Survival impact of incidental subventricular zone irradiation in IDH-wildtype glioblastoma
- Author
- Giorgio Hallaert (UGent) , Harry Pinson (UGent) , Caroline Van den Broecke (UGent) , Caroline Sweldens, Dirk Van Roost (UGent) , Jean-Pierre Kalala Okito (UGent) and Tom Boterberg (UGent)
- Organization
- Abstract
- Background and purpose The subventricular zone (SVZ) is an important niche for neural stem cells but probably also for brain tumor propagating cells, including the glioblastoma stem cell. The SVZ may become a target for radiation therapy in glioblastoma patients. However, reports studying the effect of irradiation of the SVZ on glioblastoma patient survival show conflicting results. We studied the correlation between incidental SVZ radiation dose and survival in a cohort of isocitrate dehydrogenase-wildtype (IDHwt) glioblastoma patients with inclusion of important survival prognosticators. Patients and methods In this retrospective analysis, only adult patients with supratentorial IDHwt glioblastoma were included who were treated with temozolomide-based chemoradiotherapy after surgery. The SVZ was contoured on the radiotherapy planning imaging. Cox proportional regression overall survival (OS) analysis was used to study the correlation between SVZ dose and survival. Age, Karnofsky Performance Score, extent of resection and O-6-methylguanine-methyl-DNA-transferase gene promoter (MGMTp) methylation were used as covariates in multivariate analysis. Results In total, 137 patients were included. Median OS was 13.3 months. The MGMTp methylation was present in 40% of cases. Ipsilateral SVZ (iSVZ) mean dose was 44.4 Gy and 27.2 Gy for the contralateral SVZ (cSVZ). Univariate survival analysis showed an inverse relationship between cSVZ mean dose and OS (HR 1.029 (1.003-1.057); p= .032). However, there was no correlation between cSVZ mean dose and OS in multivariate analysis. iSVZ dose did not correlate with survival. Conclusion In this cohort of 137 IDHwt glioblastoma patients, iSVZ did not correlate with OS. Higher cSVZ dose was inversely correlated with OS in univariate survival analysis but lost its significance in multivariate analysis, including MGMTp-methylation. Hence, the correlation between SVZ radiation and glioblastoma patient survival remains unclear. Carefully designed prospective studies are needed to provide unequivocal results on this controversial topic.
- Keywords
- Oncology, Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging, Hematology, General Medicine, Glioblastoma, IDH-wildtype, subventricular zone, radiation therapy survival, MGMT-methylation
Downloads
-
(...).pdf
- full text (Published version)
- |
- UGent only
- |
- |
- 1.46 MB
Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-8699533
- MLA
- Hallaert, Giorgio, et al. “Survival Impact of Incidental Subventricular Zone Irradiation in IDH-Wildtype Glioblastoma.” ACTA ONCOLOGICA, vol. 60, no. 5, 2021, pp. 613–19, doi:10.1080/0284186x.2021.1893899.
- APA
- Hallaert, G., Pinson, H., Van den Broecke, C., Sweldens, C., Van Roost, D., Kalala Okito, J.-P., & Boterberg, T. (2021). Survival impact of incidental subventricular zone irradiation in IDH-wildtype glioblastoma. ACTA ONCOLOGICA, 60(5), 613–619. https://doi.org/10.1080/0284186x.2021.1893899
- Chicago author-date
- Hallaert, Giorgio, Harry Pinson, Caroline Van den Broecke, Caroline Sweldens, Dirk Van Roost, Jean-Pierre Kalala Okito, and Tom Boterberg. 2021. “Survival Impact of Incidental Subventricular Zone Irradiation in IDH-Wildtype Glioblastoma.” ACTA ONCOLOGICA 60 (5): 613–19. https://doi.org/10.1080/0284186x.2021.1893899.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Hallaert, Giorgio, Harry Pinson, Caroline Van den Broecke, Caroline Sweldens, Dirk Van Roost, Jean-Pierre Kalala Okito, and Tom Boterberg. 2021. “Survival Impact of Incidental Subventricular Zone Irradiation in IDH-Wildtype Glioblastoma.” ACTA ONCOLOGICA 60 (5): 613–619. doi:10.1080/0284186x.2021.1893899.
- Vancouver
- 1.Hallaert G, Pinson H, Van den Broecke C, Sweldens C, Van Roost D, Kalala Okito J-P, et al. Survival impact of incidental subventricular zone irradiation in IDH-wildtype glioblastoma. ACTA ONCOLOGICA. 2021;60(5):613–9.
- IEEE
- [1]G. Hallaert et al., “Survival impact of incidental subventricular zone irradiation in IDH-wildtype glioblastoma,” ACTA ONCOLOGICA, vol. 60, no. 5, pp. 613–619, 2021.
@article{8699533, abstract = {{Background and purpose The subventricular zone (SVZ) is an important niche for neural stem cells but probably also for brain tumor propagating cells, including the glioblastoma stem cell. The SVZ may become a target for radiation therapy in glioblastoma patients. However, reports studying the effect of irradiation of the SVZ on glioblastoma patient survival show conflicting results. We studied the correlation between incidental SVZ radiation dose and survival in a cohort of isocitrate dehydrogenase-wildtype (IDHwt) glioblastoma patients with inclusion of important survival prognosticators. Patients and methods In this retrospective analysis, only adult patients with supratentorial IDHwt glioblastoma were included who were treated with temozolomide-based chemoradiotherapy after surgery. The SVZ was contoured on the radiotherapy planning imaging. Cox proportional regression overall survival (OS) analysis was used to study the correlation between SVZ dose and survival. Age, Karnofsky Performance Score, extent of resection and O-6-methylguanine-methyl-DNA-transferase gene promoter (MGMTp) methylation were used as covariates in multivariate analysis. Results In total, 137 patients were included. Median OS was 13.3 months. The MGMTp methylation was present in 40% of cases. Ipsilateral SVZ (iSVZ) mean dose was 44.4 Gy and 27.2 Gy for the contralateral SVZ (cSVZ). Univariate survival analysis showed an inverse relationship between cSVZ mean dose and OS (HR 1.029 (1.003-1.057); p= .032). However, there was no correlation between cSVZ mean dose and OS in multivariate analysis. iSVZ dose did not correlate with survival. Conclusion In this cohort of 137 IDHwt glioblastoma patients, iSVZ did not correlate with OS. Higher cSVZ dose was inversely correlated with OS in univariate survival analysis but lost its significance in multivariate analysis, including MGMTp-methylation. Hence, the correlation between SVZ radiation and glioblastoma patient survival remains unclear. Carefully designed prospective studies are needed to provide unequivocal results on this controversial topic.}}, author = {{Hallaert, Giorgio and Pinson, Harry and Van den Broecke, Caroline and Sweldens, Caroline and Van Roost, Dirk and Kalala Okito, Jean-Pierre and Boterberg, Tom}}, issn = {{0284-186X}}, journal = {{ACTA ONCOLOGICA}}, keywords = {{Oncology,Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Hematology,General Medicine,Glioblastoma,IDH-wildtype,subventricular zone,radiation therapy survival,MGMT-methylation}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{5}}, pages = {{613--619}}, title = {{Survival impact of incidental subventricular zone irradiation in IDH-wildtype glioblastoma}}, url = {{http://doi.org/10.1080/0284186x.2021.1893899}}, volume = {{60}}, year = {{2021}}, }
- Altmetric
- View in Altmetric
- Web of Science
- Times cited: