiratory failure, which were difficult to distinguish from effects of tumor progression. Conclusions: Concomitant treatment with RT and nimotuzumab was feasible in an outpatient setting. The PFS and OS were comparable to results achieved with RT and intensive chemotherapy in hospitalized setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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13. Reirradiation for diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Lu, Victor M., Welby, John P., Mahajan, Anita, Laack, Nadia N., and Daniels, David J.
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META-analysis ,BRAIN tumors ,OLIGODENDROGLIOMAS ,RADIOTHERAPY ,ELECTRONIC information resource searching ,PROGNOSIS - Abstract
Background: Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) is a pediatric brain tumor with dismal prognosis despite initial radiation therapy (RT). The clinical consequences of attempting reirradiation (reRT) in these patients to alleviate both symptomatology and improve prognosis are currently unclear. Thus, the aim of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to clarify the efficacy and safety of reRT in DIPG. Methods: Searches of seven electronic databases from inception to January 2019 were conducted following the appropriate guidelines. Articles were screened against prespecified criteria. The incidence and duration of clinical outcomes were then extracted and pooled by means of meta-analysis from the included studies. Results: A total of 7 studies satisfied all criteria, describing 90 cases of DIPG in which reRT was attempted 11.8–14 months after initial RT. Based on a random-effects model, the incidences of clinical improvement and radiologic response following reRT were 87% (95% CI, 78–95%) and 69% (95% CI, 52–84%), respectively. The incidence of acute serious toxicity was 0% (95% CI, 0–4%). Pooled overall survivals from initial diagnosis and time of reRT were 18.0 months (95% CI, 14.2–21.7) and 6.2 months (95% CI, 5.5–7.0), respectively. Conclusions: Based on these results, the clinical consequences of reRT for DIPG when administered appropriately and safely at first progression appear acceptable, and potentially favorable, based on the limited evidence in the current literature. Concerns regarding acute serious toxicity were not realized. It is likely that a subcohort of all DIPG diagnoses will be most amenable to improve prognosis with reRT, and greater investigation is required to identify their characteristics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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14. Radiotherapy for cutaneous head and neck cancer and parotid tumours: a prospective investigation of treatment-related acute swallowing and toxicity patterns.
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Moroney, Laura B., Helios, Jennifer, Ward, Elizabeth C., Crombie, Jane, Burns, Clare L., Yeo, Shu Qi, Pelecanos, Anita, Spurgin, Ann-Louise, Blake, Claire, Kenny, Lizbeth, Chua, Benjamin, and Hughes, Brett G. M.
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RADIOTHERAPY ,CUTANEOUS manifestations of general diseases ,HEAD & neck cancer treatment ,PAROTID gland tumors ,TOXICITY testing ,DEGLUTITION disorders ,SEVERITY of illness index ,SPEECH-language pathology - Abstract
Purpose: Reports of acute treatment-related dysphagia and toxicities for patients with parotid tumours or cutaneous head and neck cancer (HNC) are limited. This study aimed to describe the severity and timing of dysphagia and related toxicities experienced during radiotherapy for cutaneous HNC and parotid tumours, to inform the nature of future speech pathology (SP) service models required during treatment.Methods: Prospective study of 32 patients with parotid tumours and 36 with cutaneous HNC undergoing curative non-surgical management. Dysphagia and acute toxicity data was collected weekly during treatment and at 2, 4 and 12 weeks post-treatment using the Functional Oral Intake Scale, diet descriptors and CTCAE v4.0.Results: In both groups, minimal treatment toxicities (grades 0-1) were observed. Xerostomia and dysgeusia were the most frequently reported grade 2 toxicities. Only 3% of parotid patients and 6% with cutaneous HNC experienced grade 3 dysphagia. Full or soft texture diets were maintained by > 70% of patients in both groups. Symptoms peaked in the final week of treatment and rapidly improved thereafter. Apart from xerostomia < 10% of patients had any grade 2 toxicity at 12 weeks post-treatment.Conclusion: Patients in these subgroups of HNC experienced minimal treatment-related toxicity during radiotherapy. As such, the need for supportive symptom management by SP is low. Models that involve interdisciplinary surveillance of symptoms with referral to SP only when required may be best suited for these individuals to ensure issues are identified whilst minimising patient burden created by unnecessary routine SP appointments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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15. Radiosurgery or hypofractionated stereotactic radiotherapy after craniospinal irradiation in children and adults with medulloblastoma and ependymoma.
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Napieralska, Aleksandra, Brąclik, Iwona, Radwan, Michał, Mandera, Marek, and Blamek, Sławomir
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STEREOTACTIC radiosurgery ,CANCER treatment ,CANCER chemotherapy ,MEDULLOBLASTOMA ,IRRADIATION - Abstract
Purpose: To assess the results and tolerance of radiosurgery/hypofractionated stereotactic radiotherapy performed after craniospinal irradiation for recurrent tumor.Methods: Fourteen patients aged 3-46 years, diagnosed with medulloblastoma (10), anaplastic ependymoma (3), and primitive neuroectodermal tumor (1). All patients had craniospinal irradiation (CSI) with the total dose of 30.6-36 Gy and boost to 53.9-60 Gy either during primary or during second-line treatment. Twelve patients were irradiated with a single dose of 6-15 Gy (median 14.5 Gy). One received three fractions of 5 Gy and one six fractions of 5 Gy. In statistical analysis, the Kaplan-Meier method and log-rank test were used. The overall survival was calculated from the date of the end of stereotactic radiosurgery to the date of death or last contact.Results: Recurrences were diagnosed after the median time of 16 months after the end of primary treatment. Eleven patients died during the follow-up. The follow-up for the 3 patients still alive was 6.7, 40.5, and 41.4 months, respectively. One- and 2-year overall survival (OS) was 70% and 39%. Patients who had ECOG performance status of 0 at the time of diagnosis of the disease trended to have better 2-year OS compared to those evaluated as ECOG 1 (p = 0.057). Treatment results were evaluable in 12 patients. Local control (stabilization or regression of the lesion) was achieved in 9 (75%). Overall disease progression was 67%. No patient developed radiation-induced necrosis. The treatment was well tolerated and no serious adverse effects were observed. Eleven patients were given steroids as a prevention of brain edema and four of them needed continuation of this treatment afterwards. In 7 patients, symptoms of brain edema were observed during the first weeks after reirradiation.Conclusions: Stereotactic radiosurgery or hypofractionated stereotactic radiotherapy is an effective treatment method of the local recurrence after CSI and can be performed safely in heavily pre-treated patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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16. Beeinflusst die Zeitspanne zwischen Tumorresektion und Strahlentherapie das Überleben bei Kindern mit hochgradigen Gliomen?
