Controlling Central Nervous System Leukemia: Does the Extent of the Radiation Therapy Field Influence Outcomes?

Author(s):  
G.V. Walker ◽  
F. Shihadeh ◽  
H. Kantarjian ◽  
P.W. Gidley ◽  
I. Arzu ◽  
...  
1986 ◽  
Vol 72 (6) ◽  
pp. 565-573 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adriano Di Marco ◽  
Luisa Rosta ◽  
Franco Campostrini ◽  
Andrea Bonetti ◽  
Mario Palazzi ◽  
...  

A series of 10 patients with a primary non-Hodgkin lymphoma of the central nervous system were observed and treated by the authors. All were diagnosed after a pathologic examination of the surgical material; the lesions were supratentorial in all cases and unifocal in 9. In every case radiation therapy improved clinical conditions and in most cases even radiologic features of the patients. Four patients were alive and without evidence of disease many months after therapy. Four patients died with a relapse in the central nervous system; 3 of them had disseminated disease at the time of death. Two patients died for an unknown cause. Radiation therapy was performed with 60Co source with 2 opposed portals and the whole brain irradiation technique in all cases but 2. Doses ranged from 35 to 54 Gy. The recent literature on this uncommon disease and the most adequate therapeutic possibilities of radiation therapy and chemotherapy, or both, are discussed.


1998 ◽  
Vol 89 (5) ◽  
pp. 728-737 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yutaka Sawamura ◽  
Tsutomu Kato ◽  
Jun Ikeda ◽  
Jun-ichi Murata ◽  
Mitsuhiro Tada ◽  
...  

Object. The optimum clinical management of central nervous system (CNS) teratomas, particularly postsurgical adjuvant therapy, is still unclear, partly as a result of the tumors' low incidence. In this study the authors analyze 34 cases of CNS teratomas so that they may adequately indicate management of these lesions. Methods. The median age of the 34 patients was 13 years. Twenty-seven patients treated between 1970 and 1991 were retrospectively reviewed. Four of these 27 patients died as a result of radical surgery; each of them had a teratoma involving the hypothalamus. After initial treatment, which included radiation therapy, 20 patients (48%) had died. In all seven cases of mature teratomas there was no recurrence. In two cases of immature teratomas in which there was complete surgical resection there was recurrence; however, salvage therapies were effective. Seven of eight patients with highly malignant teratomas died; for these patients salvage therapies, including repeated radiation and chemotherapy, failed. Seven patients who presented with CNS teratomas between 1992 and 1996 received adjuvant chemotherapy and radiation therapy according to a prospective study protocol. All seven patients were free from recurrence with a 70 to 100% Karnofsky Performance Scale score at a median follow-up period of 41 months. Patients with CNS teratomas rarely responded completely to chemotherapy or radiation therapy; an effective adjuvant therapy produced a partial response at best. Conclusions. Because teratomas show various responses to adjuvant therapy, a misdiagnosis of their histological subtype will lead to inadequate therapy. A diverse therapeutic protocol based on histological diagnosis is necessary to plan appropriate management. Treatment recommendations are discussed in detail in the article.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 59 (1) ◽  
pp. 145-145
Author(s):  
Stephen A. Feig

Thank you for the opportunity to reply to the letter of Drs. McWilliams and Maurer. We were truly perplexed by the presentation of the meningeal metastases in the reported patient. Lacking convincing evidence of central nervous system metastatic disease or bony erosion of the skull, we were loath to apply chemotherapy, which might have aggravated his clinical course and would have been of doubtful efficacy in any event. Additional radiation therapy was felt to be inadvisable because, in the opinion of our radiotherapists, the patient had been treated originally with a dose that closely approached the tolerance of the brain stem.


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