360 research outputs found

    DNA copy number alterations in central primitive neuroectodermal tumors and tumors of the pineal region: an international individual patient data meta-analysis

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    Little is known about frequency, association with clinical characteristics, and prognostic impact of DNA copy number alterations (CNA) on survival in central primitive neuroectodermal tumors (CNS-PNET) and tumors of the pineal region. Searches of MEDLINE, Pubmed, and EMBASE—after the original description of comparative genomic hybridization in 1992 and July 2010—identified 15 case series of patients with CNS-PNET and tumors of the pineal region whose tumors were investigated for genome-wide CNA. One additional case study was identified from contact with experts. Individual patient data were extracted from publications or obtained from investigators, and CNAs were converted to a digitized format suitable for data mining and subgroup identification. Summary profiles for genomic imbalances were generated from case-specific data. Overall survival (OS) was estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method, and by univariable and multivariable Cox regression models. In their overall CNA profiles, low grade tumors of the pineal region clearly diverged from CNS-PNET and pineoblastoma. At a median follow-up of 89months, 7-year OS rates of CNS-PNET, pineoblastoma, and low grade tumors of the pineal region were 22.9±6, 0±0, and 87.5±12%, respectively. Multivariable analysis revealed that histology (CNS-PNET), age (≀2.5years), and possibly recurrent CNAs were associated with unfavorable OS. DNA copy number profiling suggests a close relationship between CNS-PNET and pineoblastoma. Low grade tumors of the pineal region differed from CNS-PNET and pineoblastoma. Due to their high biological and clinical variability, a coordinated prospective validation in future studies is necessary to establish robust risk factor

    Parent-reported health-related quality of life in pediatric childhood cancer survivors and factors associated with poor health-related quality of life in aftercare

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    Purpose Despite advances in cancer treatment, there is a prevalence of pediatric childhood cancer survivors still at risk of developing adverse disease and treatment outcomes, even after the end of treatment. The present study aimed to (1) explore how mothers and fathers assess the health-related quality of life (HRQoL) of their surviving child and (2) evaluate risk factors for poor parent-reported HRQoL in childhood cancer survivors about 2.5 years after diagnosis. Methods We assessed parent-reported HRQoL of 305 child and adolescent survivors < 18 years diagnosed with leukemia or tumors of central nervous system (CNS) with the KINDL-R questionnaire in a prospective observational study with a longitudinal mixed-methods design. Results In agreement with our hypotheses, our results show that fathers rate their children’s HRQoL total score as well as the condition-specific domains family (p = .013, d = 0.3), friends (p = .027, d = 0.27), and disease (p = .035, d = 0.26) higher than mothers about 2.5 years after diagnosis. Taking variance of inter-individual differences due to family affiliation into account, the mixed model regression revealed significant associations between the diagnosis of CNS tumors (p = .018, 95% CI [− 7.78, − 0.75]), an older age at diagnosis, (p = .011, 95% CI [− 0.96, − 0.12]), and non-participation in rehabilitation (p = .013, 95% CI [− 10.85, − 1.28]) with poor HRQoL in children more than 2 years after being diagnosed with cancer. Conclusion Based on the results, it is necessary for health care professionals to consider the differences in parental perceptions regarding children’s aftercare after surviving childhood cancer. High risk patients for poor HRQoL should be detected early, and families should be offered support post-cancer diagnosis to protect survivors’ HRQoL during aftercare. Further research should focus on characteristics of pediatric childhood cancer survivors and families with low participation in rehabilitation programs

    AuftrĂ€ge zur Vorbereitung fĂŒr den 2. Klausurtag

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    AuftrĂ€ge fĂŒr LehrkrĂ€fte bis zum nĂ€chsten Klausurtag (Evaluation und Vorbereitung)

    Expression of O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase in childhood medulloblastoma

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    Medulloblastomas (MB) are the most common malignant brain tumors in childhood. Alkylator-based drugs are effective agents in the treatment of patients with MB. In several tumors, including malignant glioma, elevated O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) expression levels or lack of MGMT promoter methylation have been found to be associated with resistance to alkylating chemotherapeutic agents such as temozolomide (TMZ). In this study, we examined the MGMT status of MB and central nervous system primitive neuroectodermal tumor (PNET) cells and two large sets of primary MB. In sevenMB/PNET cell lines investigated, MGMT promoter methylation was detected only in D425 human MB cells as assayed by the qualitative methylation-specific PCR and the more quantitative pyrosequencing assay. In D425 human MB cells, MGMT mRNA and protein expression was clearly lower when compared with the MGMT expression in the other MB/PNET cell lines. In MB/PNET cells, sensitivity towards TMZ and 1-(2-chloroethyl)-3-cyclohexyl-1-nitrosourea (CCNU) correlated with MGMT methylation and MGMT mRNA expression. Pyrosequencing in 67 primary MB samples revealed a mean percentage of MGMT methylation of 3.7-92% (mean: 13.25%, median: 10.67%). Percentage of MGMT methylation and MGMT mRNA expression as determined by quantitative RT-PCR correlated inversely (n=46; Pearson correlation r 2=0.14, P=0.01). We then analyzed MGMT mRNA expression in a second set of 47 formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded primary MB samples from clinically well-documented patients treated within the prospective randomized multicenter trial HIT'91. No association was found between MGMT mRNA expression and progression-free or overall survival. Therefore, it is not currently recommended to use MGMT mRNA expression analysis to determine who should receive alkylating agents and who should no