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Azizi, Amedeo A., Paur, Simon, Kaider, Alexandra, Dieckmann, Karin, Peyrl, Andreas, Chocholous, Monika, Czech, Thomas, and Slavc, Irene
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Purpose: Paediatric high grade glioma (pHGG) are rare. Following maximum safe resection, children >3 years with HGG receive radiotherapy as standard of care. Whether the interval from tumour surgery to radiotherapy (ISRT) influences survival is disputed in adults with glioblastoma, data for children are lacking. This retrospective single-centre analysis investigates a possible impact of ISRT on survival in paediatric patients with HGG.Methods: Survival was analysed in patients aged 3-19 years with non-pontine HGG.Results: Thirty-eight patients were included (female:male 19:19) with a median age of 11.0 years (3.4-17.7). Seventeen patients had grade 3 and 21 grade 4 glioma. Gross total resection was achieved in 26.3%, partial resection in 36.8% and 36.8% underwent biopsy only. All patients received concomitant and adjuvant chemotherapy. Fifty percent (n = 19) started irradiation ≤17 days (median interval 12 days [range 5-17]), 50% thereafter (median 28 days [range 19-78]). More patients with grade 4 tumours were irradiated shortly after surgery. ISRT (as a continuous variable and dichotomised into two groups by the median ISRT of 18 days) did not significantly influence overall survival (OS) or progression-free survival (PFS). Higher extent of resection (EOR), lower tumour grade as well as chemotherapy with temozolomide had a significant positive impact on OS and PFS in univariate analysis and (except for the effect of temozolomide on PFS) also in multivariable analysis.Conclusions: ISRT did not influence survival in pHGG. In view of upcoming targeted treatment options in pHGG the present data suggest that it is safe to perform molecular analyses within a 4-week timeframe before radiotherapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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17. Prognostic aspects in the treatment of juvenile nasopharyngeal carcinoma: a systematic review.
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Gioacchini, Federico, Tulli, Michele, Re, Massimo, Kaleci, Shaniko, and Magliulo, Giuseppe
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HEAD & neck cancer treatment ,RADIOTHERAPY ,CANCER chemotherapy ,CANCER invasiveness ,PROGRESSION-free survival - Abstract
To systematically review and discuss the published data about treatments and outcomes for children and adolescents affected by nasopharyngeal carcinoma. In April 2015, an appropriate string was run on PubMed to retrieve all relevant articles. A cross-check was performed by two of the authors on abstracts and full-text articles found using the selected inclusion and exclusion criteria. A meta-analysis concerning the rate of reported disease-free survival and overall survival was performed. Fifteen studies were identified comprising a total of 865 subjects affected by nasopharyngeal carcinoma. According to the American Joint Committee for Cancer Staging system, the majority of tumors were classified as Stage IV (57.3 %). All included patients underwent radiotherapy, while 687 (79.4 %) received also some regimen of chemotherapy. On the basis of our statistical analysis, the mean (95 % CI) rate of disease-free survival was 66 % (95 % CI 56-76). The mean (95 % CI) rate of the overall survival resulted 68 % (95 % CI 58-78). On the basis of our analysis, it may be affirmed that the prognosis of juvenile nasopharyngeal carcinoma is still unsatisfactory. New reports on homogeneous populations are needed to better define the most influencing prognostic factors and to evaluate the introduction of possible alternative therapeutic protocols. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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18. Androgen Receptor Signaling in Salivary Gland Cancer.
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Watson, Philip A., Dalin, Martin G., Morris, Luc G. T., and Ho, Alan L.
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CANCER chemotherapy ,CELL receptors ,CELLULAR signal transduction ,HORMONE therapy ,METASTASIS ,PAROTID glands ,RADIOTHERAPY ,SALIVARY gland tumors - Abstract
Salivary gland cancers comprise a small subset of human malignancies, and are classified into multiple subtypes that exhibit diverse histology, molecular biology and clinical presentation. Local disease is potentially curable with surgery, which may be combined with adjuvant radiotherapy. However, metastatic or unresectable tumors rarely respond to chemotherapy and carry a poorer prognosis. Recent molecular studies have shown evidence of androgen receptor signaling in several types of salivary gland cancer, mainly salivary duct carcinoma. Successful treatment with anti-androgen therapy in other androgen receptor-positive malignancies such as prostate and breast cancer has inspired researchers to investigate this treatment in salivary gland cancer as well. In this review, we describe the prevalence, biology, and therapeutic implications of androgen receptor signaling in salivary gland cancer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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19. Nasopharynxkarzinom in einem europäischen Gebiet mit geringer Inzidenz : Eine prospektive Beobachtungsanalyse der Kopf- und Hals-Studiengruppe der Italienischen Gesellschaft für Radioonkologie (AIRO).
- Author
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Tonoli, S., Alterio, D., Caspiani, O., Bacigalupo, A., Bunkheila, F., Cianciulli, M., Merlotti, A., Podhradska, A., Rampino, M., Cante, D., Bruschieri, L., Gatta, R., Magrini, S., and Magrini, S M
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CANCER relapse ,COMPARATIVE studies ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,NASOPHARYNX tumors ,PROGNOSIS ,RADIATION injuries ,RESEARCH ,SURVIVAL ,EVALUATION research ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,DISEASE incidence ,TUMOR treatment ,PREVENTION - Abstract
Copyright of Strahlentherapie und Onkologie is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2016
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20. Relapse patterns and outcome after relapse in standard risk medulloblastoma: a report from the HIT-SIOP-PNET4 study.
