| Literature DB >> 20644945 |
Abstract
Several studies have provided ample evidence of a clinically significant interobserver variation of the histological diagnosis of glioma. This interobserver variation has an effect on both the typing and grading of glial tumors. Since treatment decisions are based on histological diagnosis and grading, this affects patient care: erroneous classification and grading may result in both over- and undertreatment. In particular, the radiotherapy dosage and the use of chemotherapy are affected by tumor grade and lineage. It also affects the conduct and interpretation of clinical trials on glioma, in particular of studies into grade II and grade III gliomas. Although trials with central pathology review prior to inclusion will result in a more homogeneous patient population, the interpretation and external validity of such trials are still affected by this, and the question whether results of such trials can be generalized to patients diagnosed and treated elsewhere remains to be answered. Although molecular classification may help in typing and grading tumors, as of today this is still in its infancy and unlikely to completely replace histological classification. Routine pathology review in everyday clinical practice should be considered. More objective histological criteria for the grade and lineage of gliomas are urgently needed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20644945 PMCID: PMC2910894 DOI: 10.1007/s00401-010-0725-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol ISSN: 0001-6322 Impact factor: 17.088
Fig. 1A case submitted for inclusion in the CATNON study on anaplastic glioma without 1p/19q co-deletion, showing a overall relatively poor quality with stretched and discohesive material; b a sporadic mitosis; c “incipient” microvascular proliferation; and d gemistocytic cells including one with mitosis
Standard of care in gliomas
| Tumor type | Standard of care |
|---|---|
| Glioblastoma multiforme | Combined chemo-irradiation (60 Gy) with temozolomide |
| Grade III tumors | Radiotherapy 60 Gy, value of adjuvant chemotherapy and of combined chemo-irradiation unproven |
| Low grade glioma | Radiotherapy 45–55 Gy, higher dosages of RT correlated with more toxicity, unproven role for upfront chemotherapy alone |
| Oligodendroglial tumors | Initial management with upfront chemotherapy widely accepted, regardless of tumor grade |