Central Cord Syndrome |
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Clinical Trial: Chemotherapy, Filgrastim, and Radiation Therapy in Treating Patients With Primary Central Nervous System Lymphoma
This study is no longer recruiting patients.
Purpose
RATIONALE: Drugs used in chemotherapy use different ways to stop cancer cells from dividing so they stop growing or die. Radiation therapy uses high-energy x-rays to damage cancer cells. Combining chemotherapy with radiation therapy may kill more cancer cells. Colony-stimulating factors such as filgrastim allow doctors to give higher doses of chemotherapy drugs to kill more cancer cells.
PURPOSE: Phase II trial to study the effectiveness of lomustine, procarbazine, filgrastim, and radiation therapy in treating patients who have primary central nervous system lymphoma.
| Condition | Treatment or Intervention | Phase |
|---|---|---|
| AIDS-related primary CNS lymphoma primary central nervous system lymphoma | Drug: filgrastim Drug: lomustine Drug: procarbazine | Phase II |
MedlinePlus related topics: Cancer; Cancer Alternative Therapy; Lymphoma; Neurologic Diseases
Study Type: Interventional
Study Design: Treatment
Official Title: Phase II Study of Lomustine, Procarbazine, Filgrastim (G-CSF), and Radiotherapy in Patients with AIDS-Related or Immunocompetent Primary Central Nervous System Lymphoma
Study start: June 1998
OBJECTIVES: I. Determine response rate, response duration, and survival of patients with AIDS-related or immunocompetent primary central nervous system lymphoma after treatment with oral lomustine and procarbazine, filgrastim (G-CSF), and radiotherapy.
II. Determine toxicity of this combined modality in these patients.
III. Determine quality of life of these patients.
PROTOCOL OUTLINE: Patients are stratified by CD4 count (50/mm3 and under vs greater than 50/mm3).
Patients receive oral lomustine on day 1 and oral procarbazine on days 1-10 and days 22-31. Filgrastim (G-CSF) is administered subcutaneously daily on days 12-21 and days 33-42, until absolute neutrophil counts recover. Patients with a complete response after 6 weeks receive one additional course of chemotherapy prior to radiotherapy. Patients with a partial response, stable disease, or disease progression after 6 weeks proceed to radiotherapy without receiving a second course of chemotherapy. Whole brain radiotherapy is administered daily for 28 days beginning 1-3 weeks following chemotherapy.
Quality of life is assessed prior to therapy, at 3 and 6 weeks, and then every 2 months following radiotherapy.
Patients are followed every 2 months until death.
PROJECTED ACCRUAL: Approximately 16 patients will be accrued for this study.
Eligibility
Criteria
PROTOCOL ENTRY CRITERIA:
--Disease Characteristics--
- Histologically proven AIDS-related non-Hodgkin's lymphoma of the CNS or non AIDS-related, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma of CNS also eligible, if not eligible for higher priority clinical trial
--Prior/Concurrent Therapy--
- Biologic therapy:
- Chemotherapy: No prior chemotherapy
- Endocrine therapy: Steroids may be used concurrently. Doses should be as low as possible. Increases in steroids above study's upper limit will result in patient going off study.
- Radiotherapy: No prior radiotherapy
- Surgery: Prior surgical debulking allowed
--Patient Characteristics--
- Age: 0-120
- Performance status: ECOG 0-2
- Life expectancy: At least 6 weeks
- Hematopoietic: WBC at least 1500/ mm3; Platelets at least 50,000/mm3
- Hepatic: Serum bilirubin no greater than 3.0 mg/dL
- Renal: Serum creatinine no greater than 3.0 mg/dL
- Cardiovascular:
- Pulmonary:
- Other: Active infection(s) allowed if drug receiving treatment; No Zidovudine during combined modality chemotherapy and radition; Negative CSF cytology
Location Information
Scot C. Remick, Study Chair, Ireland Cancer Center
More Information
Clinical trial summary from the National Cancer Institute's PDQ®
Record last reviewed: July 2004
Last Updated: October 13, 2004
Record first received: November 1, 1999
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00003929
Health Authority: United States: Federal Government
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this record on 2005-04-08
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov
Cache Date: April 8, 2005
Resources
- Central Cervical Cord Syndrome (National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke)

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