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Low-grade gliomas (LGGs) are the most common intracranial tumors in children, accounting for about 40% of intracranial tumors in children. The biological characteristics and clinical prognosis of LGGs vary greatly, and they can present different biological characteristics such as restricted growth, invasive growth, and malignant transformation during their development. The prognosis of LGGs is related to the degree of tumor resection, histological type, and whether it has spread.
For LGGs, surgical resection is the main treatment method. However, many tumors located in the visual pathway, brainstem, hypothalamus and other midline parts, it is impossible to completely remove. Radiotherapy can effectively control tumor progression to a certain extent, but radiotherapy can cause obvious and serious delayed damage, such as cognitive impairment, endocrine disorders, cerebrovascular events, and second tumors. Chemotherapy can effectively treat LGGs in children, and can postpone or avoid radiotherapy. It is the preferred treatment for children with LGGs after surgery. Carboplatin combined with vincristine, the CV regimen, is currently the main chemotherapy regimen for the treatment of children with LGGs.
Anti-angiogenesis is a new type of treatment. Bevacizumab, a humanized monoclonal antibody that targets vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). Among children with relapsed, refractory or progressing LGGs, the effective rate of Bev combined with irinotecan was 44%, and the 6-month and 2-year progression-free survival rates were 85% and 48%, respectively. However, almost all of them were treated with Bev progressed again. Tumor growth is more aggressive after Bev treatment fails. Recombinant human endostatin (rh-ES) is an endogenous broad-spectrum angiogenesis inhibitor that has been shown to significantly improve therapeutic efficacy when combining with conventional chemotherapy agents in non-small-cell lung cancer, breast cancer and melanoma.Previous retrospective studies of the research team found that rh-ES combined with CV can treat LGGs in children effectively, shorten the onset time, help quickly alleviate the symptoms of brainstem damage, and improve the quality of life.
This study intends to use prospective clinical studies to further confirm the efficacy and safety of the anti-angiogenic drug rh-ES combined with traditional CV regimens in the treatment of children with LGGs.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Age ≥ 3months and ≤18years;
Histopathologically confirmed low-grade glioma (WHO grade I and II), including astrocytoma, pilocytic astrocytoma, pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma, subependymal giant cell astrocytoma, infantile desmoplastic astrocytoma, low-grade oligodendroglioma, oligoastrocytoma, ganglioglioma, and infantile desmoplastic ganglioglioma. Chiasmatic-hypothalamic tumors intrinsic to the optic pathway were eligible without pathologic confirmation.
There is a clear evaluable lesion with less than 95% resection or residual tumor of more than 1.5 cm^2;
KPS score ≥50 (age> 12 years old) or Lansky score ≥ 50 (age ≤ 12 years old);
Estimated survival of at least 12 weeks;
Have not been received radiotherapy or chemotherapy before;
Participants must have adequate organ function as defined by the following criteria (within 7 days before treatment):
Hematology (No transfusion within 14 days):
Hemoglobin(HB)≥90g/L; Absolute neutrophil count (ANC)≥1.5×10^9/L; Platelet (PLT)≥80×10^9/L.
Chemistry:
Serum bilirubin ≤ 1.5×upper limit of normal (ULN) ALT and AST≤2.5ULN; Serum creatinine ≤1.5ULN or creatinine clearance rate(CCr)≥60ml/min; ECG: heart rate in the normal range (55-100beats/min), normal or slightly prolonged QT interval (QTc<480ms), normal or low T wave, normal or non-specific ST segment changes;
The patient or his legal guardian signs an informed consent form.
Exclusion criteria
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60 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Zhang Jun-ping
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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