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Sabel, Magnus, Fleischhack, Gudrun, Tippelt, Stephan, Gustafsson, Göran, Doz, François, Kortmann, Rolf, Massimino, Maura, Navajas, Aurora, Hoff, Katja, Rutkowski, Stefan, Warmuth-Metz, Monika, Clifford, Steven, Pietsch, Torsten, Pizer, Barry, and Lannering, Birgitta
- Abstract
The HIT-SIOP-PNET4 randomised trial for standard risk medulloblastoma (MB) (2001-2006) included 338 patients and compared hyperfractionated and conventional radiotherapy. We here report the long-term outcome after a median follow up of 7.8 years, including detailed information on relapse and the treatment of relapse. Data were extracted from the HIT Group Relapsed MB database and by way of a specific case report form. The event-free and overall (OS) survival at 10 years were 76 ± 2 % and 78 ± 2 % respectively with no significant difference between the treatment arms. Seventy-two relapses and three second malignant neoplasms were reported. Thirteen relapses (18 %) were isolated local relapses in the posterior fossa (PF) and 59 (82 %) were craniospinal, metastatic relapses (isolated or multiple) with or without concurrent PF disease. Isolated PF relapse vs all other relapses occurred at mean/median of 38/35 and 28/26 months respectively (p = 0.24). Late relapse, i.e. >5 years from diagnosis, occurred in six patients (8 %). Relapse treatment consisted of combinations of surgery (25 %), focal radiotherapy (RT 22 %), high dose chemotherapy with stem cell rescue (HDSCR 21 %) and conventional chemotherapy (90 %). OS at 5 years after relapse was 6.0 ± 4 %. In multivariate analysis; isolated relapse in PF, and surgery were significantly associated with prolonged survival whereas RT and HDSCR were not. Survival after relapse was not related to biological factors and was very poor despite several patients receiving intensive treatments. Exploration of new drugs is warranted, preferably based on tumour biology from biopsy of the relapsed tumour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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21. Non-endemic locoregionally advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma: long-term outcome after induction plus concurrent chemoradiotherapy in everyday clinical practice.
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Boscolo-Rizzo, Paolo, Tirelli, Giancarlo, Mantovani, Monica, Baggio, Vittorio, Lupato, Valentina, Spinato, Giacomo, Gava, Alessandro, and Da Mosto, Maria
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CAUCASIAN race ,RADIOTHERAPY ,CISPLATIN ,RESPONSE rates ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,HEALTH - Abstract
The aim of this study was to evaluate the long-term outcome in Caucasian population of a non-endemic area treated for locoregionally advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma (LA-NPC) with multidrug platinum-based induction plus concurrent chemoradiotherapy (IC/CCRT) in everyday clinical practice setting. Between May 1990 and July 2007, 75 patients with newly diagnosed histologically confirmed LA-NPC were given IC/CCRT. All patients were judged suitable to receive conventional fractionated course of radiotherapy to a dose of 70 Gy in 35 fractions (2 Gy per fraction). The intended chemotherapy regimen consisted in one cycle of induction chemotherapy followed by radiotherapy concomitantly with two cycles of chemotherapy. Each cycle of chemotherapy included cis-platinum, 100 mg/m, and continuous infusion of 5-fluorouracil, 1,000 mg/m/d for 5 days. The median follow-up in survivors was 122 months. The complete response rate after CCRT was 90.7 %. The main limiting toxicity was grade 3 and 4 pharyngeal mucositis (46.7 %). Five-year cumulative rate of locoregional control (LRC), distant control (DC), overall survival (OS), and event-free survival (EFS) was 80.1, 82.2, 72.0, and 66.7 %, respectively. Ten-year cumulative rate of LRC, DC, OS, and EFS was 73.4, 73.8, 57.1, and 55.2 %, respectively. At multivariate analysis advanced N category and low hemoglobin levels at baseline were found to be independent predictors for both worse OS and EFS. In everyday clinical practice, treating LA-NPC with cisplatin-based IC/CCRT was relatively safe and long-term effective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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22. Posterior fossa tumors in infants and neonates.
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Spennato, Pietro, Nicosia, Giancarlo, Quaglietta, Lucia, Donofrio, Vittoria, Mirone, Giuseppe, Martino, Giuliana, Guadagno, Elia, Basso de Caro, Maria, Cascone, Daniele, and Cinalli, Giuseppe
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MUCINOUS adenocarcinoma ,DISCIPLINE of infants ,RADIOTHERAPY ,TUMORS in infants ,INFANT diseases - Abstract
Introduction: Management of posterior fossa tumors in infants and neonates is challenging. The characteristics of the young babies make surgery very difficult, sometimes precluding a safe complete removal. Methods: A review of the literature was undertaken to examine the incidence, histology, surgical aspects, and prognosis of posterior fossa tumors in the first year of life. Therapeutical strategies of the most frequent tumor types are also discussed in detail. Results: Histology is dominated by tumors with aggressive behavior, such as medulloblastomas, atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumors, and anaplastic ependymomas. The most important surgical considerations in small children are the small circulating blood volume; the poor thermoregulation; and incomplete maturation of the brain, of the skull, and of the soft tissue. Treatment toxicity is inversely related to the age of the patients. Radiation therapy is usually considered as contraindicated in young children, with few exceptions. Proton therapy is a promising tool, but access to this kind of treatment is still limited. The therapeutic limitations of irradiation render resection of this tumor and adjuvant chemotherapy often the only therapeutic strategy in many cases. Conclusions: The overall prognosis remains dismal because of the prevalent aggressive histologies, the surgical challenges, and the limitations of adjuvant treatment. Nevertheless, the impressive improvements in anesthesiology and surgical techniques allow, in the vast majority of the cases, complete removal of the lesions with minor sequelae in high-volume referral pediatric centers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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23. ABCB1 in children's brain tumours.
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Coyle, Beth, Kessler, Maya, Sabnis, Durgagauri H., and Kerr, Ian D.
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ATP-binding cassette transporters ,BRAIN tumors ,CHILDHOOD cancer ,CANCER chemotherapy ,ADJUVANT treatment of cancer ,RADIOTHERAPY ,PATIENTS ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Tumours of the central nervous system are the most common solid tumour, accounting for a quarter of the 1500 cases of childhood cancer diagnosed each year in the U.K. They are the most common cause of cancer-related death in children. Treatment consists of surgery followed by adjuvant chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy. Survival rates have generally increased, but many survivors suffer from radiotherapyrelated neurocognitive and endocrine side effects as well as an increased risk of secondary cancer. Adjuvant chemotherapy is normally given in combination to circumvent chemoresistance, but several studies have demonstrated it to be ineffective in the absence of radiotherapy. The identification of children with drug-resistant disease at the outset could allow stratification of those that are potentially curable by chemotherapy alone. Ultimately, however, what is required is a means to overcome this drug resistance and restore the effectiveness of chemotherapy. Medulloblastomas and ependymomas account for over 30% of paediatric brain tumours. Advances in neurosurgery, adjuvant radiotherapy and chemotherapy have led to improvements in 5-year overall survival rates. There remain, however, significant numbers of medulloblastoma patients that have intrinsically drug-resistant tumours and/or present with disseminated disease. Local relapse in ependymoma is also common and has an extremely poor prognosis with only 25% of children surviving first relapse. Each of these is consistent with the acquisition of drug and radiotherapy resistance. Since the majority of chemotherapy drugs currently used to treat these patients are transport substrates for ATP-binding cassette sub-family B member 1 (ABCB1) we will address the hypothesis that ABCB1 expression underlies this drug resistance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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24. Relapse in medulloblastoma: what can be done after abandoning high-dose chemotherapy? A mono-institutional experience.
