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Outcome and Prognostic Factors in Recurrent Glioblastoma Multiforme Treated with Re-Irradiation: A Retrospective Study from a Tertiary Care Hospital

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Last updated: 22 Jan 2023

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Abstract

Background: Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) continue to portend a dismal prognosis despite the use of multimodal approaches as nearly all patients will experience relapse. We aimed to determine the outcome and toxicity of re-irradiation (re-RT) for patients with recurrent GBM.
Methods: We retrospectively collected data for 57 patients with locally recurrent GBM who received re-RT from June, 2011 to January, 2018.
Results: The median time interval between primary RT and re-RT was 16 months. The type of recurrences was: “in-field" recurrence (n=41, 71.9%), marginal (n=12, 21.1%) and “out-of-field" (n=4, 7.0%). Of 33 chemo-naive patients, 27 patients (81.8%) received TMZ concomitantly and after re-RT, and 6 patients (18.2%) were medically unfit and received re-RT alone. All patients were treated using 3D conformal radiation therapy with three dose/fractionation schedules: 35 Gy/10 fractions (n=15, 26.3%), 36 Gy/18 fractions (n=34, 59.6%), and 25 Gy/5 fractions (n=8, 14.0%). The median tumor and planning volume at recurrence were 67 cm3 (range: 10 - 170 cm3) and 287 cm3 (range: 28 - 581 cm3) respectively. The median re-RT dose was 36 Gy (range: 31.3 – 39.4 Gy) and the median cumulative doses were 96 Gy (range: 91.3 – 99.4 Gy) for the two irradiation. The median cumulative biologic effective dose (α/β = 10 Gy) was 115.5 Gy (range, 109.5 – 119.3 Gy). The median follow-up duration was 10 months (range: 6 – 31 months). The median Overall and progression free survival was 11 and 8.0 months respectively. Multivariate analysis confirmed that younger age (P=0.022), longer time between primary RT and re-RT (P=0.002), and the combined chemoradiotherapy treatment (P=0.017) at recurrence were predictive for improved survival. All patients completed the planned reirradiation course with manageable toxicity. Only 7 of 57 patients (12.3%) had grade 3 or more toxicities. Late toxicity included radionecrosis in two patients who received 5 Gy per fraction.
Conclusion: Re-RT is tolerable and could be a salvage treatment for selected recurrent GBM patients with younger age, recurrence over a long time, and combined chemoradiation schedule. However, larger randomized studies are required to shed more light on this issue and to establish the optimal management strategy for recurrent GBM.

Keywords

Recurrent glioblastoma, Reirradiation, Survival, Prognostic factors, toxicity

Volume

10

Article Issue

3

Related Issue

35731

Issue Date

2022-07-01

Receive Date

2022-06-13

Publish Date

2022-06-21

Page Start

152

Page End

161

Print ISSN

2537-0995

Online ISSN

2314-8500

Link

https://secioj.journals.ekb.eg/article_251919.html

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https://secioj.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=251919

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251,919

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

SECI Oncology Journal

Publication Link

https://secioj.journals.ekb.eg/

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Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023