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Neurocognitive function and progression in patients with brain metastases treated with whole-brain radiation and motexafin gadolinium: results of a randomized phase III trial

Neurocognitive function and progression in patients with brain metastases treated with whole-brain radiation and motexafin gadolinium: results of a randomized phase III trial
Neurocognitive function and progression in patients with brain metastases treated with whole-brain radiation and motexafin gadolinium: results of a randomized phase III trial
Purpose: to report the neurocognitive findings in a phase III randomized trial evaluating survival and neurologic and neurocognitive function in patients with brain metastases from solid tumors receiving whole-brain radiation therapy (WBRT) with or without motexafin gadolinium (MGd).
Patients and Methods: patients were randomly assigned to receive WBRT 30 Gy in 10 fractions with or without MGd 5 mg/kg/d. Monthly neurocognitive testing for memory, executive function, and fine motor skill was performed.
Results: four hundred one patients were enrolled (251 with non–small-cell lung cancer, 75 with breast cancer, and 75 with other cancers); 90.5% patients had impairment of one or more neurocognitive tests at baseline. Neurocognitive test scores of memory, fine motor speed, executive function, and global neurocognitive impairment at baseline were correlated with brain tumor volume and predictive of survival. There was no statistically significant difference between treatment arms in time to neurocognitive progression. Patients with lung cancer (but not other types of cancer) who were treated with MGd tended to have improved memory and executive function (P = .062) and improved neurologic function as assessed by a blinded events review committee (P = .048).
Conclusion: neurocognitive tests are a relatively sensitive measure of brain functioning; a combination of tumor prognostic variables and brain function assessments seems to predict survival better than tumor variables alone. Although the addition of MGd to WBRT did not produce a significant overall improvement between treatment arms, MGd may improve memory and executive function and prolong time to neurocognitive and neurologic progression in patients with brain metastases from lung cancer.
157-165
Meyers, Christina A.
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Smith, Jennifer A.
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Bezjak, Andrea
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Mehta, M. P.
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Liebmann, James
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Illidge, Tim
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Kunkler, Ian
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Caudrelier, Jean-Michel
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Eisenberg, Peter D.
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Meerwaldt, Jacobus
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Siemers, Ross
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Carrie, Christian
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Gaspar, Laurie E.
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Curran, Walter
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Phan, See-Chun
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Miller, Richard A.
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Renschler, Markus F.
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Meyers, Christina A.
2d6f4be6-eae6-4fc8-899e-adab473c18c1
Smith, Jennifer A.
2fe50496-15e3-4416-92d2-783b292b6a64
Bezjak, Andrea
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Mehta, M. P.
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Liebmann, James
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Illidge, Tim
50e3482f-405f-4534-8062-180bba1c1619
Kunkler, Ian
f12844bf-88a7-4286-a4a7-4fe003c3374b
Caudrelier, Jean-Michel
ff07b7cb-156b-4609-9c1c-f9289c579437
Eisenberg, Peter D.
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Meerwaldt, Jacobus
34aac758-4622-4032-95fe-788969863817
Siemers, Ross
34583e75-e04c-437f-bbad-424994b6cdfe
Carrie, Christian
ec98c209-05ca-487c-9f92-89d27f6410e4
Gaspar, Laurie E.
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Curran, Walter
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Phan, See-Chun
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Miller, Richard A.
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Renschler, Markus F.
d9ce5f16-c78f-485b-b98a-a434f064a591

Meyers, Christina A., Smith, Jennifer A., Bezjak, Andrea, Mehta, M. P., Liebmann, James, Illidge, Tim, Kunkler, Ian, Caudrelier, Jean-Michel, Eisenberg, Peter D., Meerwaldt, Jacobus, Siemers, Ross, Carrie, Christian, Gaspar, Laurie E., Curran, Walter, Phan, See-Chun, Miller, Richard A. and Renschler, Markus F. (2004) Neurocognitive function and progression in patients with brain metastases treated with whole-brain radiation and motexafin gadolinium: results of a randomized phase III trial. Journal of Clinical Oncology, 22 (1), 157-165. (doi:10.1200/JCO.2004.05.128).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Purpose: to report the neurocognitive findings in a phase III randomized trial evaluating survival and neurologic and neurocognitive function in patients with brain metastases from solid tumors receiving whole-brain radiation therapy (WBRT) with or without motexafin gadolinium (MGd).
Patients and Methods: patients were randomly assigned to receive WBRT 30 Gy in 10 fractions with or without MGd 5 mg/kg/d. Monthly neurocognitive testing for memory, executive function, and fine motor skill was performed.
Results: four hundred one patients were enrolled (251 with non–small-cell lung cancer, 75 with breast cancer, and 75 with other cancers); 90.5% patients had impairment of one or more neurocognitive tests at baseline. Neurocognitive test scores of memory, fine motor speed, executive function, and global neurocognitive impairment at baseline were correlated with brain tumor volume and predictive of survival. There was no statistically significant difference between treatment arms in time to neurocognitive progression. Patients with lung cancer (but not other types of cancer) who were treated with MGd tended to have improved memory and executive function (P = .062) and improved neurologic function as assessed by a blinded events review committee (P = .048).
Conclusion: neurocognitive tests are a relatively sensitive measure of brain functioning; a combination of tumor prognostic variables and brain function assessments seems to predict survival better than tumor variables alone. Although the addition of MGd to WBRT did not produce a significant overall improvement between treatment arms, MGd may improve memory and executive function and prolong time to neurocognitive and neurologic progression in patients with brain metastases from lung cancer.

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Published date: 2004

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Local EPrints ID: 26480
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/26480
PURE UUID: 2b7c4a75-91de-4bb4-b213-398db4e77877

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Date deposited: 12 Apr 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 07:11

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Contributors

Author: Christina A. Meyers
Author: Jennifer A. Smith
Author: Andrea Bezjak
Author: M. P. Mehta
Author: James Liebmann
Author: Tim Illidge
Author: Ian Kunkler
Author: Jean-Michel Caudrelier
Author: Peter D. Eisenberg
Author: Jacobus Meerwaldt
Author: Ross Siemers
Author: Christian Carrie
Author: Laurie E. Gaspar
Author: Walter Curran
Author: See-Chun Phan
Author: Richard A. Miller
Author: Markus F. Renschler

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