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INSP-17. Augmented Drug Delivery for Pediatric Diffuse Midline Glioma using Convection Enhanced Delivery

Convection enhanced delivery (CED), an alternative to systemic chemotherapy, spans nearly two decades of clinical experience. The application of CED in pediatric neuro-oncology has been mainly used in children with DMG. This exploratory period is highlighted by widely variable features including pro...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Souweidane, Mark M
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9164705/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noac079.713
Descripción
Sumario:Convection enhanced delivery (CED), an alternative to systemic chemotherapy, spans nearly two decades of clinical experience. The application of CED in pediatric neuro-oncology has been mainly used in children with DMG. This exploratory period is highlighted by widely variable features including procedural technique, disease extent, device interface, infusion parameters, and therapeutic agent. This presentation is meant to critically assess if CED for DMG is a logical therapeutic strategy. Most convincing to the perpetuation of this platform is the reproducible demonstration of augmented drug delivery. Post-treatment ratios of intralesional to systemic drug concentrations consistently exceed 1000. CED in the brain stem satisfies a desirable goal of CNS drug delivery: achieving high target tissue drug concentrations while avoiding systemic exposure. Surgical targeting of the brain stem and cannula deployment are solidly established as safe and accurate. Catheter insertion complications such as clinically relevant hemorrhage, CNS infection, and neurological injury are exceptional. Likewise, targeting error is on a millimeter scale with infrequent need for catheter repositioning. The use of intrinsic MRI signals, direct drug labeling, and surrogate tracers have all been used for measuring distribution of the infusion. The experience using a radio-labelled theragnostic agent has provided detailed distribution and dosimetry information. Based on estimates of tumor and hence target volumes, a rationale goal is to reach volumes of distribution in the range of 15-25 cm3. Optimizing this goal has focused on surgical targeting, infusion duration, and multiple treatment plans. Computational predictive modeling is being employed as a preoperative adjunct for maximizing distribution. Experience in DMG thus far has been limited to feasibility and safety studies. There is a paucity of Phase 2 studies and hence outcome has not yet been rigorously tested. Anecdotal increase in survival and long-term survival has been reproducibly reported. Of particular interest are the occasional cases of children exhibiting late out-of-treatment field and even extra-CNS recurrence. Available data is convincing that CED should serve be further explored in future clinical trials designs for children with DMG. Important features of any Phase 2 study design however should include monitoring of drug distribution, measures of tumor coverage, early response monitoring techniques, and possibly combination with whole CNS axis treatment.