Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) is a rare clinically, neuro-radiologically, and molecularly defined malignancy of the brainstem with a median overall survival of approximately 11 months. Our aim is to evaluate the current tendency for its treatment in Europe in order to develop (inter)national consensus guidelines.Healthcare professionals specialized in DIPG were asked to fill in an online survey with questions regarding usual treatment strategies at diagnosis and at disease progression in their countries and/or their centers, respectively.Seventy-four healthcare professionals responded to the survey, of which 87.8% were pediatric oncologists. Only 13.5% of the respondents biopsy all of their patients, 41.9% biopsy their patients infrequently. More than half of the respondents (54.1%) treated their patients with radiotherapy only at diagnosis, whereas 44.6% preferred radiotherapy combined with chemotherapy. When the disease progresses, treatment strategies became even more diverse, and the tendency for no treatment increased from 1.4% at diagnosis to 77.0% after second progression. 36.5% of the healthcare professionals treat children younger than 3 years differently than older children at diagnosis. This percentage decreased, when the disease progresses. Most of the participants (51.4%) included less than 25% of their patients in clinical trials.This survey demonstrates a large heterogeneity of treatment regimens, especially at disease progression. We emphasize the need for international consensus guidelines for the treatment of DIPG, possible by more collaborative clinical trials.
The prognosis of children with medulloblastoma, primitive neuroectodermal tumor of cerebella, is poor especially in case of disseminated disease. Bad outcome of this disease encouraged the investigators to look for new more effective and safer ways of medulloblastoma treatment that would be able to improve the prognosis and quality of live for children with medulloblastoma. Adjuvant chemotherapy administered after radiotherapy prolongs the time to progression as well as overall survival for high-risk group of medulloblastoma patients, while such results vary little in standard-risk medulloblastoma group.To evaluate effectiveness of adjuvant chemotherapy while treating high-risk medulloblastoma patients.A total of 18 patients with disseminated and non-totally removed medulloblastoma admitted to high-risk group aged from 3 to 18 years were enrolled in this study. Nine of these patients were treated by radiotherapy alone and the adjuvant chemotherapy with CCNU (lomustine), cisplatinum, and vincristine after radiotherapy was administered to the other nine patients.Full response was determined in all patients of adjuvant chemotherapy group and only in 3 children out of 9 in radiotherapy group (33.3%) (p<0.01). The rate of the relapse was 100% in radiotherapy and 11.1% in adjuvant chemotherapy group that differed statistically reliably in both group patients (p<0.001). Mean time to progression among patients of radiotherapy group was 9+/-2 months and 47+/-8 months among of the patients of adjuvant chemotherapy group (p<0.01). Two years free to progression survival in adjuvant chemotherapy group was 88.9%, in radiotherapy group - 0%. Two-year overall survival in these groups was 71.1 and 22.2%, respectively (p<0.01).With this research we proved that adjuvant chemotherapy, prescribed after standard radial (craniospinal and local) treatment, statistically reliably improves survival indices of patients from high risk group and has to be prescribed to all patients from this risk group.