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Efficacy and Low Toxicity of Normo-Fractionated Re-Irradiation with Combined Chemotherapy for Recurrent Glioblastoma—An Analysis of Treatment Response and Failure.

Authors :
Pepper, Niklas Benedikt
Prange, Nicholas Grischa
Troschel, Fabian Martin
Kröger, Kai
Oertel, Michael
Kuhlmann, Tanja
Müther, Michael
Grauer, Oliver
Stummer, Walter
Eich, Hans Theodor
Source :
Cancers. Nov2024, Vol. 16 Issue 21, p3652. 19p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Simple Summary: In this single-center retrospective analysis of 101 patients with recurrent glioblastoma, we demonstrate the benefit of a multimodal treatment approach with normo-fractionated re-RT with combined alkylating chemotherapy after surgical resection. Additionally, questions of patient selection, treatment tolerability, and patterns of relapse are addressed. Multimodal Treatment with re-resection followed by re-irradiation in combination with alkylating chemotherapy achieved the best results, especially when a combination of two agents (TMZ and CCNU) is used. Treatment was tolerated well with little evidence of radionecrosis or hematological toxicity and mean overall survival was 11.3 months (mean progression free survival: 9.5 months). No influence of second-line chemotherapy on patterns of relapse was detected. Background: Glioblastoma is the most common malignant brain tumor in adults. Even after maximal safe resection and adjuvant chemoradiotherapy, patients normally relapse after a few years or even months. Standard treatment for recurrent glioblastoma is not yet defined, with re-resection, re-irradiation, and systemic therapy playing key roles. Usually, re-irradiation is combined with concurrent chemotherapy, harnessing the radiosensitizing effects of alkylating agents. Methods: A retrospective analysis of 101 patients with recurrent glioblastoma treated with re-irradiation was conducted, evaluating the survival impact of concurrent chemotherapy regimens, as well as prior resection. Patients were subcategorized according to concurrent chemotherapy (temozolomide vs. CCNU vs. combination of both vs. none) and details are given regarding treatment toxicity and patterns of relapse after first- and second-line treatment. Results: Patients were treated with normo-fractionated re-irradiation (with prescription dose of ~40 Gy to the PTV), resulting in a moderate cumulative EQD2 (~100 Gy). The mean overall survival was 11.3 months (33.5 months from initial diagnosis) and mean progression free survival was 9.5 months. Prior resection resulted in increased survival (p < 0.001), especially when gross total resection was achieved. Patients who received concurrent chemotherapy had significantly longer survival vs. no chemotherapy (p < 0.01), with the combination of CCNU and TMZ achieving the best results. Overall survival was significantly better in patients who received the CCNU + TMZ combination at any time during treatment (first or second line) vs. monotherapy only. The treatment of larger volumes (mean PTV size = 112.7 cm3) was safe and did not result in worse prognosis or increased demand for corticosteroids. Overall, the incidence of high-grade toxicity or sequential radionecrosis (5%) was reasonably low and treatment was tolerated well. While second-line chemotherapy did not seem to influence patterns of relapse, patients who received TMZ + CCNU as first-line treatment had a tendency towards better local control with more out-field recurrence. Conclusions: Normo-fractionated re-irradiation appears to be safe and is accompanied by good survival outcomes, even when applied to larger treatment volumes. Patients amenable to undergo re-resection and achieving concurrent systemic therapy with alkylating agents had better OS, especially when gross total resection was possible. Based on existing data and experiences reflected in this analysis, we advocate for a multimodal approach to recurrent glioblastoma with maximal safe re-resection and adjuvant second chemoradiation. The combination of TMZ and CCNU for patients with methylated MGMT promoter yielded the best results in the primary and recurrent situation (together with re-RT). Normo-fractionated RT enables the use of more generous margins and is tolerated well. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20726694
Volume :
16
Issue :
21
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Cancers
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180784686
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16213652