Glioma vascularity correlates with reduced patient survival and increased malignancy

Surgical Neurology(2009)

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摘要
Background: The objective of this study was 2-fold: (1) document the presence and degree of vascularity in gliomas of different pathologic grades and (2) determine whether the presence of abnormal vascularity, determined by catheter angiography, correlates with a shortened survival. Methods: As part of a protocol for radiographic data acquisition that was used in a computer-assisted, stereotactic system, all patients who underwent biopsy or resection of a newly diagnosed glioma between 1994 and 200(1 at our institution routinely underwent preoperative catheter angiography. The presence and degree of tumor vascularity were recorded and then correlated with survival and pathologic grade. The; confounding effects of age, KPS, adjuvant treatment, and extent of resection on survival were considered. Results: Two hundred thirty-one patients were included in this study. The mean follow-up of survivors was 7.8 years. Turner vascularity correlated with a shortened survival (proportional hazards RR for survival, 0.69; 95% Cl, 0.58-0.82). This correlation persisted after correction for age, KPS score, adjuvant therapy, and extent of resection (RR, 0.81; 95% Cl, 0.68-0.97). Abnormal vascularity was present in 25 (30%) of 82 low-grade (WHO grade 2) gliomas. Overall, the extent of vascularity (none [120 patients, 52%], blush [63 patients, 27%], neovessels [25 patients, 11%], and arteriovenous shunting [23 patients, 10%]) correlated with worse WHO tumor grade (P<.0001). Conclusions: The presence of abnormal vascularity correlates with both a shortened survival and higher grade of malignancy. These findings underscore the importance of antiangiogenesis factor investigation and drug development for the treatment of gliomas, regardless of their pathologic grade. (C) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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CI,KPS,MRI,rCBV,RR,WHO
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