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Comparison of Neurocognitive Outcome in Two Standard Regimen for Treatment of Low-risk Medulloblastoma

Nationwide Children's Hospital logo

Nationwide Children's Hospital

Status and phase

Begins enrollment in 4 months
Phase 3

Conditions

Medulloblastoma

Treatments

Drug: HIT-SKK Chemotherapy Cycles B1-3
Drug: Consolidation Cycle A6
Drug: Induction Cycles A1-A3
Drug: Modified HIT-SKK Cycle B4-5
Drug: Bridging Chemotherapy
Drug: Induction Cycles A4-5

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07291102
COGNITO-MB
2024-517133-40-00 (EU Trial (CTIS) Number)

Details and patient eligibility

About

This is a trial to compare neurocognitive outcomes in the intent-to-treat population 2.5 years after diagnosis between patients with newly diagnosed, non-metastatic, SHH-activated, TP53-wt, non-MYC amplified MF randomized to the interventional arms A ("Head Start 4") or B (HIT-SKK).

Full description

In this study, two highly effective irradiation-sparing treatment regimens are being compared in patients with low-risk early childhood MB:

  1. Arm A: The "Head Start" 4 regimen developed by the North American Head Start Consortium. This approach uses intensive Induction chemotherapy and Consolidation with HDCT and has led to equally favorable results in this subgroup -- 3y PFS was 96% for infants and young children with M0, SHH MB; 5y EFS was 93% for M0, DMB on the predecessor "Head Start" 3 study.
  2. Arm B: The HIT-SKK regimen developed within the GPOH. This regimen combines systemic chemotherapy with intraventricular MTX, leading to 93% 5-year PFS in low-risk patients.

Both treatment regimens use high-dose i.v. MTX, but only the HIT-SKK regimen also uses intraventricular administration of MTX directly into the CSF in addition to i.v. MTX. Given the long-term neurocognitive deficits of MTX have been described in childhood leukemia, and the pathogenesis of MTX-induced CNS-damage has been described, this has raised some concerns. Similarly, highly intensive, HDCT containing "Head Start" chemotherapy carries specific risks for the neurocognitive outcomes. Encouragingly, five years after HIT-SKK treatment including intraventricular MTX, young children with MB have a mean fluid intelligence score of 93.8 points. The full-scale IQ after "Head Start" chemotherapy is 95.4 and likewise within normal range. On the other hand, highly intensive, HDCT/AuHCR containing "Head Start" chemotherapy carries specific risks for the neurocognitive outcomes. However, neurocognitive outcomes after the HIT-SKK and "Head Start" chemotherapy regimens are difficult to compare from existing data, because of small sample sizes and inhomogeneous assessment tools used in prior studies. Therefore, a confirmatory study utilizing the same measures administered at the same time points is required to identify clinically relevant differences. In addition, survival, occurrence of second malignancies, neurological and endocrine deficits, hearing loss, and psychosocial comorbidities are also of high relevance in survivors of MB and may differ after both regimens. Since these also severely limit the survivors' potential for activity and participation in everyday life and affect their parents and siblings as well, this information will also be recorded.

Enrollment

96 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

Under 5 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria for screening:

  • Age at diagnosis < 5 years
  • Patients with institutional suspicion or diagnosis of SHH-activated MB
  • Patient and family in social circumstances that will allow neuropsychological follow-up
  • Ability of parents/legal representatives to understand the patient information and to personally sign and date the informed consent to participate in screening procedures
  • Patient and the parents/legal representative are able and willing to participate in the entire study (if patient is eligible)

Exclusion Criteria for overall study:

  • Patients previously treated for any other brain tumor or any type of malignant disease
  • Patients, in whom compliance with toxicity management guidelines and study procedures cannot be assured
  • History of hypersensitivity to an investigational medicinal product or to any drug with similar chemical structure or to any excipient present in the pharmaceutical form of an investigational medicinal product.
  • Patients/parents who do not wish to abstain from treatment with live vaccines during study participation
  • Patients with a language barrier too extensive to complete neuropsychological tests based on the investigator's judgement
  • Patients with severe premorbid developmental delay (based on the investigator's judgement), which will not allow WPPSI-IV assessment after 2.5 years
  • Patients cannot undergo MRI

Inclusion Criteria for Bridging chemotherapy (carboplatin/etopiside) in interventional arms:

  • Patients with SHH-activated MB, TP53-wt demonstrated by IHC for Gab1 or p75-NGFR, Yap1, beta-catenin, and TP53 (lack of strong and widespread nuclear p53 positivity) on central review according to WHO classification 2021.
  • No clinical evidence of extra-CNS metastases
  • Negative CSF cytology
  • No prior therapy for MB other than surgery
  • No other medical contraindications to chemotherapy:
  • No uncontrolled invasive fungal infection or other severe systemic infection requiring system/parental therapy
  • No other severe organ dysfunctions, which cannot be clinically controlled
  • No concomitant use with yellow fever vaccine and with live virus and bacterial vaccines
  • No demyelinating form of Charcot-Marie-Tooth syndrome
  • Assessment of hearing function completed
  • No evidence of cancer predisposition syndromes other than Gorlin syndrome or ELP1, GPR161 germline alterations.
  • Provided written informed consent by parent(s)/parent representative(s) by bridging chemotherapy
  • Patient should be enrolled within 28 days after diagnosis. Bridging chemotherapy can start as early as criteria for enrollment are met, and must start no later than 33 days after diagnosis

Exclusion Criteria for bridging chemotherapy:

  • One or more of the inclusion criteria for bridging chemotherapy are lacking
  • Other histology than SHH MB

Inclusion Criteria for randomization:

  • Patient has received bridging chemotherapy as described in this protocol
  • Patients with centrally reviewed SHH-activated MB, TP53-wt, according to WHO classification 2021
  • Absence of metastatic disease on central radiology review
  • Exclusion of TP53-mutation by DNA sequencing of the TP53-gene from tumor tissue by central review. Results from local institution will be accepted if raw data of this analysis is forwarded to the national central review institution
  • Confirmation of SHH activation by DNA methylation-based classification on central review. Results from local institution will be accepted if raw data of this analysis is forwarded to the national central review institution
  • No amplification of MYC (amplification of MYCN allowed). Array-based technologies (850k array, molecular inversion probe assay (MIP)), array-based comparative genomic hybridization (array-CGH) or next generation sequencing (NGS) DNA sequencing coverage MYC locus will be used. If these alternative assays give any indication of possible amplification, FISH will be performed on central review.
  • No other medical contraindications to chemotherapy:
  • No uncontrolled invasive fungal infection or other severe systemic infection requiring system/parental therapy
  • No other severe organ dysfunctions, which cannot be clinically controlled
  • No concomitant use with yellow fever vaccine and with live virus and bacterial vaccines
  • No demyelinating form of Charcot-Marie-Tooth syndrome
  • Retrospective assessment of pre-operative health-related QoL (HR-QoL) measured by Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory
  • Provided written informed consent by parent(s)/parent representative(s) for randomization

Exclusion criteria for randomization:

-Patients are excluded from the interventional study if any of the following criteria are met:

  1. One or more of the inclusion criteria for randomization are lacking
  2. Patients with metastatic disease
  3. TP53-mutated SHH MB
  4. MYC amplified MB
  5. Pre-existing condition incompatible with scheduled therapy (e.g. Fanconi anemia)
  6. Patients with non-communicating hydrocephalus, e.g. due to perinatal intracranial haemorrhage, adueductal stenosis, or meningitis
  7. Contraindication for any components of the randomized therapies, including HDCT and intraventricular chemotherapy. Note: postperative hydrocephalus is not a contraindication for i.ventr. MTX.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

96 participants in 2 patient groups

Arm A: "Head Start" 4
Experimental group
Description:
Arm A consists of 3 to 5 Induction chemotherapy cycles and one high-dose chemotherapy cycle evaluated in the "Head Start" 4 study.
Treatment:
Drug: Induction Cycles A4-5
Drug: Bridging Chemotherapy
Drug: Induction Cycles A1-A3
Drug: Consolidation Cycle A6
Arm B: HIT-SKK
Experimental group
Description:
Arm B consists of 3 to 5 cycles of chemotherapy evaluated in the HIT-SKK'92 (Rutkowski et al. 2005) and HIT-2000 (NCT00303810) clinical studies.
Treatment:
Drug: Modified HIT-SKK Cycle B4-5
Drug: Bridging Chemotherapy
Drug: HIT-SKK Chemotherapy Cycles B1-3

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Kelsey Troyer, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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