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Journal of Pediatric Hematology Oncology | 1998

Topotecan in pediatric patients with recurrent and progressive solid tumors: a Pediatric Oncology Group phase II study.

Ruprecht Nitschke; Joan Parkhurst; James Sullivan; Michael B. Harris; Mark Bernstein; Charles B. Pratt

Purpose: A phase II study was designed to determine the efficacy of topotecan, an inhibitor of topoisomerase I, in the treatment of patients with progressive or recurrent pediatric extracranial solid tumors (STs). Patients and Methods: Patients younger than 21 years at the time of initial diagnosis with refractory STs were treated with 2 mg/m2 topotecan given by 30-minute infusions for 5 days repeated every 3 weeks. Granulocyte colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) was added to the regimen only after occurrence of severe neutropenia or therapy delay due to sustained neutropenia. Results: One hundred forty-one patients were treated with 539 courses of topotecan. Responses were seen in 34 patients (3 had complete responses [CRs], 2 had partial responses [PRs], and 24 had minor responses [MRs] or stable disease [SD]). The number of administered courses in patients with SD varied between 5 and 24, with a median of 10. The median time on the study for patients with SD was approximately 8.5 months. In patients without bone marrow involvement, the most frequent toxicity was myelosuppression: hemoglobin < 8 g/d1 in 83 of 341 courses, absolute granulocyte count < 1,000/μl in 221 of 341 courses, and platelet count < 50,000/μl in 162 of 341 courses. Nausea and vomiting were infrequent; many patients were pretreated with ondansetron or granisetron. A recurrent rash developed in 16 patients and was usually well controlled with diphenhydramine and hydrocortisone. G-CSF was administered in 203 of 539 courses because of neutropenia. Therapy was delayed over 1 week in 33 instances. Conclusion: In previously treated patients, topotecan produced CRs and PRs in patients with neuroblastoma, Ewings tumor, and retinoblastoma. In hepatoblastoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, and a few rare tumors, long-lasting MRs and SDs with excellent symptom control were seen. The toxicity of topotecan, predominantly myelosuppression, was tolerable.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1988

Localized neuroblastoma treated by surgery: a Pediatric Oncology Group Study.

Ruprecht Nitschke; E I Smith; Stephen J. Shochat; Geoffrey Altshuler; H Travers; Jonathan J. Shuster; F A Hayes; R Patterson; Nancy B. McWilliams

A prospective study was designed to evaluate the outcome of patients with localized resectable neuroblastoma without regional lymph node involvement when no therapy beyond surgical resection was administered. One hundred one patients observed for 3 to 60 months had a 2-year disease-free survival of 89% (SE = 5%). Of the nine patients experiencing relapse, only three have died. There were no apparent distinguishing characteristics of the nine failures. Due to the favorable prognosis of the subset of neuroblastoma patients, prognostic factor analysis had very limited power and lacked clinical importance. Complete gross removal of the localized tumors is adequate therapy to ensure the survival of the majority of these patients.


Cancer | 1992

Age‐linked prognostic categorization based on a new histologic grading system of neuroblastomas. A clinicopathologic study of 211 cases from the pediatric oncology group

Vijay V. Joshi; Alan Cantor; Geoffrey Altshuler; Ernest W. Larkin; James S. A. Neill; Jonathan J. Shuster; C. Tate Holbrook; F. Ann Hayes; Ruprecht Nitschke; Marilyn H. Duncan; Stephen J. Shochat; James Talbert; E. Ide Smith; Robert P. Castleberry

Histologic sections (minimum of four sections per patient) from 211 patients with neuroblastoma were reviewed. The tumors were resected before therapy, which was standardized according to age and stage. Low mitotic rate (MR) (≤ ten per ten high‐power fields) and calcification emerged as the most significant prognostic features after statistical analysis by stepwise log‐rank tests (P < 0. 0001 and P = 0. 0065, respectively). Histologic Grades 1, 2, and 3 were defined on the basis of the presence of both, any one, or none of these two prognostic features, respectively (Grade 3 had absence of low MR, i.e., these tumors had high MR [> ten per ten high‐power fields]). Statistically significant differences in survival were observed in the grades after adjusting for age and stage (P < 0. 001). The degree of differentiation, although significant by itself, was no longer significant after adjusting for the grades, Age groups (≤ 1 versus > 1 year of age), which also emerged as an independent prognostic feature (P < 0. 001), were linked with the grades to define two risk groups as follows: (1) a low‐risk (LR) group consisting of patients in both age groups with Grade 1 tumors and patients 1 year of age or younger with Grade 2 tumors and (2) a high‐risk (HR) group consisting of patients older than 1 year of age with Grade 2 tumors and patients in both age groups with Grade 3 tumors. The difference in survival between LR (160 cases) and HR groups (51 cases) was statistically significant (P < 0. 001). Concordance between these LR and HR groups and the Shimada classification was observed in 84% of cases. The new histologic grading system has the following advantages: (1) use of familiar terminology and histologic features in the grading system and (2) relative ease of assessment because the degree of differentiation does not need to be determined. The grading system should be tested on a new data set with an appropriate histologic sample of similar size to confirm these results.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1991

Radiotherapy improves the outlook for patients older than 1 year with Pediatric Oncology Group stage C neuroblastoma.

