Children's Oncology Group's 2023 blueprint for research: Central nervous system tumors

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Abstract

Tumors of the central nervous system (CNS) are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the pediatric population. Molecular characterization in the last decade has redefined CNS tumor diagnoses and risk stratification; confirmed the unique biology of pediatric tumors as distinct entities from tumors that occur in adulthood; and led to the first novel targeted therapies receiving Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for children with CNS tumors. There remain significant challenges to overcome: children with unresectable low-grade glioma may require multiple prolonged courses of therapy affecting quality of life; children with high-grade glioma have a dismal long-term prognosis; children with medulloblastoma may suffer significant short- and long-term morbidity from multimodal cytotoxic therapy, and approaches to improve survival in ependymoma remain elusive. The Children's Oncology Group (COG) is uniquely positioned to conduct the next generation of practice-changing clinical trials through rapid prospective molecular characterization and therapy evaluation in well-defined clinical and molecular groups.

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Leary, S. E. S., Onar-Thomas, A., Fangusaro, J., Gottardo, N. G., Cohen, K., Smith, A., … Fouladi, M. (2023). Children’s Oncology Group’s 2023 blueprint for research: Central nervous system tumors. Pediatric Blood and Cancer, 70(S6). https://doi.org/10.1002/pbc.30600

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