| Literature DB >> 19604414 |
J Vesper1, E Graf, C Wille, J Tilgner, M Trippel, G Nikkhah, Cb Ostertag.
Abstract
Although chemotherapy with procarbazine, lomustine and vincristine (PCV) is considered to be well tolerated, side effects frequently lead to dose reduction or even discontinuation of treatment of oligodendroglial brain tumors. The primary objective of the analysis was to retrospectively compare progression-free survival (PFS) after PCV vs. PC chemotherapy (without vincristine to avoid side effects). Patients were retrospectively identified from a database containing our patients between 1990 and 2003. For the selected cases, all histopathology reports were re-evaluated by a local neuropathologist. Based on the updated histology data, patients were included in the study if they had at least one histological diagnosis of an oligodendroglial tumor. PFS after start of PCV (n = 61) and PC (n = 84) chemotherapy identical (median 30 months). Multivariate analysis adjusting for prognostic imbalances favouring the PC group showed a minor, statistically non-significant benefit for PCV (hazard ratio 0.81, 95% confidence interval 0.53-1.25; p = 0.346). Younger age (< 50 y) was a statistically significant predictor of longer PFS. Significant advantages in terms of overall survival after first diagnosis of oligodendroglial tumor (OS, n = 315) were found for patients < 50 y (p < 0.001), oligodendrogliomas versus oligoastrocytomas (p = 0.002), and WHO degrees II vs. degrees III (p < 0.001). Three risk groups regarding OS were identified. Findings support the hypothesis that PC may be as effective as PCV chemotherapy, while avoiding the additional risks of vincristine. Younger age, lower tumor grade and histology of an oligodendroglioma were identified to be favorable prognostic factors.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19604414 PMCID: PMC2719586 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2377-9-33
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Description of patient population at the time of first diagnosis of oligodendroglioma or oligoastrocytoma (n = 315)
| n | % | ||
| Age (in years) | <20 | 15 | 5% |
| ≥20 – <30 | 53 | 17% | |
| ≥30 – <40 | 87 | 28% | |
| ≥40 – <50 | 82 | 26% | |
| ≥50 – <60 | 43 | 14% | |
| ≥60 – <70 | 26 | 8% | |
| ≥70 | 9 | 3% | |
| median (range) | 40 (4 – 77) | ||
| Sex | male | 202 | 64% |
| female | 113 | 36% | |
| Previous resection | yes | 83 | 26% |
| no | 232 | 74% | |
| Histology and grade | Oligodendroglioma, WHO II | 87 | 28% |
| Oligodendroglioma, WHO III | 10 | 3% | |
| Oligoastrocytoma, WHO II | 181 | 57% | |
| Oligoastrocytoma, WHO III | 37 | 12% | |
Description of patient population at time of PCV or PC treatment
| PCV n = 61 | PC n = 84 | ||||
| Age (in years) | < 50 | 40 | (66%) | 53 | (63%) |
| ≥50 | 21 | (34%) | 31 | (37%) | |
| median (range) | 44 (14 – 73) | 42 (19 – 77) | |||
| Sex | male | 38 | (62%) | 54 | (64%) |
| female | 23 | (38%) | 30 | (36%) | |
| Time from diagnosis of oligodendroglioma to onset of chemotherapy (in years) | median (range) | 2.8 (0 – 17) | 0.4 (0 – 18) | ||
| Resection prior to chemo-therapy | yes | 30 | (49%) | 23 | (27%) |
| no | 31 | (51%) | 61 | (73%) | |
| Radiotherapy or seed implantation prior to chemotherapy | yes | 30 | (49%) | 54 | (64%) |
| no | 31 | (51%) | 65 | (36%) | |
| Histology and grade | Oligodendroglioma, WHO II | 10 | (16%) | 16 | (19%) |
| Oligodendroglioma, WHO III | 6 | (10%) | 7 | (8%) | |
| Oligoastrocytoma, WHO II | 22 | (36%) | 40 | (48%) | |
| Oligoastrocytoma, WHO III | 21 | (34%) | 18 | (21%) | |
| Other, WHO III/IV° | 2 | (3%) | 3 | (4%) | |
| Karnofsky performance score | < 90 | 24 | (41%) | 28 | (34%) |
| ≥90 | 35 | (59%) | 55 | (66%) | |
| Unknown | 2 | 1 | |||
Figure 1Progression-free survival for PCV (n = 61) vs PC (n = 84).
Determinants of progression-free survival after PCV (n = 59) and PC (n = 83) treatment in patients with complete data (100 events)
| Hazard ratio* | 95% confidence interval | p value | ||
| Treatment | PCV vs. PC | 0.81 | 0.53–1.25 | 0.346 |
| Age (in years) | < 50 vs. ≥50 | 0.64 | 0.41–1.00 | 0.051 |
| Resection before chemotherapy | yes vs. no | 1.61 | 1.01–2.58 | 0.047 |
| Histology | Oligoastrocytoma vs oligodendroglioma | 1.34 | 0.83–2.18 | 0.487 |
| Other vs oligodendroglioma | 1.42 | 0.46–4.39 | ||
| WHO grade | II vs III/IV | 0.75 | 0.49–1.14 | 0.176 |
| Karnofsky performance score | < 90 vs ≥90 | 1.26 | 0.81–1.96 | 0.304 |
* A hazard ratio < 1 (> 1) indicates an effect in favor of the first (the second) group in terms of progression-free survival.
Figure 2Progression-free survival after resection (n = 98).
NCI Common Toxicity Criteria for PCV and PC treated patients (n = 84 vs. n = 61 respectively)
| PC | Motor | 0 | (0%) | 0 | (0%) | 0 | (0%) | 0.26 | |
| PCV | 3 | (4%) | 0 | (0%) | 0 | (0%) | |||
| PC | Vomiting | 10 | (16%) | 4 | (7%) | 0 | (0%) | 0.62 | |
| PCV | 9 | (11%) | 5 | (6%) | 0 | (0%) | |||
| PC | PLT | 10 | (16%) | 8 | (13%) | 2 | (3%) | 0.20 | |
| PCV | 8 | (10%) | 6 | (7%) | 1 | (1%) | |||
| PC | Allergy | 6 | (10%) | 0 | (0%) | 0 | (0%) | 0.33 | |
| PCV | 4 | (5%) | 2 | (2%) | 0 | (0%) | |||
Determinants of overall survival after first diagnosis of oligodendroglioma or oligoastrocytoma (n = 315 patients, 120 deaths)
| Hazard ratio* | 95% confidence interval | p-value | ||
| Age (in years) | < 50 vs ≥50 | 0.40 | 0.27–0.59 | < 0.001 |
| Previous resection | yes vs no | 0.87 | 0.57–1.32 | 0.506 |
| Histology | Oligoastrocytoma vs Oligodendroglioma | 1.99 | 1.28–3.10 | 0.002 |
| WHO grade | II vs III | 0.39 | 0.24–0.61 | < 0.001 |
* A hazard ratio < 1 (> 1) indicates an effect in favor of the first (the second) group in terms of overall survival.
Figure 3Overall survival after first diagnosis of oligodendroglioma or oligoastrocytoma (n = 315) by risk group (low, medium, high risk).