Robert P. Castleberry; L E Kun; Jonathan J. Shuster; Geoffrey Altshuler; I. Smith; Ruprecht Nitschke; M Wharam; Nancy B. McWilliams; Vijay V. Joshi; F A Hayes

Children older than 1 year of age who have neuroblastoma with complete or partial removal of the primary tumor and positive intracavitary lymph nodes (Pediatric Oncology Group [POG] stage C) are a small but higher-risk subset of patients. To further evaluate the importance of identifying patients with POG stage C neuroblastoma and to assess the efficacy and toxicity of adding concurrent radiation therapy (RT) to chemotherapy (CT) in these children, a randomized study was conducted. Eligible patients received cyclophosphamide 150 mg/m2 orally days 1 to 7 and Adriamycin (doxorubicin; Adria Laboratories, Columbus, OH) 35 mg/m2 intravenously (IV) on day 8 (CYC/ADR) every 3 weeks for five courses with or without RT to primary tumor and regional lymph nodes (24 to 30 Gy/16 to 20 fractions). Second-look surgery was advised to evaluate response and to remove residual disease. Continuation therapy alternated CYC/ADR every 3 weeks with cisplatin 90 mg/m2 day 1 followed by teniposide 100 mg/m2 day 3 (CDP/VM) for two courses each. Secondary CT with CDP/VM alone was available for patients not achieving complete response (CR) following induction treatment and second-look surgery. Of 29 eligible patients randomized to CT alone, 13 achieved CR, and nine are disease-free (NED) 1 to 52 months (median, 35 months) off therapy. Twenty-two of 33 eligible cases treated with CT/RT attained CR, and 19 are NED 1 to 77 months (median, 23 months) off therapy. Local and metastatic relapses occurred in both arms. Differences in CR, event-free survival, and survival rates were significant, P = .013, .009, and .008, respectively. Surgical compliance was excellent and complications uncommon. Therapy was tolerable in both groups but hematopoietic toxicity was more common in the CT/RT arm. We conclude that POG stage C neuroblastoma in children older than 1 year of age is a higher-risk group that should be identified, that CT/RT provides superior initial and long-term disease control compared with CT alone in this patient subset, and that the occurrence of metastatic failures in both treatment groups suggests a need for more aggressive chemotherapy.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1994

A Pilot Study of Isotretinoin in the Treatment of Juvenile Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia

Robert P. Castleberry; Peter D. Emanuel; Kenneth S. Zuckerman; Susan L. Cohn; Lewis Strauss; Rebecca L. Byrd; Alan Homans; Sarah Chaffee; Ruprecht Nitschke; Richard J. Gualtieri

BACKGROUND Juvenile chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) is a rare myeloproliferative disease of infants and young children for which there is no effective therapy other than allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. In vitro, isotretinoin (13-cis-retinoic acid) attenuates both the spontaneous proliferation of leukemic peripheral-blood progenitor cells (granulocyte-macrophage colony-forming units) and their selective hypersensitivity to granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF). We conducted a pilot study to evaluate the clinical efficacy of isotretinoin in juvenile CML. METHODS To be eligible the patients had to have newly diagnosed untreated disease, leukocytosis with monocytosis, marrow with less than 25 percent blasts, hepatosplenomegaly, no chromosomal abnormalities, and negative viral cultures and antibody titers. Isotretinoin was administered orally in single daily doses of 100 mg per square meter of body-surface area. When possible, patients subsequently underwent bone marrow transplantation. RESULTS Ten children (median age, 10 months) were enrolled in the study. In all 10 there was spontaneous colony formation of leukemic progenitor cells in vitro. In the eight patients tested there was hypersensitivity to GM-CSF. The only toxic effect of isotretinoin therapy was cheilitis in two patients. Four children had disease progression. Two children had complete responses to isotretinoin (normalization of the white-cell count and disappearance of organomegaly), three had partial responses (more than a 50 percent reduction in the white-cell count and degree of organomegaly), and one had a minimal response (more than a 50 percent reduction in the white-cell count, but a 26 to 50 percent reduction in the degree of organomegaly). The median duration of response was 37 months (range, 6 to 83). Three of the four children who had a complete or partial response and who did not undergo bone marrow transplantation were alive 36 to 83 months after the diagnosis of juvenile CML. The spontaneous colony formation in vitro was reduced in samples from the five patients in whom this factor was reassessed during treatment. There was also a reduction in the hypersensitivity of leukemic progenitor cells to GM-CSF in the two patients retested. CONCLUSIONS Isotretinoin can induce durable clinical and laboratory responses in patients with juvenile CML.


