PURPOSE: The aims of patients' radiological surveillance are to: ascertain relapse; apply second-line therapy; accrue patients in phase 1/2 protocols if second-line therapy is not standardized/curative; and assess/treat iatrogenic effects. To lessen the emotional and socioeconomic burdens for patients and families, we ideally need to establish whether scheduled radiological surveillance gives patients a better outcome than waiting for symptoms and signs to appear. METHODS: We analyzed a prospective series of 160 newly-diagnosed and treated pediatric/adolescent patients with intracranial ependymoma, comparing patients with recurrent disease identified on scheduled MRI (the RECPT group; 34 cases) with those showing signs/symptoms of recurrent disease (the SYMPPT group; 16 cases). The median follow-up was 67 months. RESULTS: No significant differences emerged between the two groups in terms of gender, age, tumor grade/site, shunting, residual disease, or type of relapse (local, distant, or concomitant). The time to relapse (median 19 months; range 5-104) and the MRI follow-up intervals did not differ between the SYMPPT and RECPT groups. The presence of signs/symptoms was an unfavorable factor for overall survival (OS) after recurrence (5-year OS: 8% vs. 37%, p = 0.001). On multivariable analysis, an adjusted model confirmed a significantly worse OS in the SYMPPT than in the RECPT patients. CONCLUSIONS: Symptomatic relapses carried a significantly worse survival for ependymoma patients than recurrences detected by MRI alone. It would therefore be desirable to identify recurrences before symptoms develop. Radiological follow-up should be retained in ependymoma patient surveillance because there is a chance of salvage treatment for relapses found on MRI.

Pediatric intracranial ependymoma: correlating signs and symptoms at recurrence with outcome in the second prospective AIEOP protocol follow-up / Massimino, M; Barretta, F; Modena, P; Giangaspero, F; Chiapparini, L; Erbetta, A; Boschetti, L; Antonelli, M; Ferroli, P; Bertin, D; Pecori, E; Biassoni, V; Garrè, Ml; Schiavello, E; Sardi, I; Viscardi, E; Scarzello, G; Mascarin, M; Quaglietta, L; Cinalli, G; Genitori, L; Peretta, P; Mussano, A; Barra, S; Mastronuzzi, A; Giussani, C; Marras, Ce; Balter, R; Bertolini, P; Tornesello, A; La Spina, M; Buttarelli, Fr; Ruggiero, A; Caldarelli, M; Poggi, G; Gandola, L. - In: JOURNAL OF NEURO-ONCOLOGY. - ISSN 0167-594X. - 140:2(2018), pp. 457-465. [10.1007/s11060-018-2974-6]

Pediatric intracranial ependymoma: correlating signs and symptoms at recurrence with outcome in the second prospective AIEOP protocol follow-up

Giangaspero F;Chiapparini L;Antonelli M;Mastronuzzi A;Buttarelli FR;
2018

Abstract

PURPOSE: The aims of patients' radiological surveillance are to: ascertain relapse; apply second-line therapy; accrue patients in phase 1/2 protocols if second-line therapy is not standardized/curative; and assess/treat iatrogenic effects. To lessen the emotional and socioeconomic burdens for patients and families, we ideally need to establish whether scheduled radiological surveillance gives patients a better outcome than waiting for symptoms and signs to appear. METHODS: We analyzed a prospective series of 160 newly-diagnosed and treated pediatric/adolescent patients with intracranial ependymoma, comparing patients with recurrent disease identified on scheduled MRI (the RECPT group; 34 cases) with those showing signs/symptoms of recurrent disease (the SYMPPT group; 16 cases). The median follow-up was 67 months. RESULTS: No significant differences emerged between the two groups in terms of gender, age, tumor grade/site, shunting, residual disease, or type of relapse (local, distant, or concomitant). The time to relapse (median 19 months; range 5-104) and the MRI follow-up intervals did not differ between the SYMPPT and RECPT groups. The presence of signs/symptoms was an unfavorable factor for overall survival (OS) after recurrence (5-year OS: 8% vs. 37%, p = 0.001). On multivariable analysis, an adjusted model confirmed a significantly worse OS in the SYMPPT than in the RECPT patients. CONCLUSIONS: Symptomatic relapses carried a significantly worse survival for ependymoma patients than recurrences detected by MRI alone. It would therefore be desirable to identify recurrences before symptoms develop. Radiological follow-up should be retained in ependymoma patient surveillance because there is a chance of salvage treatment for relapses found on MRI.
2018
childhood ependymoma; follow-up; re-irradiation; relapse; surveillance
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Pediatric intracranial ependymoma: correlating signs and symptoms at recurrence with outcome in the second prospective AIEOP protocol follow-up / Massimino, M; Barretta, F; Modena, P; Giangaspero, F; Chiapparini, L; Erbetta, A; Boschetti, L; Antonelli, M; Ferroli, P; Bertin, D; Pecori, E; Biassoni, V; Garrè, Ml; Schiavello, E; Sardi, I; Viscardi, E; Scarzello, G; Mascarin, M; Quaglietta, L; Cinalli, G; Genitori, L; Peretta, P; Mussano, A; Barra, S; Mastronuzzi, A; Giussani, C; Marras, Ce; Balter, R; Bertolini, P; Tornesello, A; La Spina, M; Buttarelli, Fr; Ruggiero, A; Caldarelli, M; Poggi, G; Gandola, L. - In: JOURNAL OF NEURO-ONCOLOGY. - ISSN 0167-594X. - 140:2(2018), pp. 457-465. [10.1007/s11060-018-2974-6]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1283583
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