| Literature DB >> 26520780 |
Lisa B E Shields1,2, Brent J Shelton3, Andrew J Shearer4, Li Chen5, David A Sun6,7, Sarah Parsons8,9, T David Bourne10, Renato LaRocca11,12, Aaron C Spalding13,14,15.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dexamethasone (DXM) is commonly used in the management of cerebral edema in patients diagnosed with glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). Bevacizumab (BEV) is FDA-approved for the progression or recurrence of GBM but has not been shown to improve survival when given for newly diagnosed patients concurrently with radiation (RT) and temozolomide (TMZ). Both DXM and BEV reduce cerebral edema, however, DXM has been shown to induce cytokine cascades which could interfere with cytotoxic therapy. We investigated whether DXM would reduce survival of GBM patients in the setting of concurrent TMZ and BEV administration.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26520780 PMCID: PMC4628380 DOI: 10.1186/s13014-015-0527-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiat Oncol ISSN: 1748-717X Impact factor: 3.481
Population statistics of patients with newly diagnosed GBM
| Population statistics | Category | Absolute | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median age at diagnosis | 61.0 | ||
| Average age at death | 60.5 | ||
| Gender | M | 44 | 60 % |
| F | 29 | 40 % | |
| Extent of resection | GTR | 38 | 52 % |
| STR | 24 | 33 % | |
| Biopsy | 11 | 15 % | |
| Median RT dose | 6000 | ||
| Concurrent agents | Temozolomide alone | 39 | 53 % |
| Temozolomide and Bevacizumab | 34 | 47 % | |
| Smoker | No | 43 | 60 % |
| Yes | 29 | 40 % | |
| HTN | No | 32 | 44 % |
| Yes | 41 | 56 % | |
| BMI | Normal (<25) | 17 | 23 % |
| Overweight (25–30) | 37 | 51 % | |
| Obese (>30) | 19 | 26 % | |
| DM | No | 63 | 86 % |
| Yes | 10 | 14 % | |
| Hyperlipidemia | No | 46 | 63 % |
| Yes | 27 | 37 % | |
| Dexamethasone during RT | No | 37 | 51 % |
| Yes | 36 | 49 % |
Fig. 1Kaplan-Meier curve shows the (a) OS of the whole cohort of newly diagnosed GBM patients after surgical resection, with a median of 15.9 months. b The extent of resection correlated with OS: GTR 22.6 months, STR 14.9 months, and biopsy 12.1 months. c DXM use concurrent with RT was a poor prognostic indicator of OS (median 12.7 vs. 22.5 months, p = 0.02 by log-rank test). d For patients who underwent GTR, those who were treated with DXM had a median survival of 16.3 months compared to 24.6 months without DXM (p = 0.15 by log-rank test)
Fig. 2Kaplan-Meier curve of the (a) DXM use concurrent with RT was a poor prognostic indicator of OS in patients receiving TMZ (12.7 vs 22.6 months, p = 0.003 by log-rank test). b DXM use was a poor prognostic factor for OS in patients who underwent a GTR treated with TMZ alone (13.5 vs 25.1 months, p = 0.01 by log-rank test). c DXM did not reduce OS patients who received TMZ and BEV concurrent with RT (22.9 vs 22.8 months, p = 0.4818 by log-rank test)
Survival for patients with GBM following radiation with biological agents
| Study | Treatment | Median OS | Median PFS | One-year survival | Two-year survival |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Current study (2015) ( | RT + BEV + TMZ (12 cycles) | 15.9 months | 7.7 months | 70 % | 31 % |
| Stupp [ | RT + TMZ | 14.6 months | 6.9 months | 61 % | 27 % |
| Grossman [ | RT + TMZ + novel agents | 19.6 months | -- | 81 % | 37 % |
| Lai [ | RT + BEV + TMZ | 19.6 months | 13.6 months | -- | -- |
| Vredenburgh [ | RT + BEV + TMZ + Irinotecan | 21.2 months | 14.2 months | 78.7 % | 44.9 % |
| Narayana [ | RT + BEV + TMZ (six cycles) | 23 months | 13 months | 85 % | 43 % |
OS Overall survival
PFS Progression-free survival
RT Radiotherapy
BEV Bevacizumab
TMZ Temozolomide