Oligodendroglial Component in Anaplastic Astrocytomas: A Prognostic Factor for Survival

Publication
Article
OncologyONCOLOGY Vol 11 No 8
Volume 11
Issue 8

Perhaps contrary to expectations, the presence of an oligodendroglial component in patients with anaplastic astrocytomas was associated with a significantly longer survival than were pure anaplastic tumors. This finding emerged from a randomized

Perhaps contrary to expectations, the presence of an oligodendroglialcomponent in patients with anaplastic astrocytomas was associated witha significantly longer survival than were pure anaplastic tumors. Thisfinding emerged from a randomized phase I-II trial from the Radiation TherapyOncology Group (RTOG).

In this study, Dr. Bernadine Donahue of New York University, and colleaguesreviewed the data on 133 adults who met the criteria defined for an anaplasticastrocytoma: the absence of tumor necrosis with the presence of two ormore of the following features: nucleopleomorphism, increased cell density,mitotic figures, or vascular prominence. Of these patients, 24 were consideredto have oligodendroglial elements.

There was a marginally significant difference in age, with patientswho had oligodendroglial elements being slightly older than patients withpure anaplastic astrocytomas. Patients with oligodendroglial elements werealso more likely to have had resection than biopsy. Although there wasno difference in the performance status or neurologic function status betweenthe patients with pure anaplastic astrocytomas and the patients who hadanaplastic astrocytomas with oligodendroglial components, there was a significantdifference in survival: the median survival of patients with pure anaplasticastrocytomas was 3 years vs 7.3 years for patients who had anaplastic astrocytomaswith oligodendroglial elements.

Recent Videos
Shwetal Mehta, PhD, describes efforts regarding the development of protein degraders and antibody-drug conjugates in the neuro-oncology field.
Liquid biopsy tests may help determine the extent of activity among patients who receive a novel fourth-generation EGFR inhibitor for brain cancer.
Shwetal Mehta, PhD, highlights novel brain cancer drug development procedures in the clinical lab and pre-clinical arms of the Ivy Brain Tumor Center.
Raymond B. Mailhot, MD, MPH, discussed how radiation therapy can impact education and survivorship for pediatric survivors of brain tumors.
Significant results from a retrospective analysis of brain tumor survivor academic performance after radiotherapy emerged despite small sampling size.
Raymond B. Mailhot, MD, MPH, discussed methods for comparing academic performances of patients following radiation therapy with healthy control groups.
The act of asking for help is critical to finding mentors who can help one advance in the brain cancer field, according to Yoshie Umemura, MD.
Through multidisciplinary collaboration, Yoshie Umemura, MD, and colleagues were able to organize the Gliofocus trial in brain cancer relatively fast.
Yoshie Umemura, MD, discusses how multiple departments can positively impact a patient with brain cancer during their visit to a medical center.
Antibody-drug conjugates and small molecule inhibitors may show utility in the neuro-oncology field, according to Nader Sanai, MD.