| Literature DB >> 23529375 |
Olivier L Chinot1, David R Macdonald, Lauren E Abrey, Gudrun Zahlmann, Yannick Kerloëguen, Timothy F Cloughesy.
Abstract
Since 1990, the primary criteria used for assessing response to therapy in high-grade gliomas were those developed by Macdonald and colleagues, which incorporated 2-dimensional area measurements of contrast-enhancing tumor regions, corticosteroid dosing, and clinical assessment to arrive at a designation of response, stable disease, or progression. Recent advances in imaging technology and targeted therapeutics, however, have exposed limitations of the Macdonald criteria and have highlighted the need for reevaluation of response assessment criteria. In 2010, the Response Assessment in Neuro-Oncology (RANO) Working Group published updated criteria to address this need and to standardize response assessment for high-grade gliomas. In 2009, prior to the publication of the RANO criteria, the randomized, placebo-controlled, multicenter, phase 3 AVAglio trial was designed and initiated to investigate the effectiveness of radiotherapy and temozolomide with or without bevacizumab in newly diagnosed glioblastoma. The AVAglio protocol enacted specific measures to adapt the Macdonald criteria to the frontline treatment setting and to antiangiogenic agent evaluation, including the incorporation of a T2/fluid-attenuated inversion recovery component, qualitative assessment of irregularly shaped contrast-enhancing lesions, and a decision tree for confirming or ruling out pseudoprogression. Moreover, the protocol outlines practical means by which these adapted response criteria can be implemented in the clinic. This article describes the evolution of radiographic response criteria for high-grade gliomas and highlights the similarities and differences between those implemented in the AVAglio study and those subsequently published by RANO.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23529375 PMCID: PMC3631110 DOI: 10.1007/s11910-013-0347-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Neurol Neurosci Rep ISSN: 1528-4042 Impact factor: 5.081
Response assessment criteria in the first-line treatment of glioblastoma
| Macdonald | AVAglio | RANO | RTOG 0825 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Complete responsea | • Disappearance of all enhancing measurable and nonmeasurable disease (sustained for ≥4 weeks) | • Disappearance of all index lesions (sustained for ≥4 weeks) | • Disappearance of all enhancing measurable and nonmeasurable disease (sustained for ≥4 weeks) | • Disappearance of all enhancing disease (sustained for ≥1 mo.) |
| • No worsening of all nonindex lesions (sustained for ≥4 weeks), with no evidence of PD | • Stable or improved nonenhancing (T2/FLAIR) lesions | • No corticosteroids (physiologic replacement doses only) | ||
| • No new lesions | • Improved or stable neurologic symptoms | |||
| • No corticosteroids | • No new lesions | • No new lesions | ||
| • Clinically stable or improved | • Corticosteroid dose must not exceed physiologic levels | • No corticosteroids (physiologic replacement doses only) | ||
| • Improved or stable neurologic symptoms | • Clinically stable or improved | |||
| Partial responsea | • ≥50% decrease of all measurable enhancing lesions (sustained for ≥4 weeks)b | • ≥50% decrease (sum of lesion diameters) of all index lesions (sustained for ≥4 weeks)b | • ≥50% decrease of all measurable enhancing lesions (sustained for ≥4 weeks)b | • ≥50% decrease of enhancing disease (2 diameters; sustained for ≥1 mo.) |
| • No new lesions | • No progression of nonindex lesions | • No progression of nonmeasurable disease | • Stable or reduced corticosteroid dose | |
| • Stable or reduced corticosteroid dose | • No new lesions | • Stable or improved nonenhancing (T2/FLAIR) lesionsc | • Improved or stable neurologic symptoms | |
| • Clinically stable or improved | • Stable or reduced corticosteroid dose | • No new lesions | ||
| • Improved or stable neurologic symptoms | • Stable or reduced corticosteroid dose compared with time of baseline scan | |||
| • Clinically stable or improved | ||||
| Minor responsea | • Not applicable | • Not applicable | • Only applies to low-grade gliomas [ | • <50% decrease in diameter products of enhancing disease |
| • Stable or reduced corticosteroid dose | ||||
| Stable diseasea | • Clinically stable | • Does not qualify for CR, PR, or progression | • Does not qualify for CR, PR, or progression | • Scan shows no change |
| • Does not qualify for CR, PR, or progression | • Improved or stable neurologic symptoms | • Stable nonenhancing (T2/FLAIR) lesionsc | • Stable or reduced corticosteroid dose | |
| • Corticosteroid dose alone does not affect determination of SD | • Stable or reduced corticosteroid dose | |||
| • Clinically stable or improved | ||||
| Progressiond | • ≥25% increase in enhancing lesionsb | • ≥25% increase in index lesionsb | • ≥25% increase of enhancing lesions on stable or increasing doses of corticosteroidsb | • ≥25% increase of enhancing disease (2 diameters) |
| • Any new lesion | • Unequivocal progression of existing nonindex lesions | • Significant increase in nonenhancing (T2/FLAIR) lesionse (not caused by comorbid events) | • Any new lesion | |
| • Clinical deterioration | • Any new lesion | • Any new lesion | • Worsened neurologic symptoms (only applies if corticosteroid dose is stable or increased) | |
| • Worsened neurologic symptoms (only applies if corticosteroid dose is stable or increased) | • Clear clinical deterioration (not attributable to other causes from the tumor or changes in corticosteroid dose) | |||
| • Clear progression of nonmeasurable disease |
CR complete response, PD progressive disease, PR partial response, SD stable disease.
