The purpose of this study is to determine if capecitabine is effective in the treatment of high grade gliomas that have returned after completing treatment.
High grade gliomas (HGGs) represent a heterogenous group of primary brain tumors that share WHO grade III or IV classification (anaplastic astrocytoma, anaplastic oligodendroglioma, anaplastic mixed glioma, and glioblastoma multiforme). Despite the upfront use of surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy, high grade gliomas uniformly result in recurrence and death. Palliative chemotherapy offers an improvement in time to progression, symptom control, quality of life, and potential survival; however, no established chemotherapy regimen for recurrence exists and new treatments are needed. Oral capecitabine is a rationale strategy for therapeutic palliation of recurrent high grade gliomas given its oral administration, its well-known kinetics and toxicities, its non-competitive toxicities to other high grade glioma treatments, its well established management algorithms, its established evidence of entry into the central nervous system, and its evidence of safety and efficacy in malignancies in the central nervous system.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
30
1,000-1,250 mg/m2 taken by mouth twice daily for 14 out of 21 consecutive days until progression or unacceptable toxicity.
University of Florida
Gainesville, Florida, United States
Percentage of Participants With Progression-free Survival.
Gadolinium-contrasted MRIs were used to assess radiographic response every 2 cycles (\~6 weeks). Tumor progression was defined by increasing tumor size, new areas of tumor, or unequivocal neurologic deterioration.
Time frame: From date of first dose of study drug until month 6.
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