| Literature DB >> 24610705 |
Mitchell S Wachtel1, Shengping Yang.
Abstract
Bevacizumab (BZM) and temozolomide (TMZ) have been shown to be beneficial in the treatment of patients with glioblastoma. We sought evidence for the benefit of BZM in the general patient population at large. The Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results SEER database was queried for patients diagnosed with glioblastoma between 2000 and 2009, divided into a pre-TMZ era (January 2000-June 2003), a transitional era (July 2003-March 2005), a TMZ era (April 2005-October 2007), and a BZM-TMZ era (November 2007-December 2009). Binomial logit regression analyzed odds of death, taking into account age at diagnosis, tumor size, gender, race, marital status, radiotherapy, and extensive surgery. Compared with the pre-TMZ era, odds of death were decreased in the TMZ era by 12% (97.5% CI [confidence interval] 3-20%) 6 months after diagnosis and 36% (30-42%) a year after diagnosis; corresponding values for BZM-TMZ were 31% (24-37%) and 50% (45-55%). For era comparisons, decreases in odds of death were larger at 12 than 6 months; the opposite was true for extensive surgery and radiotherapy (P < 0.025, Wald χ(2) test, for each analysis). For both 6 and 12 month comparisons, odds of death in the BZM-TMZ era were lower than in the TMZ era (P < 0.025, Wald χ(2) test, for each analysis). The results provide evidence that TMZ positively impacted survival of glioblastoma patients and that the addition of BZM further improved survival, this lends support to the addition of BZM to the chemotherapeutic armamentarium. Evaluation of odds of death is an attractive alternative to Cox regression when proportional hazards assumptions are violated and follow-up is good.Entities:
Keywords: Bevacizumab; SEER; glioblastoma; odds of death; population database; temozolomide
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24610705 PMCID: PMC4101757 DOI: 10.1002/cam4.213
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Med ISSN: 2045-7634 Impact factor: 4.452
Distribution of patients by predictor variable
| Pre-temozolomide era (January 2000–June 2003) | 6631 (31.8%) |
| Transitional era (July 2003–March 2005) | 3692 (17.7%) |
| Temozolomide era (April 2005–October 2007) | 5562 (26.6%) |
| Bevacizumab-temozolomide era (November 2007–December 2009) | |
| 20,879 (100.0%) | |
| 70+ years old | 6641 (31.8%) |
| 55–69 years old | 8405 (40.3%) |
| 40–54 years old | 4690 (22.5%) |
| 18–39 years old | |
| 20,879 (100.0%) | |
| First primary | 2709 (13.0%) |
| Not first primary | |
| 20,879 (100.0%) | |
| 5+ cm tumor | 6690 (32.0%) |
| <5 cm tumor | 9324 (44.7%) |
| Unknown tumor size | |
| 20,879 (100%) | |
| Widowed | 2187 (10.5%) |
| Divorced or separated | 1875 (9.0%) |
| Single | 2478 (11.9%) |
| Married, including common law | 13,764 (65.9%) |
| Unknown | |
| 20,879 (100.0%) | |
| Male | 12,274 (58.8%) |
| Female | |
| 20,879 (100.0%) | |
| White | 18,937 (90.7%) |
| Black | 1100 (5.3%) |
| Other (Asian/Pacific Islander/Native American) | |
| 20,879 (100.0%) | |
| Radical resection or lobectomy (extensive surgery) | 6527 (31.3%) |
| Less than extensive surgery | 14,079 (67.4%) |
| Unknown | |
| 20,879 (100%) | |
| Radiotherapy administered | 4273 (20.5%) |
| Not done | 16,146 (77.3%) |
| Unknown | 460 (2.2%) |
| 20,879 (100.0%) |
Results of Cox regression and tests of proportional hazards assumption; not displayed are comparisons with unknown
| Comparison | Results of regression HR (97.5% CI) | Therneau–Grambsch tests |
|---|---|---|
| TR vs. Pre-TMZ era | 0.89 (0.85–0.94) | −0.017 (5.7, 0.0169) |
| TMZ vs. Pre-TMZ era | 0.82 (0.78–0.86) | −0.032 (19.2, <0.0001) |
| BZM-TMZ vs. Pre-TMZ era | 0.72 (0.69–0.76) | −0.021 (8.21, 0.0042) |
| 55–69 years vs. 70+ years | 0.57 (0.55–0.06) | 0.032 (19.0, <0.0001) |
| 40–54 years vs. 70+ years | 0.39 (0.37–0.42) | 0.081 (120, <0.0001) |
| 18–39 years vs. 70+ years | 0.22 (0.20–0.24) | 0.055 (57.8, <0.0001) |
| No prior cancer vs. prior | 0.96 (0.91–1.01) | −0.009 (1.68, 0.195) |
| <5 vs. 5+ cm tumor | 0.89 (0.85–0.92) | 0.036 (24.9, <0.0001) |
| Divorced vs. widowed | 0.92 (0.84–1.01) | −0.004 (0.25, 0.615) |
| Single vs. widowed | 0.87 (0.80–0.95) | −0.001 (0.03, 0.853) |
| Married vs. widowed | 0.80 (0.75–0.85) | 0.010 (1.90, 0.168) |
| Women vs. men | 0.94 (0.91–0.98) | −0.020 (7.69, 0.0055) |
| Black vs. white | 1.02 (0.94–1.11) | −0.007 (0.85, 0.356) |
| Other vs. white | 0.86 (0.78–0.94) | 0.002 (0.12, 0.735) |
| Extensive surgery vs. not | 0.68 (0.66–0.71) | 0.105 (207, <0.0001) |
| Radiotherapy vs. not | 0.49 (0.46–0.52) | 0.233 (969, <0.0001) |
CI, confidence interval; HR, hazard ratios; TR, transitional; TMZ, temozolomide; BZM, bevacizumab.
Figure 1Scatterplots of residuals and time for Cox regression, top plots being regions of interest of bottom plots.
Figure 2Results of binomial logit regressions.