aResponse is designated only if all of the following criteria are met.
bMeasured by sum of the products of perpendicular diameters.
cOn same or lower dose of corticosteroids.
dProgression is designated if any of the following criteria are met.
eOn stable or increasing doses of corticosteroids.
Fig. 1Overview of treatment and radiologic assessment schedule in AVAglio. Disease assessment consists of radiologic assessment, neurologic examination, including the mini-mental state examination, and determination of corticosteroid use. Cy cycle, d days, HRQoL health-related quality of life, PD progressive disease; w weeks
Fig. 2Illustration of a disease assessment of progressive disease based on non–contrast-enhancing lesions in a 35 year old male with left frontal glioblastoma. T1 contrast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) obtained immediately after completion of chemoradiation and bevacizumab (a); 6 months later and continuing chemotherapy and bevacizumab (b); and 12 months after completion of chemoradiation and bevacizumab while continuing chemotherapy and bevacizumab (c); show no evidence of contrast-enhancing tumor progression. T2 MRI obtained immediately after completion of chemoradiation and bevacizumab (d); and 6 months later while continuing chemotherapy and bevacizumab (e); show no tumor progression, but MRI obtained 12 months after completion of chemoradiation and bevacizumab while continuing chemotherapy and bevacizumab (f); shows clear evidence of T2 non–contrast-enhancing tumor progression with architectural distortion of the left lateral ventricle (arrow)
Definitions of progressive disease, pseudoprogression, and nonprogressive disease in AVAglio
| Overall disease evaluation | |
|---|---|
| Progressive disease | • Progressive disease occurs when any of the following conditions are met: |
| - There was a ≥25% increase in the SPD of longest diameters of all index lesions compared with the smallest recorded sum (nadir) during the study. In case of confirmed pseudoprogression, the baseline scan is not taken into consideration as the nadir for further assessment | |
| - Unequivocal progression of existing nonindex lesions | |
| - Unequivocal appearance of ≥1 new lesions (index or nonindex) | |
| - Neurologically worsened compared with neurologic evaluation at previous disease assessment, and average daily corticosteroid dose must be unchanged or increased compared with the previous disease assessment | |
| • Progressive disease does not need a confirmatory scan | |
| Pseudoprogression | • Only applicable at the disease assessment performed prior to the start of the maintenance phase |
| 1. There was a ≥25% increase in the sum of the longest perpendicular diameters of all enhancing lesions compared with baseline. If pseudoprogression is observed on nonenhancing lesions, then unequivocal progression of existing nonenhancing lesions | |
| and | |
| 2. No appearance of new lesions outside of the radiation field | |
| and | |
| 3. Patient should not have significant clinical neurologic worsening | |
| • Concomitant decrease in steroid dose in the 2 months after radiation should rule out the designation of progressive disease at this time point | |
| • Pseudoprogression will be confirmed at the next disease assessment, performed 2 months later, and will designate if the patient continues treatment or not | |
| Nonprogressive disease | • All other scenarios |
| • In patients with gross total resection with neither measurable nor nonmeasurable disease for which there is no change in the radiologic assessment (no change) | |
SPD sum of the product of the diameters.
Integrated response assessment algorithm in AVAglio
| Index lesions | Nonindex lesions | New lesions | Time point overall MRI response assessment |
|---|---|---|---|
| CR | CR/SD | No | CR |
| CR | UA/ND | No | UA |
| PR | CR/SD | No | PR |
| PR | UA/SD | No | UA |
| SD | CR/SD | No | SD |
| SD | UA/ND | No | UA |
| UA | SD | No | UA |
| PD | Any | Yes/No | PD |
| Any | PD | Yes/No | PD |
| Any | Any | Yes | PD |
| NAa | SD | No | SD |
| NAa | NAb | No | No change |
CR complete response, ND not detectable, PD progressive disease, PR partial response, SD stable disease, UA unable to assess.
aNA = no index lesions identified at baseline.
bNA = no nonindex lesions identified at baseline.
Fig. 3Decision-making flow chart in patients with signs of pseudoprogression in AVAglio. PD progressive disease
Fig. 4Illustration of pseudoprogression in a 52-year-old patient with left parietal malignant glioma. T1 contrast-enhancing magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) shows a gross total resection (a). Four weeks after completion of chemoradiation, MRI showed a new area of contrast enhancement surrounding the collapsed surgical cavity (b). Two months after initiation of maintenance temozolomide, MRI showed diminution of the contrast enhancing area (c), which was further diminished after an additional months (d)