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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Outcome of children with centrally reviewed low-grade gliomas treated with chemotherapy with or without radiotherapy on Children's Cancer Group high-grade glioma study CCG-945.
- Maryam Fouladi, Daniel L Hunt, Ian F Pollack, Gregor Dueckers, Peter C Burger, Laurence E Becker, Allen J Yates, Floyd H Gilles, Richard L Davis, James M Boyett, and Jonathan L Finlay.
- Department of Hematology/Oncology, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee, USA. maryam.fouladi@stjude.org
- Cancer. 2003 Sep 15; 98 (6): 1243-52.
BackgroundThe objectives of the current study were to determine the outcome of children who were treated with chemotherapy and radiotherapy on the Children's Cancer Group (CCG) high-grade glioma protocol (CCG-945) who were diagnosed with low-grade gliomas on post hoc central pathologic review and to identify clinical and biologic features associated with prognosis.MethodsBetween 1985 and 1991, 250 children with institutionally classified high-grade gliomas were enrolled on CCG-945. Patients older than 24 months with intracranial lesions were assigned randomly to receive either lomustine, vincristine, and prednisone (control regimen) or the 8-drugs-in-1-day regimen (experimental regimen); younger patients and those with primary spinal cord tumors were assigned nonrandomly to the experimental regimen. Central independent review by 5 neuropathologists led to a reclassification of low-grade glioma in 70 patients, who were the focus of the current study.ResultsThe study involved 42 males and 28 females (median age, 7.7 years) with a median follow-up of 10.4 years. At 5 years, the progression-free survival (PFS) rate was 63% +/- 6%, and the overall survival (OS) rate was 79% +/- 5%, compared with a PFS rate of 19% +/- 3% (P < 0.0001) and an OS rate of 22% +/- 3% (P < 0.0001) in the remainder of the cohort. Significantly poorer 5-year PFS was seen in children younger than 24 months, those with fibrillary astrocytoma, and those with posterior fossa tumors. Patients demonstrated a modest improvement in PFS but no improvement in OS compared with children with low-grade gliomas who were treated with contemporary chemotherapy-alone approaches.ConclusionsThe current report calls attention to the importance of central pathologic review in large multiinstitutional trials of children with gliomas and suggests that aggressive front-line combined chemoradiotherapy does not confer a survival advantage in this highly selected population of patients.Copyright 2003 American Cancer Society.DOI 10.1002/cncr.11637
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