| Literature DB >> 35582438 |
Alicia Martínez-González1, Raquel Cabrera2, Marta Lloret2,3,4, Pedro C Lara4,5,6.
Abstract
Aim: It remains unclear what the best therapeutic option for recurrent glioma patients after Stupp treatment is. Bevacizumab (BVZ) is commonly administered in progression, but it appears that only some patients benefit. It would be useful to find biomarkers that determine beforehand who these patients are.Entities:
Keywords: Recurrent glioma; bevacizumab; inflammatory indices; lymphocytes; predictive biomarker
Year: 2020 PMID: 35582438 PMCID: PMC8992487 DOI: 10.20517/cdr.2020.33
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Drug Resist ISSN: 2578-532X
Patients features in diagnosis and progression
| 1st diagnosis | Progression | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. | % | No. | % | ||
| Age (median in years) | 46 | 48 | |||
| Progression diagnosis | Radiological | 11 | 32.26 | ||
| Clinical | 1 | ||||
| Clinical-radiological | 19 | 67.74 | |||
| KPS | Median | 90 | 85 | ||
| KPS > 80 | 27 | 87.09 | 14 | 45.16 | |
| KPS ≤ 80 | 4 | 12.90 | 14 | 45.16 | |
| Location | Frontal | 4 | 12.90 | 4 | 12.90 |
| Temporal | 4 | 12.90 | 3 | 9.68 | |
| Parietal | 3 | 9.68 | 5 | 16.13 | |
| Occipital | 4 | 12.90 | 5 | 16.13 | |
| Diencephalon | 2 | 6.45 | 1 | 3.22 | |
| Cerebellum | 1 | 3.22 | 1 | 3.22 | |
| Overlapping | 13 | 41.94 | 12 | 38.7 | |
| Edema | 27 | 87.09 | 20 | 67.74 | |
| Surgery | Total | 30 | 96.77 | 6 | 19.35 |
| Total resection | 15 | 48.39 | 2 | 33.33 | |
| Subtotal resection | 13 | 41.94 | 4 | 66.67 | |
| Biopsy | 2 | 6.45 | 0 | 0 | |
| Gliadel | 10 | 32.26 | 5 | 83.33 | |
| Anatomic pathology | Astrocytoma II | 3 | 9.67 | 2 | 6.66 |
| Oligodendroglioma II | 1 | 3.23 | 1 | 3.33 | |
| Glioma II | 1 | 3.23 | 1 | 3.33 | |
| Oligodendroglioma III | 2 | 6.45 | 2 | 6.66 | |
| Astrocytoma III | 5 | 16.13 | 5 | 16.66 | |
| GBM and High-grade glioma | 18 | 58.06 | 19 | 63.33 | |
| RT | 29 | 93.55 | 2 | 6.45 | |
| Concomitant TMZ | 25 | 80.64 | 2 | 6.45 | |
| Adjuvant | Total | 23 | 74.19 | 29 | 93.55 |
| Stupp | 23 | 74.19 | 16 | 55.17 | |
| Cycles (mean) | 7.43 | 4.38 | |||
| Confidence interval (95%) | (5.64–9.23) | (2.34–6.41) | |||
| Metronomic (any time) | 6 | 26 | 13 | 44.83 | |
KPS: karnofsky performance status; No.: number of patients; RT: radiotherapy; TMZ: temozolomide
Figure 1Overall survival from BVZ administration calculated by Kaplan-Meier curves for the total of 31 patients: (A) all patients in the same group; (B) stratified by levels of neutrophils; (C) stratified by levels of platelets; (D-F) stratified by levels of lymphocytes using the median = 1260 cells/mL, the first tertile = 1019 cells/mL, and the second tertile = 1522 cells/mL as the cut-offs, respectively. BVZ: bevacizumab
Levels of neutrophils, lymphocytes, platelets (mg/dL), NLR, and PLR blood counted before first cycle of bevacizumab
| Neutrophils (mg/dL) | Lymphocytes (mg/dL) | Platelets (mg/dL) | NLR | PLR | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | 5.67 | 1.26 | 222.03 | 5.71 | 207.19 |
| Median | 4.95 | 1.26 | 196.00 | 3.97 | 186.42 |
| SD | 2.92 | 0.50 | 85.35 | 6.00 | 132.98 |
| 95%CI | (4.6-6.75) | (1.08-1.45) | (190.73-253.34) | (3.51-7.91) | (158.40-255.97) |
SD: standard deviation; NLR: neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio; PLR: platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio
Figure 2Overall survival from BVZ administration calculated by Kaplan-Meier curves for 31 patients stratified by: (A) NLR positive or negative; (B) PLR positive or negative; (C) Association between NLR and PLR. It seems the more NLR increases, the more PLR increases as well. This association is almost statistically significant following a Spearman test (P > 0.05; 95%CI). BVZ: bevacizumab; NLR: neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio; PLR: platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio
