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Researchers Report Benefits of New Standard Treatment Study
for Rare Pediatric Brain Cancer
October 12, 2009
SAO PAULO, BRAZIL ― A team of researchers led by The University of
Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center unveiled results today from the
largest-ever collaborative study addressing the treatment of a rare
pediatric brain tumor. The findings suggest a new standard protocol
could improve survival nearly two-fold for pediatric patients with
choroid plexus tumors, as reported at the 41st Annual Meeting of the
International Society of Pediatric Oncology (SIOP).
Johannes Wolff, M.D., professor in the Children's Cancer Hospital at
M. D. Anderson Cancer Center and lead investigator on the study,
revealed that the protocol, consisting of three chemotherapy agents and
radiation, had projected overall survival rates of 93 percent at one
year, 82 percent at five years, and 78 percent at eight years.
"This SIOP 2000 study started 10 years ago and has grown to include
more than 100 institutions from more than 20 countries," said Wolff.
"With the data we have, we can tell which patients are prone to do
better and which ones have a poor prognosis. In addition, we've
established a promising standard protocol for these patients."
Choroid plexus carcinomas are malignant brain tumors that originate
in the choroid plexus epithelium, which is the gland that produces
cerebrospinal fluid. Often the tumors may block the flow of
cerebrospinal fluid causing pressure to build in the brain and possibly
enlarge the skull. It is a very rare tumor affecting approximately 1,500
children worldwide each year, occurring more often in infants.
Due to the rarity of the disease, there is no standard treatment
protocol for the disease, but Wolff and other international researchers
hope to change that through their studies. They also developed an
innovative statistical module for institutions to use that will ensure
quality and efficient data coming out of the study.
One surprising finding Wolff and fellow researchers discovered
contradicted historical research, which originally showed the
significant advantage of complete surgical resection. The SIOP 2000
study found that patients receiving the intense chemotherapy protocol
had similar outcomes as those with complete resection, reducing the need
for surgical treatment.
"We think the better outcomes had to do with the fact that physicians
will prolong chemotherapy treatment if there is residual tumor," said
Wolff. "If we can prove this hypothesis, this would be an argument for
extending treatment in the future."
Wolff says the next step will be to begin another study that will
investigate a four-armed chemotherapy protocol. This would investigate
the possibility of adding another chemotherapy to further improve
survival rates. The SIOP 2000 study used carboplatinum, etoposide and
cyclophosamide in combination with radiation.
Source: University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center
The study was funded through the German Children's Cancer
Foundation.
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