Pattern of Relapse and Treatment Response in WNT-Activated Medulloblastoma

Liana Nobre(University of Toronto), Michal Zápotocký(Charles University), Sara Khan(Royal Children's Hospital), Kohei Fukuoka(Saitama Children's Medical Center), Adriana Fonseca(Hospital for Sick Children), Tara McKeown(Hospital for Sick Children), David Sumerauer(Charles University), Aleš Vícha(Charles University), Wiesława Grajkowska(Children's Memorial Health Institute), Joanna Trubicka(Children's Memorial Health Institute), Kay Ka Wai Li(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Ho‐Keung Ng(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Luca Massimi(Agostino Gemelli University Polyclinic), Ji Yeoun Lee(Seoul National University Children's Hospital), Seung‐Ki Kim(Seoul National University Children's Hospital), Shayna Zelcer(Western University), Alexandre Vasiljevic(McMaster University), Cécile Faure‐Conter(Institut d’Hématologie et d’Oncologie Pédiatrique), Péter Hauser(Semmelweis University), Bolesław Lach(Hamilton General Hospital), Marie-Lise van Veelen-Vincent(Erasmus MC), Pim J. French(Erasmus MC), Erwin G. Van Meir(Emory University), William A. Weiss(University of California, San Francisco), Nalin Gupta(University of California, San Francisco), Ian F. Pollack(University of Pittsburgh), Ronald L. Hamilton(University of Pittsburgh), Amulya A. Nageswara Rao(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Caterina Giannini(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Joshua B. Rubin(Washington University in St. Louis), Andrew S. Moore(Children’s Health Queensland Hospital and Health Service), Lola B. Chambless(Neurological Surgery), Rajeev Vibhakar(University of Colorado Denver), Young Seob Shin(Asan Medical Center), Maura Massimino(Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori), Roger E. McLendon(Duke University), Helen Wheeler(The University of Sydney), Massimo Zollo(University of Naples Federico II), Veronica Ferruci(University of Naples Federico II), Toshihiro Kumabe(Kitasato University), Cláudia C. Faria(Centro Hospitalar Lisboa Norte), Jaroslav Štěrba(Masaryk University), Shin Jung(Chonnam National University Hwasun Hospital), Enrique López‐Aguilar(Centro Medico Nacional Siglo XXI), Jaume Mora(Hospital Sant Joan de Déu Barcelona), Carlos Gilberto Carlotti(Universidade de São Paulo), James M. Olson(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Sarah Leary(Seattle Children's Hospital), Jason E. Cain(Monash Children’s Hospital), Lenka Krsková(Charles University), Josef Zámečnı́k(Charles University), Cynthia Hawkins(Hospital for Sick Children), Uri Tabori(University of Toronto), Annie Huang(University of Toronto), Ute Bartels(Hospital for Sick Children), Paul A. Northcott(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Michael D. Taylor(University of Toronto), Stephen Yip(University of British Columbia), Jordan R. Hansford(Royal Children's Hospital), Éric Bouffet(Hospital for Sick Children), Vijay Ramaswamy(University of Toronto)
Cell Reports Medicine
June 1, 2020
Cited by 48Open Access
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Abstract

Over the past decade, wingless-activated (WNT) medulloblastoma has been identified as a candidate for therapy de-escalation based on excellent survival; however, a paucity of relapses has precluded additional analyses of markers of relapse. To address this gap in knowledge, an international cohort of 93 molecularly confirmed WNT MB was assembled, where 5-year progression-free survival is 0.84 (95%, 0.763-0.925) with 15 relapsed individuals identified. Maintenance chemotherapy is identified as a strong predictor of relapse, with individuals receiving high doses of cyclophosphamide or ifosphamide having only one very late molecularly confirmed relapse (p = 0.032). The anatomical location of recurrence is metastatic in 12 of 15 relapses, with 8 of 12 metastatic relapses in the lateral ventricles. Maintenance chemotherapy, specifically cumulative cyclophosphamide doses, is a significant predictor of relapse across WNT MB. Future efforts to de-escalate therapy need to carefully consider not only the radiation dose but also the chemotherapy regimen and the propensity for metastatic relapses.


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