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Efficacy of Whole-Ventricular Radiotherapy in Patients Undergoing Maximal Tumor Resection for Glioblastomas Involving the Ventricle

Patients with glioblastoma (GBM) involving the ventricles are at high risk of ventricle opening during surgery and potential ventricular tumor spread. We evaluated the effectiveness of whole-ventricular radiotherapy (WVRT) in reducing intraventricular seeding in patients with GBM and identified pati...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Frontiers in oncology 2021-09, Vol.11, p.736482-736482
Main Authors: Kim, Kyung Hwan, Yoo, Jihwan, Kim, Nalee, Moon, Ju Hyung, Byun, Hwa Kyung, Kang, Seok-Gu, Chang, Jong Hee, Yoon, Hong In, Suh, Chang-Ok
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Patients with glioblastoma (GBM) involving the ventricles are at high risk of ventricle opening during surgery and potential ventricular tumor spread. We evaluated the effectiveness of whole-ventricular radiotherapy (WVRT) in reducing intraventricular seeding in patients with GBM and identified patients who could benefit from this approach. We retrospectively reviewed the data of 382 patients with GBM who underwent surgical resection and temozolomide-based chemoradiotherapy. Propensity score matching was performed to compensate for imbalances in characteristics between patients who did [WVRT (+); n=59] and did not [WVRT (-); n=323] receive WVRT. Local, outfield, intraventricular, and leptomeningeal failure rates were compared. All patients in the WVRT (+) group had tumor ventricular involvement and ventricle opening during surgery. In the matched cohort, the WVRT (+) group exhibited a significantly lower 2-year intraventricular failure rate than the WVRT (-) group (2.1% . 11.8%; P=0.045), with no difference in other outcomes. Recursive partitioning analysis stratified the patients in the WVRT (-) group at higher intraventricular failure risk (2-year survival, 14.2%) due to tumor ventricular involvement, MGMT unmethylation, and ventricle opening. WVRT reduced the intraventricular failure rate only in high-risk patients (0% . 14.2%; P=0.054) or those with MGMT-unmethylated GBM in the matched cohort (0% . 17.3%; P=0.036). WVRT reduced the intraventricular failure rate in patients with tumor ventricular involvement and ventricle opening during surgery. The MGMT-methylation status may further stratify patients who could benefit from WVRT. Further prospective evaluation of WVRT in GBM is warranted.
ISSN:2234-943X
2234-943X
DOI:10.3389/fonc.2021.736482