| Literature DB >> 21234719 |
Whitney B Pope1, Jonathan R Young, Benjamin M Ellingson.
Abstract
Bevacizumab is thought to normalize tumor vasculature and restore the blood-brain barrier, decreasing enhancement and peritumoral edema. Conventional measurements of tumor response rely upon dimensions of enhancing tumor. After bevacizumab treatment, glioblastomas are more prone to progress as nonenhancing tumor. The RANO (Response Assessment in Neuro-Oncology) criteria for glioma response use fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR)/T2 hyperintensity as a surrogate for nonenhancing tumor; however, nonenhancing tumor can be difficult to differentiate from other causes of FLAIR/T2 hyperintensity (e.g., radiation-induced gliosis). Due to these difficulties, recent efforts have been directed toward identifying new biomarkers that either predict treatment response or accurately measure response of both enhancing and nonenhancing tumor shortly after treatment initiation. This will allow for earlier treatment decisions, saving patients from the adverse effects of ineffective therapies while allowing them to try alternative therapies sooner. An active area of research is the use of physiologic imaging, which can potentially detect treatment effects before changes in tumor size are evident.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21234719 PMCID: PMC3075404 DOI: 10.1007/s11910-011-0179-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Neurol Neurosci Rep ISSN: 1528-4042 Impact factor: 5.081
Summary of the RANO criteria
| Response | Criteria |
|---|---|
| Complete response | Disappearance of all enhancing measurable and nonmeasurable disease sustained for a minimum of 4 weeks |
| Stable or improved FLAIR/T2 lesions | |
| No new lesions | |
| Clinical status is stable or improved | |
| Patients cannot be receiving corticosteroids (physiologic replacement doses are acceptable) | |
| Partial response | 50% or greater decrease (compared with baseline) in the sum of products of perpendicular diameters of all measurable enhancing lesions sustained for a minimum of 4 weeks |
| No progression of nonmeasurable disease | |
| No new lesions | |
| Stable or improved FLAIR/T2 lesions | |
| Clinical status is stable or improved | |
| The corticosteroid dosage at the time of the scan should be no greater than the dosage at the time of the baseline scan | |
| Stable disease | Patient does not qualify for complete response, partial response, or progression |
| Stable FLAIR/T2 lesions on a corticosteroid dose no greater than at baseline | |
| Clinical status is stable | |
| Progression | Defined by any of the following: |
| 25% or greater increase in sum of the products of perpendicular diameters of all measurable enhancing lesions compared with the smallest tumor measurement obtained either at baseline or best response following the initiation of therapy, while on a stable or increasing dose of corticosteroids. | |
| Significant increase in FLAIR/T2 lesions compared with baseline or best response following initiation of therapy, not caused by comorbid events (eg, radiation therapy, ischemic injury, seizures, postoperative changes, or other treatment effects), while on a stable or increasing dose of corticosteroids | |
| Presence of new lesions | |
| Clinical deterioration not attributable to other causes apart from the tumor (eg, seizures, medication side effects, complications of therapy, cerebrovascular events, infection) or decreases in corticosteroid dose | |
| Failure to return for evaluation due to death or deteriorating condition | |
| Clear progression of nonmeasurable disease |
FLAIR fluid-attenuated inversion recovery, RANO Response Assessment in Neuro-Oncology. (Adapted from Wen et al. [2])
Key findings of MR perfusion studies in the assessment of gliomas
| Study | Key finding(s) |
|---|---|
| DSC perfusion | |
| Prognostic value for standard treatment (chemotherapy and radiation) | |
| Hirai et al. [ | Maximum rCBV was prognostic of 2-year survival in patients with high-grade astrocytomas |
| Mangla et al. [ | Change in rCBV was predictive of 1-year survival in patients with glioblastoma |
| Law et al. [ | rCBV was predictive of time to progression in both high- and low-grade gliomas |
| Predictive value for response to antiangiogenic therapy | |
| Sawlani et al. [ | Change in HPV correlated with time to progression in recurrent glioblastoma patients |
| Akella et al. [ | rCBF was correlated with radiographic and clinical response in patients with malignant gliomas treated with cilengitide |
| Differentiating true progression from pseudoprogression | |
| Barajas et al. [ | DSC parameters (rCBV, rPH, PSR) were significantly different in recurrent glioblastoma compared with radiation necrosis |
| Hu et al. [ | An rCBV threshold value of 0.71 differentiated high-grade glioma recurrence from post-treatment radiation effect with a sensitivity of 91.7% and a specificity of 100% |
| Sugahara et al. [ | rCBV ratios were > 2.6 in cases of recurrent tumor and < 0.6 in cases of post-treatment radiation effect |
| Gahramanov et al. [ | Ferumoxytol-DSC was more sensitive in detecting true progression than gadoteridol-DSC |
| DCE perfusion | |
| Prognostic value for standard treatment (chemotherapy and radiation) | |
| Cao et al. [ | Baseline as well as changes in rCBV were predictive of survival in patients with high-grade gliomas |
| Predictive value for response to antiangiogenic therapy | |
| Sorensen et al. [ | Combining K-trans, microvessel volume, and circulating collagen IV was predictive of overall and progression-free survival in patients with recurrent glioblastoma treated with cediranib |
| Cha et al. [ | Changes in rCBV were more strongly correlated with treatment response than enhancing tumor size in recurrent malignant gliomas treated with thalidomide and carboplatin |
DCE dynamic contrast enhanced, DSC dynamic susceptibility contrast, HPV hyperperfusion volume, MR magnetic resonance, PSR percentage of signal intensity recovery, rCBV relative cerebral blood volume, rPH relative peak height
Fig. 1Fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) images and functional diffusion maps (fDMs) in a patient with recurrent glioblastoma treated with bevacizumab and temozolomide. FLAIR images showing gradual spread of nonenhancing tumor (top row). fDMs showing increasing volume of low apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) (“hypercellular”) regions prior to radiographic failure (bottom row). Image days are with respect to pretreatment baseline (day 0)