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  • GCT-23. LONG-TERM FOLLOW-UP...
    Dhall, Girish; Wang, Yu; Onar-Thomas, Arzu; Shaw, Dennis; MacDonald, Shannon; Murphy, Erin; Khatua, Soumen; Bartels, Ute; Fangusaro, Jason

    Neuro-oncology (Charlottesville, Va.), 06/2024, Letnik: 26, Številka: Supplement_4
    Journal Article

    Abstract BACKGROUND ACNS1123 was a Phase 2 study to determine whether irradiation could be safely reduced without impacting survival in a subgroup of NGGCT patients. METHODS Patients with localized disease who achieved a complete (CR) or partial response (PR) to induction chemotherapy were eligible to receive reduced dose/volume of irradiation to 30.6Gy whole ventricular field with 54Gy tumor-bed boost. RESULTS 107 eligible NGGCT patients were accrued. The median age of patients at enrollment was 11 years (3.7-21.6). Eighty patients (75%) were male. Location was pineal in 58 (55%), suprasellar in 37 (35%), ventricles in 6 (6%), and bifocal in 6 patients (6%). Sixty-six (61.7%) patients achieved a CR/PR post-induction and were eligible and evaluable for the primary objective and received reduced dose and volume of irradiation. Eight patients progressed; 6 had a distant spinal relapse (outside the irradiation field) and 2 had a local plus distant relapse. As of December 31, 2023, the median follow-up time for eligible and evaluable patients was 5.6 years (0.9-7.9) from enrollment. Except for an unrelated death due to SARS-CoV-2 at 5.5 years from enrollment, there were no grade 3 or higher adverse events at the 60-month follow-up timepoint and no disease progressions beyond 2 years. The 5-year progression-free and overall survival for all eligible and evaluable patients are 87.9% (95% CI:79%-94.8%) and 92.4% (95% CI:82.8%- 96.8%), respectively. CONCLUSION Although the study was closed prematurely due to the concern of increased spinal relapse, the current data suggest that most patients with localized NGGCT and a CR/PR to chemotherapy will survive long-term, and, in fact, have similar survival (PFS and OS) to patients enrolled on ACNS0122 who received full dose craniospinal irradiation. The key to future biologic studies and clinical trials is identifying at diagnosis those patients at high risk for relapse.