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Outcomes of Infants and Young Children With Relapsed Medulloblastoma After Initial Craniospinal Irradiation-Sparing Approaches : An International Cohort Study

Authors :
Craig Erker
Martin Mynarek
Simon Bailey
Claire M. Mazewski
Lorena Baroni
Maura Massimino
Juliette Hukin
Dolly Aguilera
Andrea M. Cappellano
Vijay Ramaswamy
Alvaro Lassaletta
Sébastien Perreault
Cassie N. Kline
Revathi Rajagopal
George Michaiel
Michal Zapotocky
Vicente Santa-Maria Lopez
Andres Morales La Madrid
Chantel Cacciotti
Eric S. Sandler
Lindsey M. Hoffman
Darren Klawinski
Sara Khan
Ralph Salloum
Anna L. Hoppmann
Valérie Larouche
Kathleen Dorris
Helen Toledano
Stephen W. Gilheeney
Mohamed S. Abdelbaki
Beverly Wilson
Derek S. Tsang
Jeffrey Knipstein
Michal Yalon Oren
Shafqat Shah
Jeffrey C. Murray
Kevin F. Ginn
Zhihong J. Wang
Gudrun Fleischhack
Denise Obrecht
Svenja Tonn
Virginia L. Harrod
Kara Matheson
Bruce Crooks
Douglas R. Strother
Kenneth J. Cohen
Jordan R. Hansford
Sabine Mueller
Ashley Margol
Amar Gajjar
Girish Dhall
Jonathan L. Finlay
Paul A. Northcott
Stefan Rutkowski
Steven C. Clifford
Giles Robinson
Eric Bouffet
Lucie Lafay-Cousin
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

PURPOSE Infant and young childhood medulloblastoma (iMB) is usually treated without craniospinal irradiation (CSI) to avoid neurocognitive late effects. Unfortunately, many children relapse. The purpose of this study was to assess salvage strategies and prognostic features of patients with iMB who relapse after CSI-sparing therapy. METHODS We assembled a large international cohort of 380 patients with relapsed iMB, age younger than 6 years, and initially treated without CSI. Univariable and multivariable Cox models of postrelapse survival (PRS) were conducted for those treated with curative intent using propensity score analyses to account for confounding factors. RESULTS The 3-year PRS, for 294 patients treated with curative intent, was 52.4% (95% CI, 46.4 to 58.3) with a median time to relapse from diagnosis of 11 months. Molecular subgrouping was available for 150 patients treated with curative intent, and 3-year PRS for sonic hedgehog (SHH), group 4, and group 3 were 60%, 84%, and 18% ( P = .0187), respectively. In multivariable analysis, localized relapse ( P = .0073), SHH molecular subgroup ( P = .0103), CSI use after relapse ( P = .0161), and age ≥ 36 months at initial diagnosis ( P = .0494) were associated with improved survival. Most patients (73%) received salvage CSI, and although salvage chemotherapy was not significant in multivariable analysis, its use might be beneficial for a subset of children receiving salvage CSI < 35 Gy ( P = .007). CONCLUSION A substantial proportion of patients with relapsed iMB are salvaged after initial CSI-sparing approaches. Patients with SHH subgroup, localized relapse, older age at initial diagnosis, and those receiving salvage CSI show improved PRS. Future prospective studies should investigate optimal CSI doses and the role of salvage chemotherapy in this population.

Subjects

Subjects :
Cancer Research
Oncology
Medizin

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8e1c84196b9b4ebe9f95cd02adcf4b70