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Massimino, Maura, Casanova, Michela, Polastri, Daniela, Biassoni, Veronica, Modena, Piergiorgio, Pecori, Emilia, Schiavello, Elisabetta, Pava, Marco, Indini, Alice, Rampini, Paolo, Bauer, Dario, Catania, Serena, Podda, Marta, and Gandola, Lorenza
- Subjects
MEDULLOBLASTOMA ,CHEMOTHERAPY complications ,CANCER chemotherapy ,SPINAL cord radiography ,RADIOTHERAPY ,ETOPOSIDE ,CISPLATIN - Abstract
Purpose: We retrospectively report strategies used for medulloblastoma patients progressing after craniospinal irradiation where we aimed for: symptom control, a satisfactory quality of life, accrual in phase 1-2 trials, when available, and the first two conditions could no longer be satisfied by already experienced second-line strategies. Methods: Surgery was used in cases of doubtful relapse or when only one site was affected. Radiotherapy was given whenever possible, especially to relieve symptoms. The main chemotherapy regimens were oral temozolomide/etoposide, intravenous (iv.) cisplatin/etoposide, iv. gemcitabine/oxaliplatin, an oral sonic hedgehog pathway inhibitor and oral melphalan. Results: Between 1998 and 2011, we treated 18 patients relapsed after median 20 months. Nine had relapsed locally, four had dissemination, three single metastases, and two had one synchronous local and metastatic recurrence. Responses to chemotherapy were seen in 32 % of cases. The median hospital stay for treatments/complications was 19 days. The 1- and 3-year progression-free survival (PFS) rates were 28 ± 10 % and 0 %, respectively, for OS, they were 44 ± 12 % and 22 ± 10 % but no patient was cured. The median PFS after a first relapse was 7 months (range 1-29); the median OS was 7 months (range 4-44). No patients died due to treatment toxicity. Late recurrence (more than 1-2 years after diagnosis) and involvement of single sites were favorable prognostic factors. Conclusions: Without succeeding in patients cure, we ensured them further treatment with short hospital stay thus affording low personal and social costs. The chances of cure may emerge from tailored therapies according to genetic stratification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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25. Retrospective analysis of treatment outcome of pediatric ependymomas in Korea: analysis of Korean multi-institutional data.
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Kim, Yeon-Joo, Kim, Joo-Young, Lim, Do, Park, Hyeon, Joo, Jungnam, Sung, Ki, Shin, Hyung, Kim, Seung-Ki, Phi, Ji, Kim, Il, Park, Kyung, Ahn, Seung-do, Jung, Jinhong, Rha, Young, Kim, Dong-Seok, and Suh, Chang-Ok
- Abstract
We analyzed the treatment outcomes of intracranial ependymomas in Korean children aged <18 years. Data for 96 patients were collected from five hospitals. Survival rates were calculated using the Kaplan-Meier method. Log-rank tests for univariate analyses and Cox regression model for multivariate analysis were conducted to identify prognostic factors for survival. The median age of the patients was 4 years (range, 0.3-17.9 years). The median follow-up was 55 months (range, 2-343 months). Age <3 years was an important factor for selecting adjuvant therapy after surgery. Among children aged <3 and ≥3 years, adjuvant radiotherapy (RT) was applied to 55 and 84 %, respectively, and adjuvant chemotherapy to 52 and 10 %, respectively. The 5 year local progression-free survival (LPFS), disease-free survival (DFS), and overall survival (OS) rates were 54, 52, and 79 %, respectively. Gross total resection was the most significant prognostic factor for all survival endpoints. Age ≥3 years and RT were significant prognostic factors for superior LPFS and DFS. However, the significance of age was lost in multivariate analysis for DFS. LPFS, DFS, and OS were superior in patients who started RT within 44 days after surgery (the median time) than in patients who started RT later in the patients aged ≥3 years. Postoperative RT was a strong prognostic factor for intracranial ependymomas. Our results suggest that early use of RT is an essential component of treatment, and should be considered in young children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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26. Correlation between nasopharyngeal carcinoma tumor volume and the 2002 International Union Against Cancer tumor classification system.
- Author
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Zheng Wu, Mo-Fa Gu, Rui-Fang Zeng, Yong Su, and Shao-Min Huang
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NASOPHARYNX tumors ,RADIOTHERAPY ,METASTASIS ,RADIOTHERAPY treatment planning ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,CHI-squared test ,TUMOR treatment - Abstract
Background: The correlation between primary tumor volume and nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) UICC 2002 T classification, N classification and distant metastasis after radiation therapy was discussed to provide further evidence for the inclusion of tumor volume into the TNM classification staging system. Methods: Between February 2001 and December 2008, 666 patients with NPC treated with intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) were analyzed retrospectively. Primary gross tumor volume was calculated from treatment planning computed tomography scans. The Kruskal-Wallis and Mann-Whitney tests were used for comparison of continuous variables and the chi-square test was used for categorical variables. A logistic regression model was used for multivariate analysis. Results: Median primary tumor volume of the 666 patients was 20.35 ml (range, 0.44 - 192.63 ml), and it gradually increased with T classification. Statistically significant differences in tumor volume were observed between patients with different T classifications (p < 0.001). The cervical lymph node metastasis rate was 64.7% (430/666); the differences in primary tumor volume between patients with or without lymph node metastasis were statistically significant (p < 0.001). Posttreatment distant metastasis occurred in 100 NPC patients, and the five-year distant metastasis-free survival was 84.2%. Univariate and multivariate analyses showed that N classification (p < 0.001) and tumor volume (p = 0.007) were the main factors influencing distant metastasis. Conclusion: Tumor volume was correlated with T classification, cervical lymph node mestastasis and distant metastasis after radiation therapy in nasopharyngeal carcinoma, suggesting that tumor volume should be included into the TNM staging system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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27. Technique for sparing previously irradiated critical normal structures in salvage proton craniospinal irradiation.
- Author
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McDonald, Mark W., Wolanski, Mark R., Simmons, Joseph W., and Buchsbaum, Jeffrey C.
