1. SEOM clinical guideline for management of adult medulloblastoma (2020)
- Author
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R. Luque, M. Benavides, L. Egaña, Pedro Pérez-Segura, S. del Barco, Joaquín M. Sepúlveda, Maria Martinez-Garcia, Maria Vieito, Estela Pineda, and J. A. García-Gómez
- Subjects
Adult ,Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adult Medulloblastoma ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Clinical Guides in Oncology ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Medical Oncology ,Postoperative Complications ,Internal medicine ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Humans ,Adults ,Molecular Targeted Therapy ,Cerebellar Neoplasms ,Societies, Medical ,Medulloblastoma ,Chemotherapy ,Evidence-Based Medicine ,Radiotherapy ,business.industry ,Palliative Care ,Consolidation Chemotherapy ,General Medicine ,Guideline ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Treatment ,Clinical trial ,Tolerability ,Spain ,Vincristine ,Retreatment ,Cisplatin ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,business - Abstract
Recent advances in molecular profiling, have reclassified medulloblastoma, an undifferentiated tumor of the posterior fossa, in at least four diseases, each one with differences in prognosis, epidemiology and sensibility to different treatments. The recommended management of a lesion with radiological characteristics suggestive of MB includes maximum safe resection followed by a post-surgical MR 1.5 cm2, presence of micro- or macroscopic dissemination, and age > 3 years as well as pathological (presence of anaplastic or large cell features) and molecular findings (group, 4, 3 or p53 SHH mutated subgroup) determine the risk of relapse and should guide adjuvant management. Although there is evidence that both high-risk patients and to a lesser degree, standard-risk patients benefit from adjuvant craneoespinal radiation followed by consolidation chemotherapy, tolerability is a concern in adult patients, leading invariably to dose reductions. Treatment after relapse is to be considered palliative and inclusion on clinical trials, focusing on the molecular alterations that define each subgroup, should be encouraged. Selected patients can benefit from surgical rescue or targeted radiation or high-dose chemotherapy followed by autologous self-transplant. Even in patients that are cured by chemorradiation presence of significant sequelae is common and patients must undergo lifelong follow-up.
- Published
- 2021
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