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Medulloblastoma at relapse: for which patients and which tumors reirradiation is the better choice

Authors :
Maura Massimino
Sabina Vennarini
Francesca Romana Buttarelli
Manila Antonelli
Francesca Colombo
Simone Minasi
Emilia Pecori
Paolo Ferroli
Carlo Giussani
Marco Schiariti
Elisabetta Schiavello
Veronica Biassoni
Alessandra Erbetta
Luisa Chiapparini
Olga Nigro
Luna Boschetti
Francesca Gianno
Evelina Miele
Piergiorgio Modena
Loris De Cecco
Bianca Pollo
Francesco Barretta
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Research Square Platform LLC, 2023.

Abstract

Background. First-line therapies for medulloblastoma(MBL) are obtaining higher survival-rates while decreasing late-effects, but treatment at relapse is not standardized. We report the experience with MBL re-irradiation(re-RT), its timing and outcome in different clinical settings and tumor groups. Methods. Patient’s staging/treatment at diagnosis, histotypes/molecular subgroups, relapse site/s, re-treatments outcome are reported. Results. Patients were 25, median age 11.4 years, 8 had metastases, three LCA histotype. According to 2016-2021 WHO-classification, 14 had SHH subgroup tumors(6 TP53 mutated,1 + MYC and 1 + NMYC amplification), 11 non-WNT/non-SHH (2 with MYC/MYCN amplification).Thirteen had received HART-CSI, 11 standard-CSI, one HFRT; all post-radiation chemotherapy(CT), 16 also pre-RT. Median time to relapse (local-LR in 9, distant-DR in 14, LR+DR in two) was 26 months. Fourteen patients were re-operated, in 5 excising single DR-sites, thereafter 3 received CT, two after re-RT; out of 11 not re-operated patients, 4 had re-RT as first treatment and 7 after CT. Re-RT was administered at median 32 months after first RT: focally in 20 cases, CSI in 5, never resulting in radionecrosis. Median post-relapse-PFS/after re-RT were 16.7/8.2 months, while overall survival-OS were 35.1/23.9 months, respectively. Metastatic status both at diagnosis/relapse negatively affected outcome and re-surgery was prognostically favorable.MYC,MYCN,P53 status and molecular subgroups, RT extension/fractionation, gender and age were not statistically prognostic; in the multivariable model, OSs were positively influenced by longer intervals before re-RT, re-surgery and not-SHH subgroups (P=0.019 from recurrence and 0.004 from second RT). Conclusions. Re-surgery+reRT can prolong survival; a substantial fraction of patients with worse outcome belongs to SHH-subgroup.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........7380afec7e4d2ba4edaba5567152c817
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-2899535/v1