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RADIOTHERAPY ,MEDICAL radiology ,MEDICAL electronics ,DISEASE risk factors ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Background: Cranial reirradiation is clinically appropriate in some cases but cumulative radiation dose to critical normal structures remains a practical concern. The authors developed a simple technique in 3D conformal proton craniospinal irradiation (CSI) to block organs at risk (OAR) while minimizing underdosing of adjacent target brain tissue. Methods: Two clinical cases illustrate the use of proton therapy to provide salvage CSI when a previously irradiated OAR required sparing from additional radiation dose. The prior radiation plan was coregistered to the treatment planning CT to create a planning organ at risk volume (PRV) around the OAR. Right and left lateral cranial whole brain proton apertures were created with a small block over the PRV. Then right and left lateral "inverse apertures" were generated, creating an aperture opening in the shape of the area previously blocked and blocking the area previously open. The inverse aperture opening was made one millimeter smaller than the original block to minimize the risk of dose overlap. The inverse apertures were used to irradiate the target volume lateral to the PRV, selecting a proton beam range to abut the 50% isodose line against either lateral edge of the PRV. Together, the 4 cranial proton fields created a region of complete dose avoidance around the OAR. Comparative photon treatment plans were generated with opposed lateral X-ray fields with custom blocks and coplanar intensity modulated radiation therapy optimized to avoid the PRV. Cumulative dose volume histograms were evaluated. Results: Treatment plans were developed and successfully implemented to provide sparing of previously irradiated critical normal structures while treating target brain lateral to these structures. The absence of dose overlapping during irradiation through the inverse apertures was confirmed by film. Compared to the lateral X-ray and IMRT treatment plans, the proton CSI technique improved coverage of target brain tissue while providing the least additional radiation dose to the previously irradiated OAR. Conclusions: Proton craniospinal irradiation can be adapted to provide complete sparing of previously irradiated OARs. This technique may extend the option of reirradiation to patients otherwise deemed ineligible for further radiotherapy due to prior dose to critical normal structures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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28. Tumor stage, human papillomavirus and smoking status affect the survival of patients with oropharyngeal cancer: an Italian validation study.
- Author
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Granata, R., Miceli, R., Orlandi, E., Perrone, F., Cortelazzi, B., Franceschini, M., Locati, L. D., Bossi, P., Bergamini, C., Mirabile, A., Mariani, L., Olmi, P., Scaramellini, G., Potepan, P., Quattrone, P., Ang, K. K., and Licitra, L.
- Subjects
- *
PAPILLOMAVIRUSES , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *TUMOR classification , *CISPLATIN , *RADIOTHERAPY , *ONCOGENIC DNA viruses , *MEDICAL radiology - Abstract
Background Tumor human papillomavirus (HPV) status strongly affects overall survival (OS) of oropharyngeal cancer (OPC) patients. Recently, three groups with different outcomes were identified based on HPV status, smoking history and tumor stage. Our objective was to validate this model using a single-institutional retrospective database. Patients and methods Patients (n = 120) diagnosed with OPC at our institution, treated with concomitant cisplatin plus radiotherapy (RT) (n = 64), induction chemotherapy followed by concomitant chemoradiation (n = 39) or RT alone (n = 17), were stratified in three groups with respect to the risk of death (low 26, intermediate 46 and high 49 patients) according to tumor p16 expression as surrogate of HPV status, pack-years of tobacco smoking and nodal/tumor stage. Group-stratified Kaplan–Meier OS curves were estimated and compared using the log-rank test. Results The 2-year OS estimates were 100%, 86% and 70%, respectively. The difference between the survival curves was statistically significant (P = 0.009). The Harrell's concordance index was 0.70. The calibration plot showed a good concordance between our results and those observed in the original study. Conclusions This study validates the risk grouping previously identified. Risk-driven clinical decision making and trial designs will help in better defining the most appropriate treatment in OPC patients. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
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29. Oral cancers: supportive care issues.
- Author
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Murphy, Barbara A. and Gilbert, Jill
- Subjects
TREATMENT of oral cancer ,HEAD & neck cancer treatment ,DEGLUTITION disorders ,QUALITY of life ,SALIVARY gland diseases ,RADIOTHERAPY ,PREVENTION - Abstract
The article focuses on the treatment for oral cancers, its clinical impact and prevention. It says that head and neck cancers can be treated with radiation-based therapy but poses adverse acute and late toxicities including mucositis, dysphagia, and xerostomia leading to a decreased quality of life. It states that radiation-induced salivary gland dysfunction and xerostomia can be prevented using cytoprotective agents and tissue-sparing radiation therapy.
- Published
- 2011
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30. Combined treatment of adenoid cystic carcinoma with cetuximab and IMRT plus C12 heavy ion boost: ACCEPT [ACC, Erbitux® and particle therapy].
- Author
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Jensen, Alexandra D., Nikoghosyan, Anna, Hinke, Axel, Debus, Jürgen, and Münter, Marc W.
- Subjects
ADENOID cystic carcinoma ,CETUXIMAB ,RADIOTHERAPY ,SALIVARY gland tumors - Abstract
Background: Local control in adjuvant/definitive RT of adenoid cystic carcinoma (ACC) is largely dose-dependent leading to the establishment of particle therapy in this indication. However, even modern techniques leave space for improvement of local control by intensification of local treatment. Radiation sensitization by exploitation of high EGFR-expression in ACC with the EGFR receptor antibody cetuximab seems promising. Methods/design: The ACCEPT trial is a prospective, mono-centric, phase I/II trial evaluating toxicity (primary endpoint: acute and late effects) and efficacy (secondary endpoint: local control, distant control, disease-free survival, overall survival) of the combined treatment with IMRT/carbon ion boost and weekly cetuximab in 49 patients with histologically proven (≥R1-resected, inoperable or Pn+) ACC. Patients receive 18 GyE carbon ions (6 fractions) and 54 Gy IMRT (2.0 Gy/fraction) in combination with weekly cetuximab throughout radiotherapy. Discussion: The primary objective of ACCEPT is to evaluate toxicity and feasibility of cetuximab and particle therapy in adenoid cystic carcinoma. Trial Registration: Clinical Trial Identifier: NCT 01192087 EudraCT number: 2010 - 022425 - 15 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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31. Current treatment options for recurrent nasopharyngeal cancer.