Figure 3Predictive survival ability combining PLR-NLR information: (A) diagram boxes comparing median survival after BVZ administration among the three groups; (B) overall survival from BVZ administration calculated by Kaplan-Meier curves for 31 patients stratified into three groups, namely double positive, double negative, and single positive; (C) overall survival from BVZ administration calculated by Kaplan-Meier curves for 31 patients stratified into a double-positive group and otherwise. BVZ: bevacizumab; NLR: neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio; PLR: platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio
Clinical characteristics of patients according to PLR-NLR groups
| Double Positive | Single Positive | Double Negative | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-BVZ toxicity | (Yes/No) | (Yes/No) | (Yes/No) | 0.984 | 0.873 |
| Anemia | 3/6 | 5/9 | 3/5 | ||
| Neutropenia | 1/8 (11.1%/88.9%) | 1/13 (7%/93%) | 2/6 (25%/75%) | 0.477 | 0.849 |
| Lymphopenia | 5/4 | 11/3 | 7/1 | 0.285 | 0.129 |
| Leukopenia | 1/8 | 2/12 | 2/6 | 0.716 | 0.627 |
| Thrombocytopenia | 2/7 (22%/78%) | 4/10 (28.6%/71.4%) | 5/3 (62.5%/37.5) | 0.171 | 0.324 |
| Post-BVZ toxicity | (Yes/No) | (Yes/No) | (Yes/No) | 0.203 | 0.675 |
| Anemia | 4/5 | 7/7 | 1/7 | ||
| Neutropenia | 2/7 (22%/78%) | 3/11 (21%/78.5%) | 0/8 (0%/100%) | 0.354 | 0.555 |
| Lymphopenia | 7/2 | 10/4 | 5/3 | 0.786 | 0.593 |
| Leukopenia | 1/8 | 1/13 | 0/8 | 0.642 | 0.499 |
| Thrombocytopenia | 4/5 (44%/56%) | 4/10 (28.6%/71.4%) | 4/4 (50%/50%) | 0.560 | 0.675 |
NLR: neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio; PLR: platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio; BVZ: bevacizumab; 3 groups: double positive, single positive, or double negative; 2 groups: double positive vs. non-double positive
Uni- and multivariable analysis (Cox regression) for the most representative variables associated with OS after BVZ treatment
| Variables | OS-A (univariable) | OS-A (multivariable) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HR, (95%CI) | HR, (95%CI) | |||
| Age as continuous variable | 1.02 (0.96-1.05) | 0.306 | ||
| Gender | 1.25 (0.52-2.98) | 0.619 | ||
| Neutrophil Level (cells/mL) | 1.03 (0.89-1.19) | 0.704 | ||
| Median: < 4950 | 0.95 (0.43-2.11) | 0.906 | ||
| Platelet Level (cells/mL) | 1.00 (0.99-1.00) | 0.145 | ||
| Median: < 196,000 | 0.33 (0.68-3.23) | 0.316 | ||
| Lymphocyte Level (cells/mL) | 0.34 (0.145-0.81) | 0.015* | ||
| Median: < 1260 | 2.15 (0.97-4.80) | 0.052 | ||
| First tertile: < 1019 | 2.25 (1.00-5.04) | 0.042* | ||
| Second tertile: < 1522 | 2.62 (0.96-7.10) | 0.048* | ||
| NLR | 1.04 (0.99-1.10) | 0.105 | ||
| Median: (< 3.97 | 0.54 (0.24-1.20) | 0.121 | ||
| PLR | 1.00 (1.00-1.00) | 0.249 | ||
| Median: (< 186.42 | 0.71 (0.32-1.56) | 0.390 | ||
| PLR-NLR (Double positive | 2.35 (0.99-5.56) | 0.043* | ||
| Neutropenia | 0.93 (0.32-2.72) | 0.890 | ||
| Lymphopenia | 2.23 (0.82-6.10) | 0.118 | ||
| Leukopenia | 0.77 (20.29-2.06) | 0.604 | ||
| Thrombocytopenia | 1.20 (0.52-2.73) | 0.682 | ||
| Anemia | 2.22 (0.92-5.33) | 0.076 | ||
| Lymphocyte Level (cells/mL) | 0.42 (0.16-1.10) | 0.078* | ||
| PLR-NLR (Double positive | 1.50 (0.55-4.04) | 0.436 | ||
*P-values significant. OS: overall survival; BVZ: bevacizumab; OS-A: overall survival from bevacizumab administration; HR: hazard ratio; NLR: neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio; PLR: platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio
Figure 4Lymphocyte levels and outcomes with patients classified by tumor localization: (A) lymphocyte level diagram box depending on tumor localization; (B) diagram box of overall survival from BVZ administration depending on tumor localization. BVZ: bevacizumab