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SURG-18. THE IMPACT OF NEUROLOGIC IMPAIRMENTS ON THE RELATIVE BENEFIT OF MAXIMAL EXTENT OF RESECTION IN NEWLY DIAGNOSED IDH-WILD TYPE GLIOBLASTOMA

Abstract

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The prognostic importance of maximal resection of contrast enhancing and non-contrast enhancing disease has been established. Nonetheless, glioblastomas exist within the framework of complex neural circuitry serving cognition, movement, and behavior consequential leading to neurological impairments. The prognostic importance of neurological impairments on survival remains poorly understood.

METHODS

This is a retrospective, single cohort study from UCSF including 316 eligible patients diagnosed over 20 years with 9.6 years of follow-up. All patients underwent surgical resection for newly diagnosed glioblastoma for whom survival, molecular, preoperative and postoperative MRI images, and clinical data were available. All patients had chemoradiation treated IDH-wild-type glioblastoma with available preoperative and 1-month post-surgical resection neurological outcomes. We employed survival models and recursive partitioning (RPA) to investigate multivariate relationships of overall survival (OS).

RESULTS

Preoperative neurological impairments were present in 75.6% (n= 239) and new post resection impairments were identified in 37.3% (n=117). Univariate analysis confirmed that new postoperative cognitive impairment [HR 7.91, 95% CI 2.47-25.33] and hemiplegia [HR 3.38, 95% CI 0.83-13.67] (not hemiparesis) impact OS. Risk stratified grouping by RPA demonstrated that gross total resection of contrast enhancing tumor in patients with no new postoperative neurological impairments confers the longest OS (median OS 27.1 months 95%CI 21.5-33.7). Patients with any residual tumor volume after surgery but no new neurological deficits experience a similar survival to younger patients (under 65) with 1 or more new postoperative neurological deficits (median OS 16.6 months 95%CI 15.2-19.2). Shortest OS is identified in patients with any volume of residual tumor plus 1 or more new postoperative neurological deficits and age over 65 (median OS 11.4 months, 95%CI 9.3-13.5).

CONCLUSIONS

This study confirms that new postoperative neurological impairments impact overall survival in patients with chemoradiation treated IDH-wild-type glioblastoma.

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