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Current
neurosurgical management and the impact of the extent of resection in the
treatment of malignant gliomas of childhood: a report of the Children's Cancer
Group trial no. CCG-945
Wisoff JH, Boyett JM, Berger MS, Brant C, Li H, Yates AJ, McGuire-Cullen P,
Turski PA, Sutton LN, Allen JC, Packer RJ, Finlay JL
Division of Pediatric Neurosurgery, New York University Medical
Center, New York, USA
Object. One hundred seventy-two children with high-grade astrocytomas
were treated by members of the Children's Cancer Group in a prospective
randomized trial designed to evaluate the role of two chemotherapy
regimens.
Seventy-six percent of the patients (131 children) in whom a diagnosis of either
anaplastic astrocytoma or glioblastoma multiforme was confirmed by central
pathological review are the subject of this report.
Methods. Patients were stratified according to the extent of tumor
resection (biopsy [< 10%], partial resection [10-50%], subtotal resection
[51-90%], near-total resection [> 90%], and total resection) as determined by
surgical observation and postoperative computerized tomography scanning.
Information on contemporary neurosurgical management was obtained from the
patient's operative records and standardized neurosurgical report forms.
The vast majority of tumors were supratentorial: 63% (83 tumors) in the
superficial cerebral hemisphere, 28% (37 tumors) in the deep or midline
cerebrum, and only 8% (11 tumors) in the posterior fossa.
A significant association was detected between the primary tumor site and the
extent of resection (p < 0.0001).
A radical resection (> 90%) was performed in 37% of the children: 49% of the
tumors in the superficial hemisphere and 45% of tumors in the posterior fossa
compared with 8% of midline tumors.
Tumor location could also be used to predict the need for both temporary and
permanent cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) diversion.
Half of the deep tumors and 8% of the hemispheric astrocytomas ultimately
required a permanent CSF shunt.
Improvement in preoperative neurological deficits and level of consciousness was
seen in 36% and 34% of the children, respectively.
New or increased deficits were present in 14% of the children, with 6%
experiencing a diminished sensorium after surgery.
Postoperative nonneurological complications were rare: infection, hematoma, and
CSF fistula each occurred in 1.7% of the children.
Univariate and multivariate analyses demonstrated that radical tumor resection
(> 90%) was the only therapeutic variable that significantly improved
progression-free survival (PFS) rates.
For all patients with malignant astrocytomas, the distributions of PFS rates
were significantly different (p = 0.006) following radical resection compared
with less extensive (< or = 90%) resection.
The 5-year PFS rates were 35 +/- 7% and 17 +/- 4%, respectively.
The differences in the distribution of PFS rate were significant for the subsets
of patients with anaplastic astrocytoma (p = 0.055) and glioblastoma multiforme
(p = 0.046).
The 5-year PFS rates for anaplastic astrocytoma were 44 +/- 11% and 22 +/- 6%
for cases in which the tumor was radically resected and less than radically
resected, respectively; whereas the 5-year PFS rates for glioblastoma multiforme
were 26 +/- 9% and 4 +/- 3% for cases in which the tumor was radically resected
and less than radically resected, respectively.
Conclusions. The demonstration of a survival advantage provided by
radical resection should prompt neurosurgeons to treat malignant pediatric
astrocytomas with aggressive surgical resection prior to initiation of
radiotherapy or adjuvant chemotherapy.
PMID:
9647172 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Source: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=9647172&dopt=Abstract
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