AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how the time gap between surgery and the start of chemoradiotherapy affects survival rates in glioblastoma patients who underwent surgical resection and subsequent treatment.
  • Data from 692 adult patients were analyzed to see if the timing of treatment influenced progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS).
  • The findings suggest that the timing of chemoradiotherapy after surgery does not significantly impact survival outcomes, though factors like gender and extent of tumor resection do play a role.

Article Abstract

Background: To assess the influence of the time interval between surgical resection and standard combined chemoradiotherapy on survival in newly diagnosed and homogeneously treated (surgical resection plus standard combined chemoradiotherapy) glioblastoma patients; while controlling confounding factors (extent of resection, carmustine wafer implantation, functional status, neurological deficit, and postoperative complications).

Methods: From 2005 to 2011, 692 adult patients (434 men; mean of 57.5 ± 10.8 years) with a newly diagnosed glioblastoma were enrolled in this retrospective multicentric study. All patients were treated by surgical resection (65.5% total/subtotal resection, 34.5% partial resection; 36.7% carmustine wafer implantation) followed by standard combined chemoradiotherapy (radiotherapy at a median dose of 60 Gy, with daily concomitant and adjuvant temozolomide). Time interval to standard combined chemoradiotherapy was analyzed as a continuous variable and as a dichotomized variable using median and quartiles thresholds. Multivariate analyses using Cox modeling were conducted.

Results: The median progression-free survival was 10.3 months (95% CI, 10.0-11.0). The median overall survival was 19.7 months (95% CI, 18.5-21.0). The median time to initiation of combined chemoradiotherapy was 1.5 months (25% quartile, 1.0; 75% quartile, 2.2; range, 0.1-9.0). On univariate and multivariate analyses, OS and PFS were not significantly influenced by time intervals to adjuvant treatments. On multivariate analysis, female gender, total/subtotal resection and RTOG-RPA classes 3 and 4 were significant independent predictors of improved OS.

Conclusions: Delaying standard combined chemoradiotherapy following surgical resection of newly diagnosed glioblastoma in adult patients does not impact survival.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.radonc.2016.01.001DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

combined chemoradiotherapy
28
standard combined
24
surgical resection
20
newly diagnosed
16
diagnosed glioblastoma
12
resection
9
delaying standard
8
chemoradiotherapy surgical
8
impact survival
8
survival newly
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!