Depth-EEG in Stereotactic Biopsy

Author(s):  
L. Ravagnati ◽  
V. A. Sironi ◽  
E. Cappricci ◽  
G. Ettorre ◽  
M. Farabola ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Bojan Jelača ◽  
Petar Vuleković ◽  
Vladimir Papić ◽  
Mladen Karan ◽  
Tomislav Cigić ◽  
...  

2005 ◽  
Vol 32 (S 4) ◽  
Author(s):  
J.H Mehrkens ◽  
G Poepperl ◽  
W Rachinger ◽  
K Tatsch ◽  
J.C Tonn ◽  
...  

The Breast ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sara van Bekkum ◽  
Francina E.M. Dams ◽  
Pieter J. Westenend ◽  
Joost van Rosmalen ◽  
Marian B.E. Menke-Pluijmers ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (Supplement_3) ◽  
pp. iii293-iii294
Author(s):  
Jacques Grill ◽  
Gwenael Le Teuff ◽  
Karsten Nysom ◽  
Klas Blomgren ◽  
Darren Hargrave ◽  
...  

Abstract Despite 50 years of clinical trials, no improvement of survival has been observed in DIPG and most children die within 2 years of diagnosis. Only radiotherapy transiently controls disease progression. The study was conceived as a randomized multi-arm multi-stage program. It started with an open-label phase-II trial comparing three drugs (everolimus, dasatinib, erlotinib) combined with irradiation, allocated according to the presence of their specific targets (PTEN-loss, EGFR-overexpression) defined with a stereotactic biopsy after central confirmation of the diagnosis (presence of histone H3K27M mutation or loss of K27 trimethylation). Targeted therapies were started concomitantly with radiotherapy and were continued until disease progression. No biopsy-related death was reported and diagnostic yield was excellent, with only 5 non-informative biopsies. Biopsy excluded the diagnosisof DIPG in 8% of the cases. At the 3rd interim analysis, based on 193 randomized patients, the IDMC concluded that the study was unlikely to show a difference of OS between the 3 drugs even if 250 patients would be randomized. The median OS from the time of diagnosis was 11.9, 10.5 and 10 months for everolimus, dasatinib and erlotinib. Treatment was discontinued due to toxicity in 2%, 13%, and 15%, respectively. BIOMEDE shows the feasibility of biologically-driven treatment in DIPG on a large international scale. Based on the better toxicity profile and the slightly better efficacy, although not statistically significant, the steering committee proposed that everolimus should be used as the control arm for the next BIOMEDE 2.0 trial.


2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. ii46-ii46
Author(s):  
Jonathan Weller ◽  
Sophie Katzendobler ◽  
Philipp Karschnia ◽  
Stefanie Lietke ◽  
Rupert Egensperger ◽  
...  

Abstract BACKGROUND Current treatment guidelines for oligodendrogliomas (OD) recommend watch-and-wait strategies after gross total resection and radiation with subsequent chemotherapy (procarbazine, CCNU and vincristine (PCV)) after incomplete resection. The value of chemotherapy alone as an option to delay the risk of late cognitive deficits is not well defined yet. Here, we retrospectively investigated long-term outcome in OD WHO II with respect to initial therapy and tumor volume in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). METHODS A total of 142 patients with OD WHO (World Health Organization) II according to WHO 2016 were retrospectively included. Patients either had watch and wait (W&W) after histological sampling through stereotactic biopsy (n=59) or tumor resection (n=27) or else stereotactic biopsy with subsequent temozolomide (TMZ) (n=26) or PCV (n=30). Pre- and post-therapeutic T2 tumor volumes were obtained. Progression-free survival (PFS), post-recurrence PFS (PR-PFS) and rate of secondary malignization after 10 years (MR-10yrs) were correlated with clinical and volumetric data. RESULTS PFS was significantly longer in the PCV cohort compared to TMZ (9.1 vs. 3.6 years, p = 0.04), even after matching patients according to age and initial tumor volume (9.1 vs 4.7 yrs, p = 0.03). PFS in the W&W cohort was 5.1 years and 4.4 years in those receiving tumor resection only. MR-10yrs was 4% in PCV cohort, 18% in the W&W cohort and 52% in the resection only cohort (p = 0.01). In the W&W cohort, patients treated with PCV at first relapse had a longer PR-PFS than those treated with TMZ (in years, 7.2 vs 4.0, p = 0.04). Multivariate analysis confirmed initial PCV therapy (p = 0.01) and initial T2 tumor volume (p = 0.02) to be prognostic. CONCLUSION In oligodendrogliomas WHO II PCV chemotherapy alone is superior in terms of PFS and rate of secondary malignization compared to TMZ chemotherapy alone or tumor resection only.


1995 ◽  
Vol 43 (6) ◽  
pp. 563-568 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Steck ◽  
William A. Friedman

Author(s):  
Jonathan Weller ◽  
Sophie Katzendobler ◽  
Philipp Karschnia ◽  
Stefanie Lietke ◽  
Rupert Egensperger ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction The role of chemotherapy alone in newly diagnosed WHO grade 2 oligodendroglioma after biopsy, incomplete or gross total resection remains controversial. We here analyze the clinical outcome of four patient cohorts being treated with either procarbazine, CCNU and vincristine (PCV) or temozolomide (TMZ) after biopsy, resection only, or wait-and-scan after biopsy. Methods Patients (n = 142) with molecularly defined oligodendroglioma (WHO 2016) were assigned to four cohorts: W&S, wait-and-scan after stereotactic biopsy (n = 59); RES, surgical resection only (n = 27); TMZ, temozolomide after biopsy (n = 26) or PCV (n = 30) after biopsy. Presurgical MRI T2 tumor volumes were obtained by manual segmentation. Progression-free survival (PFS), post-recurrence PFS (PR-PFS) and rate of histological progression to grade 3 were analyzed. Results PFS was longest after PCV (9.1 years), compared to 5.1 years after W&S, 4.4 years after RES and 3.6 years after TMZ. The rate of histological progression from grade 2 to 3 within 10 years was 9% for the PCV, 29% for the W&S, 67% for the RES and 75% for the TMZ group (p = 0.01). In the W&S group, patients treated with PCV at first relapse had a longer PFS from intervention than those treated with TMZ (7.2 vs 4.0 years, p = 0.04). Multivariate analysis identified smaller tumor volume prior to any intervention (p = 0.02) to be prognostic for PFS. Conclusions PCV chemotherapy alone is an effective treatment for WHO grade 2 oligodendroglioma, with long PFS and low rate of histological progression.


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