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Adjuvant PCV Chemo Hikes Oligodendroglioma Survival


 

FROM THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY

CHICAGO – Patients with newly diagnosed anaplastic oligodendroglial tumors with chromosome 1p and 19q deletions live dramatically longer lives if PCV chemotherapy is added before or after standard radiation therapy, long-term follow-up from two large, prospective trials shows.*

The survival benefit was not statistically significant in patients without the signature co-deletions, which occur in about 50%-60% of patients with this rare, slow-growing brain tumor.

Median overall survival in the 80 patients harboring the 1p/19q co-deletions was 9.3 years with radiation, but had not been reached in those also treated with PCV chemotherapy (hazard ratio 0.56; P value = .059).

Overall survival was 21 months and 25 months, respectively, among the 236 patients without the co-deletions (HR 0.83; P = .19) in the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) 26951 trial.

"This opens the venue for personalized medicine not based on the histology of the tumor, but the molecular signatures of these tumors," Dr. Martin van den Bent said at a press conference at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

A survival advantage with combination therapy was also seen in patients with MGMT (O6-methylguanine DNA methyltransferase) methylated tumors and IDH (isocitrate dehydrogenase) mutations, but further study will be needed to confirm this, he added.

The most pressing question for clinicians is whether to use the older, more toxic PCV chemotherapy regimen of procarbazine (Matulane), lomustine (CeeNU) and vincristine (Oncovin) for its known survival advantage or to substitute the less toxic, oral alkylating agent temozolomide (Temodar), which has replaced PCV since the phase III trial was launched some 17 years ago.

Dr. van den Bent said in an interview that PCV plus radiation should be the standard of care for anaplastic oligodendroglial (AOD) patients but admits it’s a difficult question to answer because of the toxicity associated with PCV, including weight loss and bone marrow suppression, which he described as mostly asymptomatic. Nearly half or 46% of patients treated with PCV in the trial experienced grade 3 or 4 hematologic toxicity.

He noted, however, that the results were the same regardless of the number of PCV cycles given in the trial, raising the question of how much PCV chemotherapy is actually needed.

"The thing that’s important is that we now know that we get this huge increase in survival with PCV," he said. "The question for the physicians at home is whether they are willing to trade a certain survival benefit for an unknown survival benefit, and I expect that there will be a lot of discussions in the coming months where this will be one of the primary questions."

Dr. Mark R. Gilbert, a professor of neuro-oncology at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, who was invited to discuss the plenary abstract, said the previous standard of radiation alone is no longer adequate for patients with AOD tumors with 1p/19q co-deletions, and that the existing data support the first-line treatment of these patients with radiation and chemotherapy.

He added that the optimal chemo-radiation treatment has not been established, with data available on chemotherapy given before or after radiation and the place for temozolomide in this disease yet to be determined.

"If we decide temozolomide has a role, should it be used as we do for grade IV glioma, which is concurrently with radiation followed by adjuvant treatment?" he asked.

EORTC 26951 randomized patients to radiotherapy 59.4 Gy alone or followed by six cycles of lomustine 110 mg/m2 on day 1, procarbazine 60 mg/m2 on day 8-21 and IV vincristine 1.4 mg/m2 on days 8 and 28. The median follow-up was 140 months, with 24% of patients still alive in 2012. In all, 75% of patients who progressed in the radiation arm crossed over to PCV.

In the intent-to-treat population, median overall survival increased from 31 months with radiation alone to 42 months with the addition of PCV chemotherapy (HR 0.75; P = .018). The overall survival benefit was observed despite the crossover treatment (risk reduction 0.75), observed Dr. van den Bent, professor of neuro-oncology at Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.

Progression-free survival nearly doubled from 13 months to 24 months with adjuvant PCV (HR 0.66; P = .003).

In patients with the 1p/19q co-deletions, median overall survival was 112 months with radiation alone, but has not been reached in those treated also given chemotherapy (P = .059; relative risk reduction 0.56).

Among those without 1p/19q co-deletions, the addition of PCV delayed progression from a median of 50 months with radiation alone to 157 months, (HR 0.42). In the non-deleted patients, progression was prolonged from 9 months to only 15 months (HR 0.73).

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