Interactive Effects of Molecular, Therapeutic, and Patient Factors on Outcome of Diffuse Low-Grade Glioma.
By: Shawn L Hervey-Jumper, Yalan Zhang, Joanna J Phillips, Ramin A Morshed, Jacob S Young, Lucie McCoy, Marisa Lafontaine, Tracy Luks, Simon Ammanuel, Sofia Kakaizada, Andrew Egladyous, Andrew Gogos, Javier Villanueva-Meyer, Anny Shai, Gayathri Warrier, Terri Rice, Jason Crane, Margaret Wrensch, John K Wiencke, Mariza Daras, Nancy Ann Oberheim Bush, Jennie W Taylor, Nicholas Butowski, Jennifer Clarke, Susan Chang, Edward Chang, Manish Aghi, Philip Theodosopoulos, Michael McDermott, Asgeir S Jakola, Vasileios K Kavouridis, Noah Nawabi, Ole Solheim, Timothy Smith, Mitchel S Berger, Annette M Molinaro

Department of Neurological Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA.
2023-1-4; doi: 10.1200/JCO.21.02929
Abstract

Purpose

In patients with diffuse low-grade glioma (LGG), the extent of surgical tumor resection (EOR) has a controversial role, in part because a randomized clinical trial with different levels of EOR is not feasible.

Methods

In a 20-year retrospective cohort of 392 patients with IDH-mutant grade 2 glioma, we analyzed the combined effects of volumetric EOR and molecular and clinical factors on overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival by recursive partitioning analysis. The OS results were validated in two external cohorts (n = 365). Propensity score analysis of the combined cohorts (n = 757) was used to mimic a randomized clinical trial with varying levels of EOR.

Results

Recursive partitioning analysis identified three survival risk groups. Median OS was shortest in two subsets of patients with astrocytoma: those with postoperative tumor volume (TV) > 4.6 mL and those with preoperative TV > 43.1 mL and postoperative TV ≤ 4.6 mL. Intermediate OS was seen in patients with astrocytoma who had chemotherapy with preoperative TV ≤ 43.1 mL and postoperative TV ≤ 4.6 mL in addition to oligodendroglioma patients with either preoperative TV > 43.1 mL and residual TV ≤ 4.6 mL or postoperative residual volume > 4.6 mL. Longest OS was seen in astrocytoma patients with preoperative TV ≤ 43.1 mL and postoperative TV ≤ 4.6 mL who received no chemotherapy and oligodendroglioma patients with preoperative TV ≤ 43.1 mL and postoperative TV ≤ 4.6 mL. EOR ≥ 75% improved survival outcomes, as shown by propensity score analysis.

Conclusion

Across both subtypes of LGG, EOR beginning at 75% improves OS while beginning at 80% improves progression-free survival. Nonetheless, maximal resection with preservation of neurological function remains the treatment goal. Our findings have implications for surgical strategies for LGGs, particularly oligodendroglioma.





PMID:36599113






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