The role of cytoreductive surgery in multifocal/multicentric glioblastomas.

Biopsy Glioblastoma Growth patterns Multicentric Multifocal Resection

Journal

Journal of neuro-oncology
ISSN: 1573-7373
Titre abrégé: J Neurooncol
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 8309335

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Sep 2023
Historique:
received: 21 04 2023
accepted: 26 07 2023
pubmed: 12 9 2023
medline: 12 9 2023
entrez: 11 9 2023
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Multifocal/multicentric glioblastomas (mGBM) account for up to 20% of all newly diagnosed glioblastomas. The present study investigates the impact of cytoreductive surgery on survival and functional outcomes in patients with mGBM. We retrospectively reviewed clinical and imaging data of 71 patients with newly diagnosed primary (IDH1 wildtype) mGBM who underwent operative treatment in 2015-2020 at the authors' institution. Multicentric/multifocal growth was defined by the presence of ≥ 2 contrast enhancing lesions ≥ 1 cm apart from each other. 36 (50.7%) patients had a resection and 35 (49.3%) a biopsy procedure. MGMT status, age, preoperative KPI and NANO scores as well as the postoperative KPI and NANO scores did not differ significantly between resected and biopsied cases. Median overall survival was 6.4 months and varied significantly with the extent of resection (complete resection of contrast enhancing tumor: 13.6, STR: 6.4, biopsy: 3.4 months; P = 0.043). 21 (58.3%) of resected vs. only 12 (34.3%) of biopsied cases had radiochemotherapy (p = 0.022). Multivariate analysis revealed chemo- and radiotherapy and also (albeit with smaller hazard ratios) extent of resection (resection vs. biopsy) and multicentric growth as independent predictors of patient survival. Involvement of eleoquent brain regions, as well as neurodeficit rates and functional outcomes did not vary significantly between the biopsy and the resection cohorts. Resective surgery in mGBM is associated with better survival. This benefit seems to relate prominently to an increased number of patients being able to tolerate effective adjuvant therapies after tumor resections. In addition, cytoreductive surgery may have a survival impact per se.

Identifiants

pubmed: 37697210
doi: 10.1007/s11060-023-04410-7
pii: 10.1007/s11060-023-04410-7
pmc: PMC10522503
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

447-459

Informations de copyright

© 2023. The Author(s).

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Auteurs

Diyan Dimov (D)

Department of Neurosurgery, Evangelisches Klinikum Bethel, Universitätsklinikum OWL, Bielefeld, Germany.

Daniel Brainman (D)

Department of Neurosurgery, Evangelisches Klinikum Bethel, Universitätsklinikum OWL, Bielefeld, Germany.

Björn Berger (B)

Department of Neuroradiology, Evangelisches Klinikum Bethel, Universitätsklinikum OWL, Bielefeld, Germany.

Roland Coras (R)

Department of Neuropathology, Erlangen University Hospital, Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen, Germany.

Alexander Grote (A)

Department of Neurosurgery, Evangelisches Klinikum Bethel, Universitätsklinikum OWL, Bielefeld, Germany.
Department of Neurosurgery, Universitätsklinikum Giessen und Marburg, Marburg, Germany.

Matthias Simon (M)

Department of Neurosurgery, Evangelisches Klinikum Bethel, Universitätsklinikum OWL, Bielefeld, Germany. Matthias.Simon@evkb.de.

Classifications MeSH