| Literature DB >> 27444431 |
Myra E van Linde1, Johannes C van der Mijn1, Thang V Pham1, Jaco C Knol1, Laurine E Wedekind2, Koos E Hovinga3, Esther Sanchez Aliaga4, Jan Buter1, Connie R Jimenez1, Jaap C Reijneveld5, Henk M W Verheul6.
Abstract
Surgery followed by chemoradiation and adjuvant chemotherapy is standard of care for patients with a glioblastoma (GBM). Due to its limited benefit, an upfront method to predict dismal outcome would prevent unnecessary toxic treatment. We searched for a predictive blood derived biomarker in a cohort of 55 patients with GBM. Increasing age (HR 1.03, 95 % CI 1.01-1.06), and postoperative tumor residue (HR 1.07, 95 % CI 1.02-1.15) were independently associated with unfavourable progression free survival (PFS) in these patients. Corticosteroid use before start of chemoradiaton was strongly predictive for outcome (HR 3.26, 95 % CI 1.67-6.39) with a mean PFS and OS in patients using corticosteroids of 7.3 and 14.6 months, versus 16.1 and 21.6 months in patients not using corticosteroids (p = 0.0005, p < 0.0067 respectively). Despite earlier reports, blood concentrations of YKL-40, Fetuin-a and haptoglobin were not predictive for response. In addition, serum peptide profiles, determined by MALDI-TOF mass spectroscopy, were not predictive as well. In conclusion, further biomarker discovery studies are needed to predict treatment outcome for patients with GBM in the near future.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarker; First-line treatment; Glioblastoma multiforme; Proteomics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27444431 PMCID: PMC4992035 DOI: 10.1007/s11060-016-2178-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurooncol ISSN: 0167-594X Impact factor: 4.130
Patient characteristics
| Characteristic | PFS <16 months | PFS >16 months |
|---|---|---|
| Patients (n) | 39 | 16 |
| Age—year | ||
| Median | 59* | 48* |
| Range | 18–75 | 22–66 |
| Gender—no (%) | ||
| Female | 12 (31) | 4 (25) |
| Male | 27 (69) | 12 (75) |
| Histology—no (%) | ||
| Glioblastoma | 39 (100) | 16 (100) |
| Tumor location—no (%) | ||
| Left | 14 (36) | 5 (31) |
| Right | 20 (51) | 11 (69) |
| Multifocal | 5 (13) | – |
| WHO performance | ||
| 0 | 22 (56 %) | 8 (50 %) |
| 1 | 15 (38 %) | 6 (38 %) |
| 2 | 1 (3 %) | |
| Missing | 1 (3 %) | 2 (13 %) |
| Extent of surgery | ||
| Biopsy | 4 (10 %) | – |
| Debulking | ||
| Partial | 15 (38 %) | 10 (63 %) |
| Maximal | 9 (23 %) | 6 (38 %) |
| Unknown | 11 (28 %) | |
| Time from diagnosis to radiotherapy—weeks | ||
| Median | 4.0 | 4.1 |
| Range | 1.7–57.3 | 3.1–5.7 |
| Radiotherapy—dose | ||
| 42 Gy | 2 (5 %) | |
| 75 Gy | 37 (95 %) | 16 (100 %) |
| TMZ—dose | ||
| 0 mg/m2 | 2 (5 %) | – |
| 75 mg/m2 | 37 (95 %) | 16 (100 %) |
| Dose reductions (number of pat) | 4 (10 %) | 2 (13 %) |
| Average adjuvant cycles—no | 4.2 | 5 |
| Corticosteroid therapy | ||
| Yes | 19 (49 %)** | 1 (6 %)** |
| No | 20 (51 %)** | 15 (94 %)** |
| Anti-epileptic therapy | ||
| Yes | 18 (46 %) | 9 (56 %) |
| No | 20 (51 %) | 7 (44 %) |
| Missing | 1 (3 %) | – |
*p = 0.02 and **p = 0.002
Fig. 1a Outcome of first-line treatment in patients with glioblastoma. Treatment response of patients with glioblastoma that received radiotherapy and concomitant and adjuvant temozolomide. Kaplan–Meier curves show that (a) median PFS is 10 months (range 2–52 months). b Outcome of first-line treatment in patients with glioblastoma. Treatment response of patients with glioblastoma that received radiotherapy and concomitant and adjuvant temozolomide Kaplan–Meier curves show that (b) median OS is 15 months (range 3–52 months). c Correlation between PFS and OS by Pearson correlation. Correlation between PFS and OS of patients with glioblastoma who received radiotherapy and concomitant and adjuvant temozolomide was assessed by Pearson correlation. d Normal distribution. General response (PFS) tends to follow a normal distribution with a distinct group of patients that responds beyond 16 months
Fig. 2a PFS in the group of patients using corticosteroids before start of chemoradiation versus the group of patients not using corticosteroids before start of chemoradiation. A significantly difference has been found between mean PFS of 7.3 months in patients using corticosteroids before start of chemoradiation versus 16.1 months in patients not using corticosteroids before start of chemoradiation (p = 0.0005). b OS in the group of patients using corticosteroids before start of chemoradiation versus the group of patients not using corticosteroids before start of chemoradiation. A significantly difference has been found between mean and OS of 14.6 months in patients using corticosteroids before start of chemoradiation versus 21.6 months in patients not using corticosteroids before start of chemoradiation (p = 0.0067)
Fig. 3a Categorization in a short versus long treatment response group based on serum peptide profiling. Serum was collected postoperatively, before start of chemoradiation and peptides were profiled by MALDI-TOF-MS. Unsupervised cluster analysis was performed and samples were labeled by gender and good (PFS >16 months) versus poor treatment response (PFS <16 months). b–d Result of testing potential predictive classifiers to predict treatment response. Predictive classifiers were generated from the peptide profiles of 18 patients. Each classifier was tested in an independent patient set of 26 patients. Signatures generated by support vector machine (a), k-nearest neighbor (b) and random forrest (c) did not predict treatment response (b–d)
Fig. 4Analysis of candidate biomarkers and correlation of candidate biomarkers with treatment response. Protein concentrations of previously published candidate biomarkers were measured in serum samples by ELISA (a, d) or immunonefolometry. b Thrombocyte counts were measured by a CD4000 impedance hematology analyzer. c Correlation with treatment response was determined by Cox regression (not shown) and group comparison. Fetuin-a protein concentrations were significantly different between good and poor response groups (p = 0.03)