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Potential role of ventricular tumor markers in CNS germ cell tumors

Legault, Genevieve; Allen, Jeffrey C
BACKGROUND: There is increasing reliance on oncoprotein assays such as the beta-subunit of human chorionic gonadotropin (beta-hCG) and alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) for diagnosis or confirmation of histology of central nervous system (CNS) germ cell tumors (GCT), but the relative diagnostic sensitivity and reliability of assays from serum (S), lumbar (L), and ventricular (V) cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) are uncertain. PROCEDURE: A total of 86 patients with CNS GCT were identified from our database. Fourteen patients had contemporaneous beta-hCG and/or AFP measurements from serum, ventricular, and lumbar CSF at diagnosis (n = 13) or relapse (n = 1), constituting the subjects for this report. Their primary tumor sites were: pineal (n = 8), suprasellar (n = 1), or both (n = 5). Their mean age at diagnosis was 16.0 years (range 9.1-25.9). The male:female sex ratio was 13:1. RESULTS: For the germinoma-treated patients (n = 8), the median (range) beta-hCG values (S, V, L) were 0 (0-6.9), 7.0 (0-57.4), 8.3 (0-34.0) mIU/ml. For patients managed as mixed malignant GCT (MMGCT) (n = 6), the median (range) beta-hCG values (S, V, L) were 3.9 (0-58.0), 3.6 (0-147.0), 61.8 (0-358.0) mIU/ml. The median (range) AFP values were 7.5 (0-27,400.0), 2.0 (0-2,981.0), 3.0 (0-14,015.0) ng/ml. Lumbar CSF beta-hCG values were equal or greater than those in ventricular CSF or serum in 12 of 13 cases (92.3%). All patients with MMGCT had lumbar AFP equal or greater than the ventricular CSF values, while serum AFP values remained highest. CONCLUSIONS: Ventricular CSF values cannot be considered a replacement for lumbar CSF. Lumbar CSF is the most reliable source of tumor markers to establish baseline and follow-up diagnostic endpoints. Pediatr Blood Cancer 2013;60:1647-1650. (c) 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
PMID: 23788492
ISSN: 1545-5009
CID: 494912

Outcome of infants and young children with newly diagnosed ependymoma treated on the "Head Start" III prospective clinical trial

Venkatramani, Rajkumar; Ji, Lingyun; Lasky, Joseph; Haley, Kelley; Judkins, Alexander; Zhou, Shengmei; Sposto, Richard; Olshefski, Randal; Garvin, James; Tekautz, Tanya; Kennedy, Gloria; Rassekh, Shahrad Rod; Moore, Theodore; Gardner, Sharon; Allen, Jeffrey; Shore, Richard; Moertel, Christopher; Atlas, Mark; Dhall, Girish; Finlay, Jonathan
This study investigates the outcome of children <10 years old with newly-diagnosed ependymoma treated on the prospective multinational "Head Start" III clinical trial. Between April 2004 and July 2009, 19 children with newly-diagnosed ependymoma were enrolled. All children were to receive five induction chemotherapy cycles followed by one consolidation cycle of myelo-ablative chemotherapy and autologous hematopoietic cell rescue. Children between 6 and 10 years of age or with residual tumor prior to consolidation were to receive irradiation thereafter. Median age of 19 children (8 female) was 20 months at diagnosis. Median follow up was 44 months. The primary site was infratentorial in 11 and supratentorial in 8 patients. Gross total resection was achieved in 10 patients. After induction chemotherapy, all three supratentorial ependymoma patients with residual disease achieved a complete response (CR), while only one of six infratentorial patients with residual disease achieved CR. Three infratentorial patients developed progressive disease during induction chemotherapy. All four infratentorial patients with residual disease who underwent autologous hematopoietic cell transplant, failed to achieve CR. Four patients received focal irradiation following chemotherapy. The 3-year event free survival (EFS) and overall survival (OS) for supratentorial ependymoma were 86 +/- 13 % and 100 % respectively. The 3-year EFS and OS for infratentorial ependymoma were 27 +/- 13 % and 73 +/- 13 % respectively. The role of intensive induction and consolidation chemotherapy in deferring irradiation should be investigated further in children with supratentorial ependymoma with residual disease following surgery. This approach appears ineffective in children with infratentorial ependymoma in the absence of irradiation.
PMCID:4119804
PMID: 23508296
ISSN: 0167-594x
CID: 427342

PHASE II STUDY OF SORAFENIB IN CHILDREN WITH RECURRENT/PROGRESSIVE LOW-GRADE ASTROCYTOMAS [Meeting Abstract]

Karajannis, Matthias; Fisher, Michael; Milla, Sarah; Cohen, Kenneth; Legault, Genevieve; Wisoff, Jeffrey; Harter, David; Merkelson, Amanda; Bloom, Michael; Dhall, Girish; Jones, David; Korshunov, Andrey; Pfister, Stefan; Eberhart, Charles; Sievert, Angela; Resnick, Adam; Zagzag, David; Allen, Jeffrey
ISI:000318570500116
ISSN: 1522-8517
CID: 386792

PHASE II STUDY OF RAD001 IN CHILDREN AND ADULTS WITH NEUROFIBROMATOSIS TYPE 2 AND PROGRESSIVE VESTIBULAR SCHWANNOMAS [Meeting Abstract]

Karajannis, Matthias; Legault, Genevieve; Hagiwara, Mari; Vega, Emilio; Merkelson, Amanda; Wisoff, Jeffrey; Golfinos, John; Roland, J. Thomas; Allen, Jeffrey
ISI:000318570500124
ISSN: 1522-8517
CID: 386802

