High-dose melphalan with autologous marrow for treatment of advanced neuroblastoma

Abstract
A group of 12 children with advanced neuroblastoma (7 Stage IV and 5 Stage III), selected by their initial response to chemotherapy with pulsed cyclophosphamide/vincristine/Adriamycin (CVA), were given consolidation therapy with high-dose melphalan (140 mg/m2) and then surgical removal of residual disease. Twenty-two high-dose melphalan procedures were combined with autologous marrow grafting to offset myelotoxicity and were well tolerated. In each of 2 additional children, procedures carried out without marrow autografting led to serious marrow and mucosal toxicity. There were no treatment-related deaths. In 7/11 patients with evaluable computerized tomographic (CT) scans there was a decrease in maximum diameter of the primary tumour after melphalan. Complete response was achieved in 6 patients, of whom 3 are well and have no evidence of disease at 35, 33 and 18 months from completion of all treatment, however, although survival (median 23 months) of all 12 autografted patients is longer than that of 28 comparable children treated between 1970-77 with conventional chemotherapy (median 14 months) the difference is not statistically significant. High-dose melphalan is a safe and tolerable treatment in children when combined with autologous marrow grafting, but further study is required to determine whether the procedure can improve prognosis for patients with advanced neuroblastoma.