Journal of neuro-oncology
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Journal of neuro-oncology · Jul 2009
Review Case ReportsCerebral astroblastoma: analysis of six cases and critical review of treatment options.
Astroblastoma is one of the rarest tumors of the central nervous system (CNS), and its classification, histogenesis, diagnosis and therapeutic management are still being debated. The typical histopathological appearance is the perivascular, astroblastic pseudorosette, which is however present in other CNS tumors. To clarify the clinical, radiological, histopathological, prognostic and therapeutic characteristics, which have been treated only recently and are not well established yet due to the rarity of this tumor, six cases of histologically proven astroblastoma were retrospectively analyzed in light of more pertinent literature and paying special attention to therapeutic remarks. ⋯ The role of chemotherapy is still very debatable. We propose an aggressive standardized treatment for those lesions that meet anaplastic criteria, owing to their postulated glial origin and the propensity to have aggressive courses, and we advocate the use of a safe adjuvant chemotherapeutic regimen with TMZ, used concomitantly and subsequently to radiotherapy, especially for the high-grade astroblastoma cases. Multicenter studies, taking into account molecular biological findings, are necessary to define a common therapeutic strategy for astroblastomas.
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Journal of neuro-oncology · Jul 2009
Randomized Controlled TrialSafety and feasibility of switching from phenytoin to levetiracetam monotherapy for glioma-related seizure control following craniotomy: a randomized phase II pilot study.
Seizures are common in patients with gliomas, and phenytoin (PHT) is frequently used to control tumor-related seizures. PHT, however, has many undesirable side effects (SEs) and drug interactions with glioma chemotherapy. Levetiracetam (LEV) is a newer antiepileptic drug (AED) with fewer SEs and essentially no drug interactions. ⋯ Reported SEs at 6 months was as follows (%LEV/%PHT group): dizziness (0/14), difficulty with coordination (0/29), depression (7/14) lack of energy or strength (20/43), insomnia (40/43), mood instability (7/0). The pilot data presented here suggest that it is safe to switch patients from PHT to LEV monotherapy following craniotomy for supratentorial glioma. A large-scale, double-blinded, randomized control trial of LEV versus PHT is required to determine seizure control equivalence and better assess differences in SEs.
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Journal of neuro-oncology · Jul 2009
Clinical TrialNo-glucose strategy influences posterior cranial fossa tumors' postoperative course: introducing the Glycemic Stress Index.
In a selected patient population, we evaluated the glycemic response to different infusional policies in the management of posterior cranial fossa tumor (PFT) removal. We analyzed the perioperative course, prospectically collected, of 137 children undergoing 150 surgical procedures. Patients were divided in two groups according to different intraoperative fluids (group A, 2.5% glucose; group B, crystalloids). ⋯ As no perioperative mortality occurred and no differences were found between groups regarding PICU respiratory or infectious complications, PICU length of stay (LOS) was assumed as the main outcome indicator. LOS was not influenced by group A or B inclusion, while a new indicator, namely the Glycemic Stress Index (GSI), representing both glycemic intraoperative change and procedure length, showed significantly different results in the study groups (P = 0.004). Our clinical experience suggests that both intraoperative glucose-free solutions are safe, and GSI can be a useful tool to identify prolonged PICU stay patients.
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Journal of neuro-oncology · Jul 2009
High-dose radiotherapy to 78 Gy with or without temozolomide for high grade gliomas.
To describe outcomes associated with high-dose radiotherapy with and without temozolomide for high grade central nervous system (CNS) neoplasms. ⋯ High dose conformal radiotherapy to > or =70 Gy with chemotherapy for high-grade CNS neoplasms appears safe but survival remains suboptimal. Within glioblastoma patients, temozolomide provided statistically significant survival improvement over no chemotherapy.