Michael Weller,Felix Boakye Oppong,Maureen Vanlancker,Roger Stupp,Burt Nabors,Olivier Chinot,Wolfgang Wick,Matthias Preusser,Thierry Gorlia,Émilie Le Rhun
出处
期刊:Journal of Clinical Oncology [American Society of Clinical Oncology] 日期:2022-06-01卷期号:40 (16_suppl): 2055-2055被引量:1
标识
DOI:10.1200/jco.2022.40.16_suppl.2055
摘要
2055 Background: Myelosuppression is the major toxicity encountered during temozolomide chemoradiotherapy for newly diagnosed glioblastoma. Methods: We assessed the association of myelosuppression (neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, anemia, lymphopenia) during temozolomide chemoradiotherapy alone or in combination with experimental agents with progression-free survival (PFS) or overall survival (OS) in 2073 patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma enrolled into five clinical trials: CENTRIC, CORE, EORTC 26082, AVAglio, and EORTC 26981. A landmark analysis approached was used. For each primary association analysis, a significance level of 1.7% was used. Results: Lower neutrophil counts at baseline were associated with better PFS (p = 0.011) and OS (p < 0.001), independently of steroid intake. Females experienced uniformly more myelotoxicity than males. Lymphopenia during concomitant chemoradiotherapy was associated with OS (p = 0.009): low-grade (1-2) lymphopenia might be associated with superior OS (HR 0.78, 98.3% CI 0.58-1.06) whereas high-grade (3-4) lymphopenia might be associated with inferior OS (HR 1.08, 98.3% CI 0.75-1.54). There were no associations of altered hematological parameters during concomitant chemoradiotherapy with PFS. During maintenance chemoradiotherapy, no significant association was found between any parameter of myelosuppression and PFS or OS, although exploratory analysis at 5% significance level indicated that either mild-to-moderate (HR 0.76, 95% CI 0.62-0.93) or high-grade lymphopenia (HR 0.65, 95% CI 0.46-0.92) were associated with superior OS (p = 0.013), but not PFS. Conclusions: The association of higher neutrophil counts at baseline with inferior PFS and OS requires further prospective evaluation. The link of therapy-induced lymphopenia to better outcome may guide the design for immunotherapy trials in newly diagnosed glioblastoma.