J Korean Soc Ther Radiol.  1997 Mar;15(1):11-18.

Radiotherapy of Supratentorial Primitive Neuroectodermal Tumor

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Radiation Oncology, Samsung Medical Center, Sung Kyun Kwan University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
  • 2Department of Therapeutic Radiology, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
  • 3Department of Radiation Oncology, Inha University Hospital, Inchon, Korea.

Abstract

PURPOSE
To evaluate the efficacy of combined treatment of surgery and chemoradiotherapy for supratentorial primitive neuroectodermal tumors (SPNET) and obtain the prognostic factors and complications. MATERIAL AND METHODS:The age of 18 patients ranged from 1 to 27 years (median=5 years). There were 12 males and 6 females. The extents of surgery were gross total (n=9), subtotal (n=8), biopsy only (n=1). Craniospinal radiotherapy was delivered to all the patients except 2 patients who were treated only with the whole brain and primary lesion. Radiation dose were 3120-5800cGy (median=5460) to primary mass, 1500-4200cGy (median=3600cGy) to the whole brain and 1320-3600cGy (median= 2400 cGy) to the spinal axis. Chemotherapy was done in 13 patients. Median follow-up period was 45 months ranged from 1 to 89 months.
RESULTS
Patterns of failure were as follows; local recurrence (1), multiple intracranial recurrence (2), spinal seeding (3), craniospinal seeding (2) and multiple bone metastasis (1). Two of two patients who did not received craniospinal radiotherapy failed at spinal area. All the relapsed cases died at 1 to 13 months after diagnosis of progression. The 2- and 5-year overall survival rates were 61% and 49%, respectively. The age, sex, tumor location did not influence the survival but aggressive resection with combined chemotherapy showed better outcome. Among 9 survivors, complications were detected as radiation necrosis (n=1), hypopituitarism (n=2), cognitive defect (n=1), memory deficit (n=1), growth retardation (n=1).
CONCLUSION
To improve the results of treatment of SPNET, maximal surgical resection followed by radiation therapy and chemotherapy is necessary. The extended radiation field including craniospinal axis may reduce the recurrence in spinal axis.

Keyword

Primitive neuroectodermal tumor; Radiotherapy

MeSH Terms

Axis, Cervical Vertebra
Biopsy
Brain
Chemoradiotherapy
Diagnosis
Drug Therapy
Female
Follow-Up Studies
Humans
Hypopituitarism
Male
Memory Disorders
Necrosis
Neoplasm Metastasis
Neuroectodermal Tumors, Primitive*
Radiotherapy*
Recurrence
Survival Rate
Survivors
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