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Prognostic value of medulloblastoma extent of resection after accounting for molecular subgroup: a retrospective integrated clinical and molecular analysis.
Abstract
<h4>Background</h4>Patients with incomplete surgical resection of medulloblastoma
are controversially regarded as having a marker of high-risk disease, which leads
to patients undergoing aggressive surgical resections, so-called second-look surgeries,
and intensified chemoradiotherapy. All previous studies assessing the clinical importance
of extent of resection have not accounted for molecular subgroup. We analysed the
prognostic value of extent of resection in a subgroup-specific manner.<h4>Methods</h4>We
retrospectively identified patients who had a histological diagnosis of medulloblastoma
and complete data about extent of resection and survival from centres participating
in the Medulloblastoma Advanced Genomics International Consortium. We collected from
resections done between April, 1997, and February, 2013, at 35 international institutions.
We established medulloblastoma subgroup affiliation by gene expression profiling on
frozen or formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissues. We classified extent of resection
on the basis of postoperative imaging as gross total resection (no residual tumour),
near-total resection (<1·5 cm(2) tumour remaining), or sub-total resection (≥1·5 cm(2)
tumour remaining). We did multivariable analyses of overall survival and progression-free
survival using the variables molecular subgroup (WNT, SHH, group 4, and group 3),
age (<3 vs ≥3 years old), metastatic status (metastases vs no metastases), geographical
location of therapy (North America/Australia vs rest of the world), receipt of chemotherapy
(yes vs no) and receipt of craniospinal irradiation (<30 Gy or >30 Gy vs no craniospinal
irradiation). The primary analysis outcome was the effect of extent of resection by
molecular subgroup and the effects of other clinical variables on overall and progression-free
survival.<h4>Findings</h4>We included 787 patients with medulloblastoma (86 with WNT
tumours, 242 with SHH tumours, 163 with group 3 tumours, and 296 with group 4 tumours)
in our multivariable Cox models of progression-free and overall survival. We found
that the prognostic benefit of increased extent of resection for patients with medulloblastoma
is attenuated after molecular subgroup affiliation is taken into account. We identified
a progression-free survival benefit for gross total resection over sub-total resection
(hazard ratio [HR] 1·45, 95% CI 1·07-1·96, p=0·16) but no overall survival benefit
(HR 1·23, 0·87-1·72, p=0·24). We saw no progression-free survival or overall survival
benefit for gross total resection compared with near-total resection (HR 1·05, 0·71-1·53,
p=0·8158 for progression-free survival and HR 1·14, 0·75-1·72, p=0·55 for overall
survival). No significant survival benefit existed for greater extent of resection
for patients with WNT, SHH, or group 3 tumours (HR 1·03, 0·67-1·58, p=0·89 for sub-total
resection vs gross total resection). For patients with group 4 tumours, gross total
resection conferred a benefit to progression-free survival compared with sub-total
resection (HR 1·97, 1·22-3·17, p=0·0056), especially for those with metastatic disease
(HR 2·22, 1·00-4·93, p=0·050). However, gross total resection had no effect on overall
survival compared with sub-total resection in patients with group 4 tumours (HR 1·67,
0·93-2·99, p=0·084).<h4>Interpretation</h4>The prognostic benefit of increased extent
of resection for patients with medulloblastoma is attenuated after molecular subgroup
affiliation is taken into account. Although maximum safe surgical resection should
remain the standard of care, surgical removal of small residual portions of medulloblastoma
is not recommended when the likelihood of neurological morbidity is high because there
is no definitive benefit to gross total resection compared with near-total resection.<h4>Funding</h4>Canadian
Cancer Society Research Institute, Terry Fox Research Institute, Canadian Institutes
of Health Research, National Institutes of Health, Pediatric Brain Tumor Foundation,
and the Garron Family Chair in Childhood Cancer Research.
Type
Journal articleSubject
HumansMedulloblastoma
Brain Neoplasms
Disease Progression
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Prognosis
Disease-Free Survival
Combined Modality Therapy
Retrospective Studies
Adult
Child
Child, Preschool
Infant
Canada
Female
Male
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25903Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1016/s1470-2045(15)00581-1Publication Info
Thompson, Eric M; Hielscher, Thomas; Bouffet, Eric; Remke, Marc; Luu, Betty; Gururangan,
Sridharan; ... Taylor, Michael D (2016). Prognostic value of medulloblastoma extent of resection after accounting for molecular
subgroup: a retrospective integrated clinical and molecular analysis. The Lancet. Oncology, 17(4). pp. 484-495. 10.1016/s1470-2045(15)00581-1. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25903.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Darell Doty Bigner
E. L. and Lucille F. Jones Cancer Distinguished Research Professor, in the School
of Medicine
The Causes, Mechanisms of Transformation and Altered Growth Control and New Therapy
for Primary and Metastatic Tumors of the Central Nervous System (CNS). There are
over 16,000 deaths in the United States each year from primary brain tumors such as
malignant gliomas and medulloblastomas, and metastatic tumors to the CNS and its covering
from systemic tumors such as carcinoma of the lung, breast, colon, and melanoma. An
estimated 80,000 cases of primary brain tumors were expected to
Gerald Arthur Grant
Allan H. Friedman Distinguished Professor of Neurosurgery
Sridharan Gururangan
Professor of Pediatrics
Dr. Gururangan is the Director of the Pediatric Neuro-Oncology program at the Preston
Robert Tisch Brain Tumor Center. His current research interest focuses on finding
novel chemotherapeutic strategies for the treatment of children and young adults with
central nervous system tumors. Since beginning his tenure at the Brain Tumor Center
at Duke, he has written seven clinical protocols. These protocols have incorporated
some of the important laboratory findings obtained from the laboratory of Dr.
This author no longer has a Scholars@Duke profile, so the information shown here reflects
their Duke status at the time this item was deposited.
Roger Edwin McLendon
Professor of Pathology
Brain tumors are diagnosed in more than 20,000 Americans annually. The most malignant
neoplasm, glioblastoma, is also the most common. Similarly, brain tumors constitute
the most common solid neoplasm in children and include astrocytomas of the cerebellum,
brain stem and cerebrum as well as medulloblastomas of the cerebellum. My colleagues
and I have endeavored to translate the bench discoveries of genetic mutations and
aberrant protein expressions found in brain tumors to better understan
Eric Michael Thompson
Associate Professor of Neurosurgery
My translational and clinical research focus is pediatric brain tumors. My lab investigates
1) the mechanism of oncolytic viral immunotherapy for the treatment of solid tumor
and disseminated medulloblastoma, and 2) the role of Abelson family kinases (ABL1
and ABL2) in the promotion of leptomeningeal dissemination of pediatric brain tumors.My
clinical research focuses on 1) using a novel peptide vaccine to target CMV antigens
to treat children with recurrent medulloblastoma and malig
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