- Author
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Suárez, Carlos, Rodrigo, Juan P., Rinaldo, Alessandra, Langendijk, Johannes A., Shaha, Ashok R., and Ferlito, Alfio
- Subjects
PHARYNGEAL diseases ,CANCER treatment ,RADIOTHERAPY ,RADIOSURGERY ,TUMORS - Abstract
Loco-regional control rate of nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) has improved significantly in the past decade. However, local recurrence still represents a major cause of mortality and morbidity in advanced stages, and management of local failure remains a challenging issue in NPC. The best salvage treatment for local recurrent NPC remains to be determined. The options include brachytherapy, external radiotherapy, stereotactic radiosurgery, and nasopharyngectomy, either alone or in different combinations. In this article we will discuss the different options for salvage of locally recurrent NPC. Retreatment of locally recurrent NPC using radiotherapy, alone or in combination with other treatment modalities, as well as surgery, can result in long-term local control and survival in a substantial proportion of patients. For small-volume recurrent tumors (T1-T2) treated with external radiotherapy, brachytherapy or stereotactic radiosurgery, comparable results to those obtained with surgery have been reported. In contrast, treatment results of advanced-stage locally recurrent NPC are generally more satisfactory with surgery (with or without postoperative radiotherapy) than with reirradiation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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32. Dysphagia in Head and Neck Cancer Patients Treated with Chemoradiotherapy.
- Author
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Platteaux, Nele, Dirix, Piet, Dejaeger, Eddy, and Nuyts, Sandra
- Abstract
Dysphagia is a very common complaint of head and neck cancer patients and can exist before, during, and after chemoradiotherapy. It leads to nutritional deficiency, weight loss, and prolonged unnatural feeding and also has a major potential risk for aspiration. This has a significant negative impact on the patient’s entire quality of life. Because treatment of dysphagia in this setting is rarely effective, prevention is paramount. Several strategies have been developed to reduce dysphagia. These include swallowing exercises, treatment modification techniques such as intensity-modulated radiotherapy, selective delineation of elective nodes, reducing xerostomia by parotid-sparing radiotherapy, and adding of radioprotectors. However, more research is needed to further decrease the incidence of dysphagia and improve quality of life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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33. Treatment results and late complications of 556 patients with locally advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma treated with radiotherapy alone.
- Author
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CHEN, C. Y., HAN, F., ZHAO, C., LU, L. X., SUN, Y., LIU, X. F., and LU, T. X.
- Subjects
CANCER treatment complications ,NASOPHARYNX diseases ,RADIOTHERAPY ,METASTASIS ,MULTIVARIATE analysis - Abstract
The aim of this study was to investigate the outcome in 556 patients with locally advanced nasopharyngeal carcinomas treated by radiation therapy alone. We observed 556 patients with stage T3-4 and N0-3 carcinoma who were treated by conventional radiotherapy alone between January and December 1999. The total dose delivered to the nasopharynx was 66-80 Gy over 6.5-8 weeks and to the neck lymph nodes 60-70 Gy over 6-7 weeks. The 5-year actuarial overall survival rate (OS) reached 66.41%. The OS was higher among stage T3 patients than among stage T4 patients (69.12% vs 58.96%, p = 0.0359). Among patients with stage N0, N1, N2 and N3 disease, the OS was 73.98%, 65.96%, 57.58% and 29.39%, respectively (p = 0.0009). Differences in disease-free survival, locoregional control rate and metastasis-free survival rate among each N stage were statistically significant, although this was not true of differences between stage T3 and T4 disease. Multivariate analysis showed that gender, age, T stage and N stage were significant prognostic factors for 5-year overall survival, disease-free survival, locoregional control and metastasis-free survival. We found that N stage is the dominant prognostic indicator for patients with locally advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma receiving conventional radiation therapy alone, and that T stage was only a secondary correlative factor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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34. Proton Radiation Therapy for Nasopharyngeal Cancer Patients: Dosimetric and NTCP Evaluation Supporting Clinical Decision.
- Author
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Vai, Alessandro, Molinelli, Silvia, Rossi, Eleonora, Iacovelli, Nicola Alessandro, Magro, Giuseppe, Cavallo, Anna, Pignoli, Emanuele, Rancati, Tiziana, Mirandola, Alfredo, Russo, Stefania, Ingargiola, Rossana, Vischioni, Barbara, Bonora, Maria, Ronchi, Sara, Ciocca, Mario, and Orlandi, Ester
- Subjects
TINNITUS ,MUCOSITIS ,HYPOTHYROIDISM ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,CANCER patients ,TRISMUS ,XEROSTOMIA ,RADIATION doses ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RADIOTHERAPY ,DECISION making in clinical medicine ,NASOPHARYNX tumors ,RADIATION dosimetry ,NECROSIS - Abstract
Simple Summary: Radiotherapy is the cornerstone of treatment of nasopharyngeal cancer, in different settings with or without chemotherapy. This role has been recently strengthened by the introduction of proton therapy, as a radiation treatment option for head and neck cancer, obtaining improved plans with a reduced dose to organs-at-risk. Definition of strategies to identify patients who would benefit the most from proton therapy in terms of reduced toxicity is highly desirable, due to limited availability and higher costs of this treatment option. Two parallel working pipelines were depicted in this study for nasopharyngeal cancer patients. The introduction of a synthetic index describing the overall expected reduction in toxicities in the head and neck region with proton therapy was supported by the application of the well-established model-based selection methodology, relative to the same patient cohort. Based on this analysis, the fraction of nasopharyngeal cancer patients expected to receive a benefit with proton therapy was in line with the Dutch experience for the head and neck cancer population. (1) Background: we proposed an integrated strategy to support clinical allocation of nasopharyngeal patients between proton and photon radiotherapy. (2) Methods: intensity-modulated proton therapy (IMPT) plans were optimized for 50 consecutive nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) patients treated with volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT), and differences in dose and normal tissue complication probability (ΔNTCPx-p) for 16 models were calculated. Patient eligibility for IMPT was assessed using a model-based selection (MBS) strategy following the results for 7/16 models describing the most clinically relevant endpoints, applying a model-specific ΔNTCPx-p threshold (15% to 5% depending on the severity of the complication) and a composite threshold (35%). In addition, a comprehensive toxicity score (CTS) was defined as the weighted sum of all 16 ΔNTCPx-p, where weights follow a clinical rationale. (3) Results: Dose deviations were in favor of IMPT (ΔD
mean ≥ 14% for cord, esophagus, brainstem, and glottic larynx). The risk of toxicity significantly decreased for xerostomia (−12.5%), brain necrosis (−2.3%), mucositis (−3.2%), tinnitus (−8.6%), hypothyroidism (−9.3%), and trismus (−5.4%). There were 40% of the patients that resulted as eligible for IMPT, with a greater advantage for T3–T4 staging. Significantly different CTS were observed in patients qualifying for IMPT. (4) Conclusions: The MBS strategy successfully drives the clinical identification of NPC patients, who are most likely to benefit from IMPT. CTS summarizes well the expected global gain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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35. The management of completely resected childhood intracranial ependymoma: the argument for observation only.
