1. Tumor Growth Rate as a New Predictor of Progression-Free Survival After Chordoma Surgery.
- Author
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Passeri T, di Russo P, Champagne PO, Bernat AL, Cartailler J, Guichard JP, Mammar H, Giammattei L, Adle-Biassette H, George B, Mandonnet E, and Froelich S
- Subjects
- Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local diagnostic imaging, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local epidemiology, Progression-Free Survival, Retrospective Studies, Survival Rate, Chordoma diagnostic imaging, Chordoma surgery, Skull Base Neoplasms
- Abstract
Background: Currently, different postoperative predictors of chordoma recurrence have been identified. Tumor growth rate (TGR) is an image-based calculation that provides quantitative information of tumor's volume changing over time and has been shown to predict progression-free survival (PFS) in other tumor types., Objective: To explore the usefulness of TGR as a new preoperative radiological marker for chordoma recurrence., Methods: A retrospective single-institution study was carried out including patients reflecting these criteria: confirmed diagnosis of chordoma on pathological analysis, no history of previous radiation, and at least 2 preoperative thin-slice magnetic resonance images available to measure TGR. TGR was calculated for all patients, showing the percentage change in tumor size over 1 mo., Results: A total of 32 patients were retained for analysis. Patients with a TGR ≥ 10.12%/m had a statistically significantly lower mean PFS (P < .0001). TGR ≥ 10.12%/m (odds ratio = 26, P = .001) was observed more frequently in recurrent chordoma. In a subgroup analysis, we found that the association of Ki-67 labeling index ≥ 6% and TGR ≥ 10.12%/m was correlated with recurrence (P = .0008)., Conclusion: TGR may be considered as a preoperative radiological indicator of tumor proliferation and seems to preoperatively identify more aggressive tumors with a higher tendency to recur. Our findings suggest that the therapeutic strategy and clinical-radiological follow-up of patients with chordoma can be adapted also according to this new parameter., (© Congress of Neurological Surgeons 2021.)
- Published
- 2021
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