A PHASE II TRIAL OF THE FIVE-DRUG ORAL ANTIANGIOGENIC (METRONOMIC) REGIMEN IN CHILDREN WITH RECURRENT OR PROGRESSIVE CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM TUMORS [Meeting Abstract]

Robison, Nathan; Campigotto, Federico; Chi, Susan; Manley, Peter; Turner, Christopher; Zimmerman, Mary Ann; Chordas, Christine; Allen, Jeffrey; Goldman, Stewart; Rubin, Joshua; Isakoff, Michael; Pan, Wilbur; Khatib, Ziad; Comito, Melanie; Bendel, Anne; Pietrantonio, Jay; Kondrat, Laura; Hubbs, Shannon; Neuberg, Donna; Kieran, Mark
ISI:000308394400078
ISSN: 1522-8517
CID: 2964302

PHASE II TRIAL OF LAPATINIB IN CHILDREN AND ADULTS WITH NEUROFIBROMATOSIS TYPE 2 AND PROGRESSIVE VESTIBULAR SCHWANNOMAS [Meeting Abstract]

Legault, Genevieve; Hagiwara, Mari; Ballas, Marc; Brown, Krysten; Vega, Emilio; Nusbaum, Annette; Bloom, Michael; Hochman, Tsivia; Goldberg, Judith; Golfinos, John; Roland, JThomas; Allen, Jeffrey; Karajannis, Matthias
ISI:000308394400071
ISSN: 1522-8517
CID: 1675542

Cancer and the nervous system: Management of primary nervous system tumors in infants and children

Chapter by: Karajannis, Matthias A; Gardner, Sharon L; Allen, Jeffrey C
in: Bradley's neurology in clinical practice, vol by Daroff, Robert B; Fenichel, Gerald M; Jankovic, Jospeh; Mazziotta, John C [Eds]
clxxxii, 1268 pp, 2012
pp. -
ISBN: 9996085368
CID: 1153232

Germ Cell Tumors and Other Pineal Region Tumors

Chapter by: Legault, G; Allen, JC
in: Neuro-oncology by
pp. 95-102
ISBN:
CID: 841212

BRAF alterations in primary glial and glioneuronal neoplasms of the central nervous system with identification of 2 novel KIAA1549:BRAF fusion variants

Lin, Alex; Rodriguez, Fausto J; Karajannis, Matthias A; Williams, Susan C; Legault, Genevieve; Zagzag, David; Burger, Peter C; Allen, Jeffrey C; Eberhart, Charles G; Bar, Eli E
Recent studies highlight the importance of BRAF alterations resulting in mitogen activated protein kinase (MAK/ERK) pathway activation in low-grade CNS tumors. We studied 106 low-grade CNS neoplasms in a cohort of primarily pediatric patients to identify the prevalence and clinicopathologic significance of these alterations. Polymerase chain reaction testing identified KIAA1549:BRAF fusions in 51 (48%) tumors overall, including 42 (60%) pilocytic astrocytomas, 4 (17%) unclassifiable low-grade gliomas, 4 (36%) low-grade glioneuronal/neuroepithelial tumors, 0 (of 5) pleomorphic xanthoastrocytomas, 0 (of 4) diffuse astrocytomas (World Health Organization grade II), and 1 (of 3, 33%) pilomyxoid astrocytoma. KIAA1549:BRAF gene fusions confirmed by sequencing included the previously reported ones involving exons 1-16/9-18 (49%), 1-15/9-18 (35%), and 1-16/11-18 (8%) and 2 fusions with novel breakpoints: 1-15/11-18 (6%) and 1-17/10-18 (1%). DNA sequencing identified BRAF mutations in 8% of tumors. BRAF mutations were absent. KIAA1549:BRAF fusions were significantly more frequent in infratentorial (57%) and optic pathway (59%) tumors versus supratentorial (19%) tumors (p = 0.001). We did not identify significantly improved progression-free survival in tumors with fusions. In summary, KIAA1549:BRAF fusions predominate in pilocytic astrocytomas but are also present in some low-grade unclassifiable gliomas and glioneuronal tumors. The prognostic and therapeutic significance of this alteration is unclear and merits further study.
PMCID:4629834
PMID: 22157620
ISSN: 0022-3069
CID: 256132

Single center retrospective analysis of BU-based conditioning regimens in allogeneic transplantation

Wong, A M; Allen, J C; Goh, Y T; Linn, Y C; Loh, S M Y; Diong, C P; Chowbay, B; Hwang, W Y K
We performed a single institution retrospective analysis of 114 patients treated with BU-based pretransplant conditioning regimens. Oral BU was administered to 76 patients (total dose 16 mg/kg or 8 mg/kg) and i.v. BU to 38 others (total dose 12.8 mg/kg or 6.4 mg/kg). Either CY (n=74) or fludarabine (n=40) was given in combination with BU. Median age was 35 years in the oral BU group and 48.5 years with i.v. BU (P<0.001). OS and PFS rates at 3-years post HSCT were not different in patients who received either i.v. or oral BU (OS: 41.3 vs 44.0% (P=0.981); PFS: 52.7 vs 54.7% (P=0.526), respectively). The i.v. BU, however, was associated with a significantly shorter time to engraftment (13.5 days vs 16 days, respectively; P<0.001). There were no significant differences in survival or 100-day mortality for patients who received either CY or fludarabine, in combination with BU. After adjustment for confounders, multivariate analysis showed that age of transplant (P=0.002), donor type (sibling or unrelated; P=0.003), GVHD (P<0.05) and route of administration (P=0.023) were significant risk factors for OS. The i.v. BU used in an older age group yielded equivalent survival compared with oral BU used in a younger population.
PMID: 21478919
ISSN: 0268-3369
CID: 256182