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Worse prognosis for IDH wild-type diffuse gliomas with larger residual biological tumor burden

Authors :
Hiroyuki, Tatekawa
Hiroyuki, Uetani
Akifumi, Hagiwara
Shadfar, Bahri
Catalina, Raymond
Albert, Lai
Timothy F, Cloughesy
Phioanh L, Nghiemphu
Linda M, Liau
Whitney B, Pope
Noriko, Salamon
Benjamin M, Ellingson
Source :
Annals of nuclear medicine. 35(9)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The association of overall survival (OS) with tumor burden, including contrast enhanced (CE) volume on CE T1-weighted images, fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) hyperintense volume, and 3, 4-dihydroxy-6-[Thirty-four patients with treatment-naïve IDH wild-type gliomas (WHO grade II 6, III 15, IV 13) were retrospectively included. Three pre-operative tumor regions of interest (ROIs) were segmented based on the CE, FLAIR hyperintense, and FDOPA hypermetabolic regions. Resected ROIs were segmented from the post-operative images. Residual CE, FLAIR hyperintense, and FDOPA hypermetabolic ROIs were created by subtracting resected ROIs from pre-operative ROIs. Cox regression analysis was conducted to investigate the association of OS with the volume of each ROI, and Akaike information criterion was used to assess the fitness.Residual CE volume had a significant association with OS [hazard ratio (HR) = 1.26, p = 0.039], but this effect disappeared when controlling for tumor grade. Residual FDOPA hypermetabolic volume best fit the regression model and was significantly associated with OS (HR = 1.18, p = 0.008), even when controlling for tumor grade. FLAIR hyperintense volume showed no significant association with OS.Residual FDOPA hypermetabolic burden predicted OS for IDH wild-type gliomas, regardless of the tumor grade. Furthermore, removing hypermetabolic and CE regions may improve the prognosis.

Details

ISSN :
18646433
Volume :
35
Issue :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of nuclear medicine
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........ba0d8e1906be2e839df5ed7e2f0e441e