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Clin Neurol Neurosurg · Jul 2013
The impact of repeated surgery and adjuvant therapy on survival for patients with recurrent glioblastoma.
- Pasquale De Bonis, Alba Fiorentino, Carmelo Anile, Mario Balducci, Angelo Pompucci, Silvia Chiesa, Gigliola Sica, Gina Lama, Giulio Maira, and Annunziato Mangiola.
- Institute of Neurosurgery, Catholic University School of Medicine, l.go F. Vito, 1 00168 Rome, Italy. debonisvox@gmail.com
- Clin Neurol Neurosurg. 2013 Jul 1;115(7):883-6.
ObjectiveTreatment of glioblastoma recurrence can have a palliative aim, after considering risks and potential benefits. The aim of this study is to verify the impact of surgery and of palliative adjuvant treatments on survival after recurrence.MethodsFrom January 2002 to June 2008, we treated 76 consecutive patients with recurrent glioblastoma. Treatment was: 1-surgery alone--17 patients; 2-adjuvant-therapy alone--24 patients; 3-surgery and adjuvant therapy--16 patients; no treatment--19 patients. The impact on median overall-survival (OS-time between recurrence and death/last follow-up) of age, Karnofsky performance scale (KPS), resection extent and adjuvant treatment scheme (Temozolomide alone vs low-dose fractionated radiotherapy vs others) was determined. Survival curves were obtained through the Kaplan-Meier method. Cox proportional-hazards was used for multivariate analyses. Significance was set at p<0.05.ResultsMedian OS was 7 months. At univariate analysis, patients with a KPS≥70 had a longer OS (9 months vs 5 months--p<0.0001). OS was 6 months for patients treated with surgery alone, 5 months for patients that received no treatment, 8 months for patients treated with chemotherapy alone, 14 months for patients treated with surgery and adjuvant therapy--p=0.01. Patients with a KPS<70 were significantly at risk for death - HR 2.8 - p=0.001. Subgroup analysis showed no significant differences between patients receiving gross total or partial tumor resection and among patients receiving different adjuvant therapy schemes. Major surgical morbidity at tumor recurrence occurred in 16 out of 33 patients (48%).ConclusionIt is fundamental, before deciding to operate patients for recurrence, to carefully consider the impact of surgical morbidity on outcome.Copyright © 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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