Aim: This retrospective study aimed to evaluate the long-term response and toxicity of recurrent malignant glioma patients to inhalation chemotherapy with perillyl alcohol (POH).

Patients And Methods: The cohort included 117 men and 81 women with primary glioblastoma multiforme (GBM; n=154), grade III astrocytoma (AA; n=26) and anaplastic oligodendroglioma (AO; n=5). POH inhalation schedule 4-times daily started with 66.7 mg/dose; 266 mg/day and escalated up to 133.4 mg/dose; 533.6 mg/day. Clinical toxicity and overall survival following treatment were compared with tumor size, topography, extent of peritumoral edema and histological classification.

Results: Adhesion to the protocol was high (>95%), POH (533.6 mg/daily) occasionally caused nose soreness but rarely nosebleed. Tumor size, peritumoral edema and the oligodendroglial component influenced response to treatment.

Conclusion: After 4 years under exclusive POH treatment, 19% of patients still remain in clinical remission. Long-term POH inhalation chemotherapy is a safe and non-invasive strategy efficient for recurrent malignant glioma.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

recurrent malignant
12
malignant glioma
12
perillyl alcohol
8
inhalation chemotherapy
8
poh inhalation
8
tumor size
8
peritumoral edema
8
long-term outcome
4
outcome patients
4
patients recurrent
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!