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. 2020 Nov 9;22(Suppl 2):ii55. doi: 10.1093/neuonc/noaa215.220

CTNI-54. LONG-TERM USE OF EVEROLIMUS PLUS OCTREOTIDE FOR RECURRENT INTRACRANIAL OR SPINAL MENINGIOMA: A SINGLE INSTITUTION EXPERIENCE

Michael Youssef 1, Lily Pham 1, Mehmet Demirhan 1, Rebecca Harrison 1, Monica Loghin 1, Jennifer Johnson 1, Kristin Alfaro-Munoz 1, Krishna Bhat 1, Debra Yeboa 1, Sujit Prabhu 1, Shaan Raza 1, John de Groot 1, Franco Demonte 1, Carlos Kamiya-Matsuoka 1
PMCID: PMC7650472

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Selection of systemic therapy for recurrent meningiomas with progression after resection and/or radiation therapy represents a challenge. The combination of everolimus, an mTOR inhibitor, plus octreotide long-acting repeatable (LAR), a somatostatin agonist, suggests synergistic activity in preclinical studies. Its long-term clinical impact in recurrent meningiomas warrants further study.

METHODS

We reviewed the records of adult patients with recurrent intracranial or spinal meningioma (WHO grade I, II, or III), not candidates for further surgery or radiation therapy, who were treated with everolimus and octreotide, between 1/1/2015 and 06/1/2020 at MD Anderson Cancer Center. Patients received everolimus (10 mg PO daily) each 28-day cycle and octreotide 30 mg SC once monthly. Molecular features were determined by next generation sequencing (T-200–1, Oncomine).

RESULTS

A total of 18 patients were identified, including WHO grade I tumors (n=4), grade II (n=10), and grade III (n=4); furthermore, 8 patients harbored NF2 mutation, followed by mutations in CREBBP (n=2), NOTCH2 (n=1), MHL1 (n=1), PTEN (n=1), SETD2 (n=1), and TP53 genes (n=1). One patient had spinal meningioma. The 6- and 12-month PFS were 77.8% and 61.1%, 6- and 12-month OS were 94.4% and 83.3% respectively. Seven (38.9%) patients had tolerated treatment for more than 12 cycles, 3 (16.7%) remain on treatment for more than 24 cycles and 1 patient is still on treatment for 31 cycles. Only 1 patient required dose reduction to 7.5 mg daily due to pneumonitis, otherwise there is an acceptable toxicity profile. Four patients had resolution of trigeminal neuralgia.

CONCLUSIONS

In our patient population, combination treatment with everolimus and octreotide seems to have antitumor activity and proved to be safe without major side effects from long-term exposure. It also contributed to control of neuralgia. Further tissue analysis of the role of mTOR pathway and SSTR2A expression is ongoing.


Articles from Neuro-Oncology are provided here courtesy of Society for Neuro-Oncology and Oxford University Press

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