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RARE-17. SURVIVAL BENEFIT FOR INDIVIDUALS WITH CONSTITUTIONAL MISMATCH REPAIR DEFICIENCY SYNDROME AND BRAIN TUMORS WHO UNDERGO SURVEILLANCE PROTOCOL. A REPORT FROM THE INTERNATIONAL REPLICATION REPAIR CONSORTIUM

Authors :
Scott Lindhorst
Jan Rapp
Deborah T. Blumenthal
Carl Koschmann
Mithra Ghalibafian
Rebecca Loret De Mola
Daniel Pettee
Garth Nicholas
Roula Farah
Raymond Bedgood
Aghiad Chamdin
Donald Basel
Valerie Larouche
Michal Yalon
Michal Lurye
Monica Newmark
Rachel Pearlman
Theodore Nicolaides
William D. Foulkes
Eric Bouffet
Shlomi Constantini
Shayna Zelcer
Maura Massimino
Duncan Stearns
Enrico Opocher
Saunders Hsu
Gabriel Robbins
Michael P. Link
Naureen Mushtaq
Ira Winer
Alyssa Reddy
Ayse Bahar Ercan
Rina Dvir
Zehavit Frenkel
Rebecca C. Luiten
An Van Damme
Miriam Bornhorst
Michal Zapotocky
Syed Ahmer Hamid
Sharon Gardner
Alvaro Lassaletta
Catherine Goudie
Melissa Edwards
Carol Durno
David Samuel
Anne Bendel
Mohsin Rashid
Kim E. Nichols
Sara Carroll
Junne Kamihara
Vahid Fallah Azad
Melyssa Aronson
Craig Harlos
Patrick Tomboc
Jordan R. Hansford
Vanessa Bianchi
Santanu Sen
Michael Osborn
Jamie L. Maciaszek
Benjamin Oshrine
Cathy Gilpin
Isabelle Scheers
Abeer Al-Battashi
David S. Ziegler
Marc Remke
Jeffrey Knipstein
Anirban Das
Uri Tabori
Stefano Chiaravalli
Carol J. Swallow
Magnus Sabel
Ossama M. Maher
Annika Bronsema
Stefanie Zimmerman
Lee Yi Yen
Lara Reichman
Simon C. Ling
Vanan Magimairajan
David Sumerauer
Nobuko Hijiya
Helen Toledano
Musa Alharbi
Leslie Taylor
Elizabeth Cairney
Source :
Neuro-Oncology
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2020.

Abstract

BACKGROUND Constitutional mismatch repair deficiency syndrome (CMMRD) is a severe cancer predisposition syndrome resulting in early onset central nervous system (CNS) and other cancers. International guidelines for surveillance exist but no study has systematically evaluated the efficacy of this protocol. METHODS We surveyed all confirmed CMMRD patients in the International Replication Repair Deficiency Consortium. A surveillance protocol consisting of frequent biochemical, endoscopic and imaging (CNS and total body MRI) studies were employed. Survival analyses and efficacy of each method were assessed. RESULTS Surveillance data were collected from 105 CMMRD individuals from 41 countries. Of the 193 malignant tumors, CNS malignancies were the most common (44%). The surveillance protocol uncovered 49 asymptomatic tumors including 16 glioblastomas and medulloblastomas. Five-year overall survival was 89% for tumors discovered by surveillance, and 61% for symptomatic tumors (p6 months as per protocol. Finally, of the low grade tumors identified asymptomatically, 5 were low grade gliomas. All of the low grade gliomas, which were not resected transformed to high grade tumors at a median of 1.6 ± 0.9 years. CONCLUSION These data support a survival benefit in CMMRD patients undergoing a surveillance protocol. Adherence to protocol and resection of lower grade lesions may improve survival for patients with CNS tumors.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15235866 and 15228517
Volume :
22
Issue :
Suppl 3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neuro-Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....06c83ff109933b99d95c03cb7d71d296