Cancer | 1986

Progressive ascending paralysis following administration of intrathecal and intravenous cytosine arabinoside. A pediatric oncology group study

Steven F. Dunton; Ruprecht Nitschke; Wayne E. Spruce; John B. Bodensteiner; Henry F. Krous

Two childhood acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) patients receiving intrathecal (IT) and intravenous (IV) cytosine arabinoside (Ara‐C) developed progressive ascending paralysis, resulting in death in one patient. Necropsy findings on this patient included spinal cord demyelination characteristic of Ara‐C neurotoxicity. An unusual aspect of these two cases was the delay between cessation of IT therapy and the onset of neurologic symptoms. These patients received relatively low total doses of IT Ara‐C and standard doses of IV Ara‐C. Previous studies have shown that Ara‐C equilibrates readily between serum and cerebrospinal fluid; this implies that total IV and IT doses of Ara‐C may be additive in relation to development of neurotoxicity. For these reasons, use of IV and IT Ara‐C in childhood AML must be approached with greater caution, especially if neurologic abnormalities develop during or after therapy.


Journal of Pediatric Hematology Oncology | 1995

Results of pediatric oncology group protocol 8104 for infants with stages D and DS neuroblastoma.

Strother D; Jonathan J. Shuster; McWilliams N; Ruprecht Nitschke; E I Smith; Joshi Vj; Kun L; Hayes Fa; Robert P. Castleberry

Purpose We determined the complete response and survival rates for infants with disseminated (state D) neuroblastoma that followed therapy identical to that for regional disease. In those infants whose disease excluded cortical bone metastases (state DS), we determined complete response rates achieved either spontaneously or with stage D therapy. Patients and Methods Eight-eight patients with metastatic disease received induction chemotherapy followed by a second operation, the results of which determined additional therapy. Twenty-five patients were observed after diagnosis, without chemotherapy, until a second operation. Results The complete response (CR) rates for patients with stage D discase after induction chemotherapy and postinduction surgery were 26% and 52%, respectively, and for immediately treated patients with stage DS disease 69% and 77%, respectively. Fifty-four percent of initially observed patients with stage DS disease achieved CR after a second operation; 44% were never treated beyond these two operations. Five-year actuarial survival rates for patients with stage D and for all those with stage DS disease were 60% (SE = 6%) and 90% (SE = 5%), respectively. Conclusions Improved survival rates for patients with stage D disease were achieved on this protocol but remained considerably lower than those for infants with less extensive disease. Rates of survival for patients with stage DS disease were achieved with therapy less aggressive than in published series.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2000

Intensification With Intermediate-Dose Intravenous Methotrexate Is Effective Therapy for Children With Lower-Risk B-Precursor Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia: A Pediatric Oncology Group Study

Donald H. Mahoney; Jonathan J. Shuster; Ruprecht Nitschke; Stephen J. Lauer; C. Philip Steuber; Bruce M. Camitta

PURPOSE To determine whether early intensification with 12 courses of intravenous (IV) methotrexate (MTX) and IV mercaptopurine (MP) is superior to 12 courses of IV MTX alone for prevention of relapse in children with lower-risk B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). PATIENTS AND METHODS Six hundred fifty-one eligible patients were entered onto the study. Vincristine, prednisone, and asparaginase were used for remission induction therapy. Patients were randomized to receive intensification with IV MTX 1,000 mg/m(2) plus IV MP 1,000 mg/m(2) (regimen A) or IV MTX 1,000 mg/m(2) alone (regimen C). Twelve courses were administered at 2-week intervals. Triple intrathecal therapy was used for CNS prophylaxis. Continuation therapy included standard oral MP, weekly MTX, and triple intrathecal therapy every 12 weeks for 2 years. RESULTS Six hundred forty-five patients (99.1%) achieved remission. Three hundred twenty-five were assigned to regimen A and 320 to regimen C. The estimated 4-year overall continuous complete remission for patients treated with regimen A is 82.1% (SE = 2.4%) and for regimen C is 82.2% (SE = 2.6%; P =.5). No significant difference in overall outcome was shown by sex or race. Serious grade 3/4 neurotoxicity, principally characterized by seizures, was observed in 7.6% of patients treated with either regimen. CONCLUSION Intensification with 12 courses of IV MTX is an effective therapy for prevention of relapse in children with B-precursor ALL who are at lower risk for relapse but may be associated with an increased risk for neurotoxicity. Prolonged infusions of MP combined with IV MTX did not provide apparent advantage.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1991

Postoperative treatment of nonmetastatic visible residual neuroblastoma: a Pediatric Oncology Group study.