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Little, Andrew S., Sheean, Tyson, Manoharan, Ragavan, Darbar, Aneela, and Teo, Charles
- Subjects
BRAIN ventricle tumors ,RADIOTHERAPY ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,CRANIOTOMY ,PEDIATRIC therapy ,SURGICAL excision - Abstract
The management of children with completely resected intracranial ependymomas is controversial. We favor deferring adjuvant radiotherapy in low-risk patients, whereas others recommend radiotherapy. This article reviews the available evidence for and against deferring radiotherapy in children with low-risk completely resected childhood ependymomas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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36. Relapsed Medulloblastoma in Pre-Irradiated Patients: Current Practice for Diagnostics and Treatment.
- Author
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Hill, Rebecca M., Plasschaert, Sabine L. A., Timmermann, Beate, Dufour, Christelle, Aquilina, Kristian, Avula, Shivaram, Donovan, Laura, Lequin, Maarten, Pietsch, Torsten, Thomale, Ulrich, Tippelt, Stephan, Wesseling, Pieter, Rutkowski, Stefan, Clifford, Steven C., Pfister, Stefan M., Bailey, Simon, and Fleischhack, Gudrun
- Subjects
BIOPSY ,IMMUNE checkpoint inhibitors ,CANCER chemotherapy ,GLIOMAS ,DISEASE relapse ,MOLECULAR biology ,DOSE-response relationship (Radiation) ,DECISION making ,RADIOTHERAPY ,IMMUNOTHERAPY - Abstract
Simple Summary: Medulloblastoma is the commonest malignant brain tumour of childhood. Disease relapse following maximal multi-modal therapy including upfront craniospinal irradiation (CSI) is almost always fatal and occurs in approximately 30% of patients. Importantly, patients rarely die of other causes, and consequently relapsed medulloblastoma (rMB) accounts for 10% of all childhood cancer deaths. There is a variety of life-prolonging treatment options at relapse including neurosurgery, re-irradiation, early-phase trials, and chemotherapy. Here, we summarise best practice for investigations including re-biopsy and molecular characterisation of rMB, treatment decision making, and available treatment options. We also highlight advances in the understanding of rMB disease biology and prognostic factors, and look towards future developments such as targeted therapies, liquid biopsies and disease modelling strategies to improve outcomes in this area of unmet clinical need. Relapsed medulloblastoma (rMB) accounts for a considerable, and disproportionate amount of childhood cancer deaths. Recent advances have gone someway to characterising disease biology at relapse including second malignancies that often cannot be distinguished from relapse on imaging alone. Furthermore, there are now multiple international early-phase trials exploring drug–target matches across a range of high-risk/relapsed paediatric tumours. Despite these advances, treatment at relapse in pre-irradiated patients is typically non-curative and focuses on providing life-prolonging and symptom-modifying care that is tailored to the needs and wishes of the individual and their family. Here, we describe the current understanding of prognostic factors at disease relapse such as principal molecular group, adverse molecular biology, and timing of relapse. We provide an overview of the clinical diagnostic process including signs and symptoms, staging investigations, and molecular pathology, followed by a summary of treatment modalities and considerations. Finally, we summarise future directions to progress understanding of treatment resistance and the biological mechanisms underpinning early therapy-refractory and relapsed disease. These initiatives include development of comprehensive and collaborative molecular profiling approaches at relapse, liquid biopsies such as cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) as a biomarker of minimal residual disease (MRD), modelling strategies, and the use of primary tumour material for real-time drug screening approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Cross-Over Study to Evaluate the Efficacy of Aqualief TM Mucoadhesive Tablets in Head and Neck Cancer Patients Who Developed Radiation-Induced Xerostomia.
- Author
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Iacovelli, Nicola Alessandro, Ingargiola, Rossana, Facchinetti, Nadia, Franceschini, Marzia, Romanello, Domenico Attilio, Bossi, Paolo, Bergamini, Cristiana, Alfieri, Salvatore, Cavalieri, Stefano, Baron, Giovanna, Aldini, Giancarlo, Locati, Laura, and Orlandi, Ester
- Subjects
THERAPEUTIC use of plant extracts ,DRUG efficacy ,DRUG tablets ,HEAD tumors ,HYDROGEN-ion concentration ,NEUROPEPTIDES ,DIETARY supplements ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,PLACEBOS ,CANCER patients ,COMPARATIVE studies ,XEROSTOMIA ,BLIND experiment ,SALIVATION ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RADIATION injuries ,RADIOTHERAPY ,PLANT extracts ,CROSSOVER trials ,NECK tumors ,LONGITUDINAL method ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Simple Summary: Xerostomia, the subjective complaint of dry mouth, is caused by therapeutic interventions or diseases. Nowadays, radiotherapy in patients with head and neck cancer (HNC) stands out as one of the most important causes of xerostomia. Currently available therapies for the treatment of xerostomia are still less than optimal and xerostomia still represents an unmet clinical need. In this article, we present the results of a clinical study with a new product, Aqualief
TM , in patients treated with curative radiotherapy for HNC. The results show that AqualiefTM stimulated salivation in these patients and reduced the pH drop that was observed in an equivalent population of patients treated with placebo. Moreover, no serious, treatment-related adverse events were observed. These encouraging results suggest that AqualiefTM may become a promising tool for the treatment of radiotherapy-related xerostomia. In addition, the results also suggest that AqualiefTM may have positive effects in the maintenance of oral health. Xerostomia, the subjective complaint of dry mouth, is caused by therapeutic interventions or diseases. Nowadays, radiotherapy (RT) in patients with head and neck cancer (HNC) stands out as one of the most important causes of xerostomia. Currently available therapies for the treatment of xerostomia are still less than optimal and xerostomia still represents an unmet clinical need. In this article, we present the results of a prospective clinical study with a new product, AqualiefTM , in patients treated with curative RT with or without chemotherapy for HNC. AqualiefTM is based on two main ingredients, carnosine and karkadé, which have acid buffering and antioxidant properties. The study was performed on 30 patients, with 4 of the patients being lost during the study period. Each patient received randomly one of the two treatments, AqualiefTM or placebo, for 8 days. After a 10-day wash-out period, each patient received the other treatment for a further 8 days. The results show that AqualiefTM stimulated salivation in these patients and reduced the pH drop that was observed in an equivalent placebo-treated population of patients. Moreover, no serious, treatment-related adverse events were observed. AqualiefTM has shown positive results, although with limitations due to unsuccessful trial accrual. Therefore, it may be further investigated as a tool for the treatment of RT-related xerostomia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Multidisciplinary Management of Radiation-Induced Salivary Gland Carcinomas in the Modern Radiotherapy Era.
