» Articles » PMID: 39001719

Memantine to Reduce Cognitive Impairment After Radiation in Children: A Pilot Study Evaluating the Feasibility of Memantine in Reducing Cognitive Impairment in Pediatric Patients After Radiation Therapy for Central Nervous System Tumors

Overview
Specialties Oncology
Radiology
Date 2024 Jul 13
PMID 39001719
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Purpose: Memantine is standard in certain adults receiving brain radiation therapy (RT) to decrease cognitive impacts, but it is unknown whether pediatric patients can take, tolerate, and/or benefit from memantine. In this prospective single-arm feasibility study, we hypothesized that pediatric patients receiving central nervous system (CNS) RT would tolerate memantine with good adherence.

Methods And Materials: Patients aged 4 to 18 years with a primary CNS malignancy (excluding World Health Organization grade 4 astrocytoma, glioblastoma) receiving intracranial RT were eligible. A 6-month memantine course was given during and after RT, with dose titration in 5 mg increments over 4 weeks targeting a weight-based maximum (0.4 mg/kg to the closest 5 mg), not to exceed 10 mg twice a day. The primary endpoint was to achieve 80% drug adherence rate in 80% of patients measured 1 month after RT. Secondary objectives included memantine feasibility at 3 and 6 months.

Results: Eighteen patients enrolled from 2020 to 2022 and were prescribed memantine with RT. The study closed early to avoid competing with the phase 3 randomized Children's Oncology Group study ACCL2031. No predefined stopping rules were met. One patient withdrew for cognition-altering substance use, leaving 17 patients available for analysis. One patient discontinued memantine after one dose due to nausea. For the remaining 16 patients, there was a median of 100% pill completion rate (range, 74%-100%; n = 9/17 with 100% adherence) at 1 month after RT, with 15/16 (94%) with adherence rates >80%. At the 3- and 6-month post-RT time points for secondary endpoints, the median adherence rates were 100% (range, 55%-100%) and 96% (range, 33%-100%), respectively. Grade 1 to 2 fatigue, headache, and nausea were the most common toxicity events, at least possibly related to the study drug (n = 27), without attributable grade 3+ events.

Conclusions: Memantine is a feasible, safe, and well-tolerated addition to multimodality treatment for pediatric CNS malignancies. Results of ACCL2031 are awaited to define the value of memantine in this population.