Hydroxyurea (HU), an orally administered chemotherapy, has become the de facto standard therapeutic agent in patients with surgically and radiation refractory meningiomas based on a limited literature. A retrospective case series of 60 patients with recurrent WHO grade 1 meningioma treated with HU following progression after surgery and radiotherapy was conducted with primary study objective progression free survival (PFS) at 6- and 12-months. Sixty patients (45 women; 15 men: median age 61.5 years, range 26-88) with recurrent meningioma were treated with HU (1000 mg/m(2)/day orally divided twice per day; one cycle operationally defined as 4-weeks of daily HU). All patients had progressed radiographically after prior therapy with surgery (60/60) and radiotherapy (external beam radiotherapy 60/60; stereotactic radiotherapy 53/60). No patient received prior chemotherapy or targeted therapy before instituting HU. Patients received 1-12 cycles (median 2.0) of HU with modest toxicity (10% grade 3 + anemia or fatigue). There were no radiographic responses, 35% of patients had stable disease and 65% manifested progressive disease. Duration of stable disease ranged from 3 to 12 months (median 4.0 months). The overall PFS was 10% (median PFS 2.0 months). The majority of patients (80%) following progression on HU were subsequently treated on an investigational trial. In this retrospective case series, HU though generally well tolerated and convenient, appeared to have very limited activity which raises questions of what constitutes effective salvage therapy and indicates an unmet need for alternative treatments for recurrent meningiomas.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11060-011-0541-5 | DOI Listing |
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