    Proton beam therapy for pediatric tumors of the central nervous system — experiences of clinical outcome and feasibility from the KiProReg Study

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    Simple Summary Radiation therapy is an important cornerstone of the treatment of many different types of brain tumors occurring in childhood. Proton beam therapy offers the opportunity to reduce doses outside of the target volume due to its physical characteristics. By sparing a large volume of the brain from radiation doses, proton beam therapy aims at reducing long-term side effects and preserving cognitive function. Our study aims at better understanding side effects and therefore contributing to better treatment decisions in this vulnerable group of patients. Therefore, the study analyses outcome and side effects including imaging changes in a large cohort of children with brain tumors from a prospective registry. Abstract As radiotherapy is an important part of the treatment in a variety of pediatric tumors of the central nervous system (CNS), proton beam therapy (PBT) plays an evolving role due to its potential benefits attributable to the unique dose distribution, with the possibility to deliver high doses to the target volume while sparing surrounding tissue. Children receiving PBT for an intracranial tumor between August 2013 and October 2017 were enrolled in the prospective registry study KiProReg. Patient’s clinical data including treatment, outcome, and follow-up were analyzed using descriptive statistics, Kaplan–Meier, and Cox regression analysis. Adverse events were scored according to the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) 4.0 before, during, and after PBT. Written reports of follow-up imaging were screened for newly emerged evidence of imaging changes, according to a list of predefined keywords for the first 14 months after PBT. Two hundred and ninety-four patients were enrolled in this study. The 3-year overall survival of the whole cohort was 82.7%, 3-year progression-free survival was 67.3%, and 3-year local control was 79.5%. Seventeen patients developed grade 3 adverse events of the CNS during long-term follow-up (new adverse event n = 7; deterioration n = 10). Two patients developed vision loss (CTCAE 4°). This analysis demonstrates good general outcomes after PBT

    Local and systemic therapy of recurrent medulloblastomas in children and adolescents: results of the P-HIT-REZ 2005 study

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    SIMPLE SUMMARY: A medulloblastoma recurrence is usually associated with an unfavorable prognosis. The German P-HIT-REZ 2005 Study gathered data from patients with relapsed medulloblastomas treated in different, non-randomized therapy arms dependent on preconditions of the patients (previous treatment, comorbidities, relapse pattern), the decision of treating physicians, and the patients’/parents’ choice. A total of 93 evaluable patients with refractory or relapsed medulloblastoma were enrolled. The main aim of this study was to analyze the impact of patient and disease characteristics as well as local and systemic therapies on post-relapse progression-free (PFS) and overall survival (OS). In multivariate analysis, a short time until the first recurrence (<18 months) was the strongest predictor for a worse PFS and OS, which was mainly associated with molecular subgroup 3. Metastatic disease, at relapse, only had a significant impact on OS. Re-biopsy, at relapse, is highly recommended to investigate the histopathological and molecular genetic tumor characteristics and to exclude a secondary malignancy. ABSTRACT: Recurrent medulloblastomas are associated with survival rates <10%. Adequate multimodal therapy is being discussed as having a major impact on survival. In this study, 93 patients with recurrent medulloblastoma treated in the German P-HIT-REZ 2005 Study were analyzed for survival (PFS, OS) dependent on patient, disease, and treatment characteristics. The median age at the first recurrence was 10.1 years (IQR: 6.9–16.1). Median PFS and OS, at first recurrence, were 7.9 months (CI: 5.7–10.0) and 18.5 months (CI: 13.6–23.5), respectively. Early relapses/progressions (<18 months, n = 30/93) found mainly in molecular subgroup 3 were associated with markedly worse median PFS (HR: 2.34) and OS (HR: 3.26) in regression analyses. A significant survival advantage was found for the use of volume-reducing surgery as well as radiotherapy. Intravenous chemotherapy with carboplatin and etoposide (ivCHT, n = 28/93) showed improved PFS and OS data and the best objective response rate (ORR) was 66.7% compared to oral temozolomide (oCHT, n = 47/93) which was 34.8%. Intraventricular (n = 43) as well as high-dose chemotherapy (n = 17) at first relapse was not related to a significant survival benefit. Although the results are limited due to a non-randomized study design, they may serve as a basis for future treatment decisions in order to improve the patients’ survival

