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- Title
The effects of tumor size and postoperative radiotherapy for patients with adult low‐grade (WHO grade II) infiltrative supratentorial astrocytoma/oligodendroglioma: A population‐based and propensity score matched study.
- Authors
Lin, Dong‐Dong; Deng, Xiang‐Yang; Zheng, Dong‐Dong; Gu, Cheng‐Hui; Yu, Li‐Sheng; Xu, Shang‐Yu; Li, Dan‐Dong; Fang, Jun‐Hao; Yin, Bo; Sheng, Han‐Song; Lin, Jian; Zhang, Xiao‐Lei; Zhang, Nu
- Abstract
Background: The update of 2018 NCCN guidelines (central nervous system cancers) recommended the risk classification of postoperative patients diagnosed as adult low‐grade (WHO grade II) infiltrative supratentorial astrocytoma/oligodendroglioma (ALISA/O) should take tumor size into consideration. Moreover, the guidelines removed postoperative radiotherapy (PORT) for low risk patients. Our study aimed to explore the specific tumor size to divide postoperative patients into relatively low‐ or high risk subgroups and the effect of PORT for ALISA/O patients. Methods: We conducted a retrospective study choosing 1277 postoperative ALISA/O patients from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results database. The X‐tile analysis provided the optimal cutoff point based on tumor size. The differences between surgery alone and surgery +RT groups were balanced by propensity score‐matched analysis. The multivariable analysis and the nomogram evaluated multiple prognostic factors based on cancer‐specific survival (CSS) and overall survival (OS). Results: X‐tile plots defined 59 mm (P < 0.001) as the optimal cutoff tumor size value in terms of CSS, which was verified in multivariate analysis (P < 0.001). The Kaplan‐Meier analysis showed that the surgery alone had higher CSS and OS than surgery +RT, while the low risk group had no statistical significance after propensity score match. Multivariable analysis showed that surgery +RT was independently associated with diminished OS and CSS for high risk group, which had no statistical significance for low‐risk group. Conclusions: Our study suggested that tumor size of 59 mm was an optimal cutoff point to divide postoperative patients into relatively low‐ or high risk subgroups. PORT may not benefit patients, while the effects of PORT for low risk patients need further research. We evaluated two changes of 2018 NCCN guideline (CNS cancer), comparing with its in 2017, for patients with adult low‐grade (WHO grade II) infiltrative supratentorial astrocytoma/oligodendroglioma (ALISA/O). We concluded that tumor size of 59mm was an optimal cutoff point to divide postoperative patients into relatively low‐ or high risk subgroups and that postoperative radiotherapy (PORT) may not benefit patients.
- Subjects
RADIOTHERAPY; OLIGODENDROGLIOMAS; CENTRAL nervous system cancer; ASTROCYTOMAS
- Publication
Cancer Medicine, 2018, Vol 7, Issue 12, p5973
- ISSN
2045-7634
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/cam4.1853