Ruprecht Nitschke; E I Smith; Geoffrey Altshuler; D Altmiller; Jonathan J. Shuster; Alexander A. Green; Robert P. Castleberry; F A Hayes; B Golembe; R Ducos

The Pediatric Oncology Group (POG) evaluated in a prospective study the hypothesis that patients who had localized, visible residual neuroblastoma without regional lymph node involvement after surgery (POG stage B) have a favorable prognosis when treated with moderate intensive chemotherapy. Eligible patients were initially treated with five courses of Cytoxan (cyclophosphamide; Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., Evansville, IN) and Adriamycin (doxorubicin; Adria Laboratories, Columbus, OH) followed by surgery (CY/AD +/- surgery). Those patients not achieving a complete remission (CR) crossed over to five courses of cisplatin and teniposide (PL/VM) +/- surgery. Radiation therapy (XRT) was given to selected patients who still were not in CR after the crossover therapy. Of the 61 eligible patients, 38 (62%) patients achieved CR after CY/AD proven by clinical (31) or surgical (seven) evaluation. One (2%) patient in clinical partial remission (PR-C) entered CR without further therapy. Nineteen (31%) patients achieved CR with the following salvage therapies: surgery (five), PL/VM +/- surgery (five) followed by XRT (three) or autologous bone marrow transplant (ABMT) (one) and further courses of CY/AD +/- PL/VM instead of courses of PL/VM (five). The overall CR rate was 95% (58 of 61). Four patients had recurrence of the disease. The probability of being disease-free at 3 years after initial or salvage therapy was estimated at 84% (SE, 5%). The overall prognosis of children older than 1 year and younger than 1 year was similar (P = .26). If, however, the three remission deaths (all younger than 1 year) were censored, there was only one other failure in 32 children younger than one versus seven of 29 children older than 1 year (P = .018). These results confirm the excellent prognosis for patients with POG stage B neuroblastoma and indicate that most patients are curable with CY/AD +/- surgery, and those not achieving CR with this therapy are curable with alternate therapy.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1992

Infants with neuroblastoma and regional lymph node metastases have a favorable outlook after limited postoperative chemotherapy: a Pediatric Oncology Group study.

Robert P. Castleberry; Jonathan J. Shuster; Geoffrey Altshuler; E I Smith; Ruprecht Nitschke; N Winick; Nancy B. McWilliams; Vijay V. Joshi; F A Hayes

PURPOSE Infants less than or equal to 1 year of age with neuroblastoma (NB) have a favorable outlook with minimal to moderate therapy. Patients with complete or partial removal of the primary tumor but positive intracavitary lymph nodes (Pediatric Oncology Group [POG] stage C) have a higher risk for recurrent disease. To determine the importance of distinguishing infants with POG stage C NB from those with POG stage B disease and to assess the efficacy and toxicity of treating POG stage C infants with limited, postoperative chemotherapy, a study was conducted by the POG. PATIENTS AND METHODS Forty-four eligible POG stage C infants received cyclophosphamide 150 mg/m2 orally on days 1 to 7 and Adriamycin (doxorubicin; Adria Laboratories, Columbus, OH) 35 mg/m2 intravenously (IV) on day 8 (CYC/ADR), every 3 weeks for five courses followed by second-look surgery. No continuation therapy was given if surgical and pathologic complete response (CR) was achieved. Secondary therapy with five courses of cisplatin 90 mg/m2 on day 1 followed by teniposide (VM-26) 100 mg/m2 on day 3 (CDP/VM) was given to infants with gross residual tumor after CYC/ADR and second-look surgery. RESULTS Thirty-four infants achieved CR after CYC/ADR alone, three after CYC/ADR and second-look surgery, two after CYC/ADR, surgery, and maintenance therapy, and two after alternative treatment with CDP/VM (total CR rate, 42 of 44). The 3-year survival and disease-free survival are both 93%. Toxicity was nominal. CONCLUSIONS Infants with POG stage C NB have a favorable outlook, which is similar to infants with POG stage B NB; the surgical staging procedure for distinguishing these infant subsets may not be necessary. Future studies should focus on the reduction of treatment toxicity and efficacy maintenance, and address methods to identify infants at risk for failure.

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Robert P. Castleberry

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Nancy B. McWilliams

Eastern Maine Medical Center

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Charles L. Sexauer

Children's Memorial Hospital

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F A Hayes

Washington University in St. Louis

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Vita J. Land

Washington University in St. Louis

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Alexander A. Green

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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