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. 2019 Nov 11;21(Suppl 6):vi223. doi: 10.1093/neuonc/noz175.932

RARE-09. CYSTIC GLIOBLASTOMA PRESENTATION AS A BENEFICIAL PROGNOSTIC INDICATOR FOR OVERALL SURVIVAL

Lee Curtin 1, Paula Whitmire 1, Cassandra Rickertsen 1, Peter D Canoll 2, Maciej Mrugala 1, Kristin Swanson 1, Leland Hu 1
PMCID: PMC6847682

Abstract

Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most aggressive primary brain tumor with a median overall survival of 15 months with standard-of-care treatment. GBM patients sometimes present with a cystic component, which can be identified through magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Previous studies suggest that cysts occur in 7–22% of GBM patients and have reported mixed results regarding whether cystic GBM have a survival benefit compared to noncystic GBM. Using our large retrospective cohort of 493 first-diagnosis GBM patients, we aim to elucidate this link between cystic GBM and survival. Within this cohort, 88 patients had a significant cystic component at presentation as identified on MRI. Compared to noncystic GBM (n=405), cystic GBM patients had significantly better overall survival (15 vs 22 months median, log-rank, p=0.001) and were significantly younger at the time of presentation (t-test, p=0.002). However, within patients that received current standard-of-care treatment (n=184), cystic GBM (n=40) was not as beneficial for outcome (22 vs 25 months, log-rank, p=0.3). We also did not observe a significant survival benefit when comparing this standard-of-care cystic cohort to cystic GBM patients diagnosed before the standard was established (n=19, 25 vs 23 months, log-rank, p=0.3), but the analogous result for noncystic GBM patients gives a sizeable benefit, as expected (n=144, n=111, respectively, 22 vs 12 months, log-rank p < 0.0001). Together, these results on current standard-of-care may explain later studies that note no significant survival benefit for cystic GBM patients receiving current standard-of-care. We also report differences in the absolute and relative sizes of imaging abnormalities on MRI and in prognostic impact of cysts based on sex. We discuss current hypotheses for these observed differences, including the possibility that the presence of a cyst could be indicative of a less aggressive tumor.


Articles from Neuro-Oncology are provided here courtesy of Society for Neuro-Oncology and Oxford University Press

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