- Author
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Romanello, Domenico Attilio, Imamguliyeva, Zulfiyya, Cavalieri, Stefano, Vischioni, Barbara, Gandola, Lorenza, Iannalfi, Alberto, Iacovelli, Nicola Alessandro, Licitra, Lisa, Guzzo, Marco, Piazza, Cesare, Lombardi, Davide, Diletto, Barbara, Quattrone, Pasquale, Calareso, Giuseppina, Locati, Laura Deborah, and Orlandi, Ester
- Subjects
HEALTH care teams ,CASE studies ,RADIATION ,RADIATION carcinogenesis ,SALIVARY gland tumors ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Simple Summary: Etiopathogenesis of salivary gland cancers [SGCs] is largely unknown, even if exposition to ionizing radiation is a recognized risk factor for SGCs development. To date, exhaustive data to guide clinicians in managing patients with radiation-induced [ri] SGCs are scarce and their treatment remains challenging. The purpose of this work is to describe and to analyze clinical and histopathological features, delivered treatments, and outcome of a series of patients with ri-SGCs treated at two Italian cancer referral sites. Given the rarity of ri-SGCs, this retrospective analysis conducted on a case series of 13 patients adds further knowledge to the paucity of literature. The management of these malignancies is extremely complex requiring a multidisciplinary treatment approach. Clinical data of ri-SGCs patients treated between 2015 and 2019 at a tertiary cancer center and a national hadron therapy facility were reviewed. Latent time (LT) from first RT to ri-SGCs diagnosis, overall (OS), and disease-free survival (DFS) were assessed. Thirteen patients developed 14 ri-SGCs (one patient had 2 synchronous ri-SCGs), after a median LT of 23 years (range 16–34). Parotid was the primary site in 8 cases (57%) and salivary duct carcinoma was the most frequent histotype (29%). Nine patients (69%) underwent surgery (Sx). Among them, 4 patients (31%) underwent Sx alone, 5 received post-operative treatments: 3 (23%) photon-based (X) reRT, one (8%) protons and carbon ions, one (8%) carbon ions only. One patient (8%) received definitive XRT. The remaining 3 patients (23%) received androgen deprivation therapy. With a median follow-up of 48 months (range 24–72), median OS and PFS were 74 and 24 months, respectively. In the subgroup of AR
+ ri-SGCs, median PFS and OS were 12 and 74 months, respectively. Given the rarity of ri-SGCs, this work adds further knowledge to the paucity of literature. The management of these malignancies is extremely complex requiring a multidisciplinary treatment approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Current and Emerging Methods of Management of Ependymoma.
- Author
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Toescu, Sebastian M. and Aquilina, Kristian
- Abstract
Purpose of Review: This review discusses the evidence base behind current and emerging strategies of management of intracranial and spinal ependymomas in children, with a particular focus on aspects of surgical techniques, challenges and complications. Recent Findings: The cornerstone of management remains maximal safe resective surgery, which has repeatedly been shown to correlate with improved survival. This is followed by focal conformal radiotherapy, although good results using proton beam therapy, with the potential for diminished side effects, are emerging. The role of chemotherapy remains largely unproven for paediatric ependymoma. Despite optimal management strategies, many children with ependymoma suffer from tumour recurrence. Summary: The standard of care for paediatric ependymoma comprises surgery and radiotherapy. Results of ongoing clinical trials will help shape its management in order to leverage our increasingly sophisticated understanding of the genetic drivers behind these tumours into survival benefit for this challenging group of patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Combination of nivolumab with standard induction chemotherapy in children and adults with EBV-positive nasopharyngeal carcinoma: Protocol of a prospective multicenter phase 2 trial
- Author
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Römer, Tristan, Vokuhl, Christian, Staatz, Gundula, Mottaghy, Felix M., Christiansen, Hans, Eble, Michael J., Timmermann, Beate, Klussmann, Jens Peter, Elbracht, Miriam, Calaminus, Gabriele, Zimmermann, Martin, Brümmendorf, Tim H., Feuchtinger, Tobias, Kerp, Helena, and Kontny, Udo
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The role of adjuvant chemotherapy in patients with H3K27 altered diffuse midline gliomas: a multicentric retrospective study
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Di Nunno, Vincenzo, Lombardi, Giuseppe, Simonelli, Matteo, Minniti, Giuseppe, Mastronuzzi, Angela, Di Ruscio, Valentina, Corrà, Martina, Padovan, Marta, Maccari, Marta, Caccese, Mario, Simonetti, Giorgia, Berlendis, Arianna, Farinotti, Mariangela, Pollo, Bianca, Antonelli, Manila, Di Muzio, Antonio, Dipasquale, Angelo, Asioli, Sofia, De Biase, Dario, Tosoni, Alicia, Silvani, Antonio, and Franceschi, Enrico
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Re-Irradiation: New Frontiers
- Author
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Carsten Nieder, Johannes Langendijk, Carsten Nieder, and Johannes Langendijk
- Subjects
- Combined modality therapy, Radiotherapy
- Abstract
This book, now in its second edition, provides a comprehensive overview of current re-irradiation strategies, with detailed discussion of re-irradiation methods, technical aspects, the role of combined therapy with anticancer drugs and hyperthermia, and normal tissue tolerance. In addition, disease specific chapters document recent clinical results and future research directions. All chapters from the first edition have been revised and updated to take account of the latest developments and research findings, including those from prospective studies. Due attention is paid to the exciting developments in the fields of proton irradiation and frameless image-guided ablative radiotherapy. The book documents fully how refined combined modality approaches and significant technical advances in radiation treatment planning and delivery have facilitated the re-irradiation of previously exposed volumes, allowing both palliative and curative approaches to be pursued at various disease sites. Professionals involved in radiation treatment planning and multimodal oncology treatment will find it to be an invaluable aid in understanding the benefits and limitations of re-irradiation and in designing prospective trials.
- Published
- 2017
43. Cetuximab and platinum-based chemoradio- or chemotherapy of patients with epidermal growth factor receptor expressing adenoid cystic carcinoma: a phase II trial
- Author
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Hitre, E, Budai, B, Takácsi-Nagy, Z, Rubovszky, G, Tóth, E, Remenár, É, Polgár, C, and Láng, I
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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