    Outcome of 11 children with ependymoblastoma treated within the prospective HIT-trials between 1991 and 2006

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    Ependymoblastoma is a rare malignant brain tumor of early childhood. Data on clinical behavior and optimal treatment strategies are scarce. We report on 11 consecutively treated children with centrally confirmed diagnosis of CNS ependymoblastoma, registered between February 1994 and October 2006 to the prospective GPOH-HIT multicenter brain tumor trials, and treated by multimodal regimens. Median age at diagnosis was 3.5years (range, 1.8-5.6years), and the median follow-up of survivors was 5.9years (range, 2.2-12.7years). Initial stage was M0 in 9, and M0/1 (no cerebrospinal fluid examination done) in 2 patients. Gross-total tumor resection was achieved in 7 patients, incomplete resection in 4 patients. Further primary therapy included chemotherapy in all patients, craniospinal radiotherapy in 5 patients and high-dose chemotherapy in 2 patients. Tumor response to chemotherapy was observed in 1 of 4 evaluable patients. Tumor progression occurred in 7 patients after a median time of 5.0months (range, 2.5-19.2months). Five-year progression-free survival was 36.4% (±14.5%), 5-year overall survival 30.3% (±15.9%). Of 4 survivors, 3 had gross-total tumor resection, and all were treated by either craniospinal radiotherapy and/or high-dose chemotherapy with autologous blood stem cell rescue. Prognosis of children with ependymoblastoma is poor, but sustained remissions have been achieved after multimodal treatment. Considerable diagnostic discrepancies between local and central pathologists underscore the importance of central review. Further studies are needed to improve survival of children with this rare malignant central nervous system tumo

    QOL-04. Histology, treatment, and extent of pretreatment hydrocephalus are major determents of neurocognitive outcome for survivors of pediatric posterior fossa tumors - report from the German HIT-studies [Abstract]

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    BACKGROUND: Cognitive impairments following pediatric brain tumors are generally attributed to tumor site, surgical intervention, complications as well as to nonsurgical treatment. We investigated impairments for patients with medulloblastoma (MB), ependymoma (EP) and low-grade glioma (LGG) of the cerebellum treated within the German pediatric brain tumor network to compare and rank major determents. PATIENTS+METHODS: Following protocol treatment, 245 patients with MB (n=106), EP (n=32), and cerebellar LGG (n=107, surgery only) were examined 2 + 5 years after diagnosis using the German “Neuropsychological-Basic-Diagnostic” (NBD) tool based on the Cattell-Horn-Carroll model for intelligence. Within this retrospective study, multiple linear regression models were applied. RESULTS: The MB+EP vs. LGG-cohort differed slightly in median age at diagnosis (8.7/6.1 years) and location (cerebellar hemispheres: 8%MB+EP/49.5%LGG), while sex-ratio, grade of resection, extent of pre-operative hydrocephalus were comparable. With smaller median tumor-volume in the MB+EP vs. LGG-cohort (34.1/44.1cm3), ranges broadly overlapped. Median scores of age-appropriate tests were in the lower normal range for all patients for fluid and crystallized intelligence, selective attention, visual-spatial processing (VSP) and verbal short-term memory (median=93-103), but distinctly below for processing speed (PS), and psychomotor speed abilities (PMS) (median=65-84). Higher doses of craniospinal irradiation (>23.4Gy/23.4Gy) resulted in lower scores for most domains for MB-patients compared to LGG-patients (e.g., PS-estimate: >23.4Gy:-27.71, p=0.026/23.4Gy:-9.93, p=0.286). EP-patients (surgery+54Gy local radiation) scored better than LGG-patients except for PS (estimate:-15.65, p=0.111). Impairments were accentuated with higher degrees of hydrocephalus (estimate:-7.64, p=0.103) in patients with incomplete resection (estimate:12.23, p=0.006) for PMS both hands. CONCLUSION: Following age-adapted comprehensive treatment, survivors of a cerebellar tumor show significant impairments of PMS abilities in our trials. Our data suggest that slow growing LGG impair neurocognitive development more than local radiotherapy for ependymoma, while craniospinal irradiation compromises VSP and PS in MB. Initial symptomatic intracranial pressure remains a strong predictor for general neuropsychological impairment
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