Route of intracerebrospinal fluid chemotherapy administration and efficacy of therapy in neoplastic meningitis Journal Article


Authors: Glantz, M. J.; Van Horn, A.; Fisher, R.; Chamberlain, M. C.
Article Title: Route of intracerebrospinal fluid chemotherapy administration and efficacy of therapy in neoplastic meningitis
Abstract: BACKGROUND: A study was undertaken to determine whether route (intraventricular vs intralumbar) of intracerebrospinal fluid (intra-CSF) drug administration influences progression-free survival in the treatment of patients with neoplastic meningitis, which occurs in 1% to 5% of patients with known cancer. Currently available treatment options result in modest responses, which is in part a reflection of obstacles to drug delivery into the leptomeningeal space. METHODS: One hundred patients with clinically and cytologically or radiographically documented neoplastic meningitis because of solid cancers received intra-CSF liposomal cytarabine or methotrexate as specified in a randomized phase 4 trial. The 2 treatment arms were well balanced for demographic and tumor-related characteristics of known prognostic importance, including age, performance status, tumor type, extent of systemic and other central nervous system (CNS) disease, prior CNS therapy, and concurrent systemic chemotherapy. RESULTS: One hundred patients were randomized and treated (52 with sustained-release cytarabine, and 48 with methotrexate). Progression-free survival (the primary study endpoint) was identical between the sustained-release cytarabine and methotrexate treatment arms for all 100 patients (35 vs 37.5 days, P = .79). When progression-free survival was examined as a function of route of chemotherapy administration (lumbar vs ventricular), there was no difference for patients treated with sustained-release cytarabine (29 vs 43 days, P = .35). For patients treated with methotrexate, however, there was a statistically significant difference favoring patients receiving intraventricular therapy (19 vs 43 days, P = .048). CONCLUSIONS: Site of intra-CSF chemotherapy drug administration is clinically relevant with short half-life drugs such as methotrexate. © 2010 American Cancer Society.
Keywords: adult; cancer chemotherapy; controlled study; human tissue; treatment response; disease-free survival; human cell; major clinical study; clinical trial; solid tumor; unspecified side effect; cancer patient; cytarabine; methotrexate; antineoplastic agent; neoplasms; cytology; demography; progression free survival; controlled clinical trial; randomized controlled trial; cerebrospinal fluid; multicenter study; radiography; therapy effect; brain cancer; meningitis; performance; drug delivery; central nervous system disease; leptomeninx; intralumbar chemotherapy; intraventricular chemotherapy; neoplastic meningitis; phase 4 clinical trial; delayed-action preparations; injections, intraventricular; meningeal carcinomatosis; spinal puncture
Journal Title: Cancer
Volume: 116
Issue: 8
ISSN: 0008-543X
Publisher: Wiley Blackwell  
Date Published: 2010-04-15
Start Page: 1947
End Page: 1952
Language: English
DOI: 10.1002/cncr.24921
PUBMED: 20151421
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 6" - "Export Date: 20 April 2011" - "CODEN: CANCA" - "Source: Scopus"
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  1. Rebecca Fisher
    2 Fisher