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The Role of Chemotherapy for Pure and Mixed Anaplastic Oligodendroglial Tumors. Current treatment options in oncology [Curr Treat Options Oncol] Journal article

 
TitleThe Role of Chemotherapy for Pure and Mixed Anaplastic Oligodendroglial Tumors.
Author(s)Dunbar EM 
InstitutionThe Preston A. Wells Jr. Center for Brain Tumor Therapy at the University of Florida, McKnight Brain Institute, 100 South Newell Drive, L2-100, Gainesville, FL, 32610-0265, USA, edunbar@neurosurgery.ufl.edu.
SourceCurr Treat Options Oncol 2009 Apr 18.
AbstractOPINION STATEMENT: Pure and mixed anaplastic oligodendrogliomas (AO/mixed-AOs) remain terminal primary brain tumors, without a defined optimal initial therapy, and without sufficiently active and tolerable therapies at recurrence/progression (R/P). Very heterogeneous international therapy recommendations remain. Historical advances have resulted in only modest improvements in outcome. AO/mixed-AOs with 1p/19q co-deletion are prognostically favorable, regardless of therapy, and must be identified as early as possible. Following resection, outcome data on initial therapy with radiation (RT) remain the most mature, although controversies regarding its true toxicities and optimal timing continue. Recently, the landmark RTOG 9402 and EORTC 26951 trials showed that the addition of Procarbazine, CCNU, Vincristine chemotherapy to RT, at anytime during initial therapy, prolongs progression-free survival, but not survival, and not without moderate toxicity. Despite a lack of definitive evidence, this strategy has commonly been extrapolated to Temozolomide. Chemo-sensitivity of AO/mixed-AOs provides the rationale for the chemotherapy-only strategies being explored. In the setting of recurrence/progression (R/P), chemotherapy, small molecule (targeted), biologic, and other strategies have been relatively disappointing, toxic, and cumbersome. Partly secondary to biases regarding the relative toxicities of tumor burden vs. treatment effect, therapy remains highly individualized. Future international research must prospectively evaluate health-related quality of life, toxicity, and molecular genetic markers.
LanguageENG
Pub Type(s)JOURNAL ARTICLE
PubMed ID19381820
  
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