Correction to: A combined analysis of two prospective randomised studies exploring the impact of extended post-radiation temozolomide on survival outcomes in newly diagnosed glioblastoma

L. Gately, C. Mesía, J. M. Sepúlveda,S. del Barco, E. Pineda, R. Gironés,J. Fuster, W. Hong, M. Dumas, S. Gill, L. M. Navarro,A. Herrero, A. Dowling,R. de las Peñas, M. A. Vaz,M. Alonso, Z. Lwin, R. Harrup,S. Peralta, A. Long, P. Perez-Segura, E. Ahern, C. O. Garate,M. Wong, R. Campbell, K. Cuff, R. Jennens, O. Gallego, C. Underhill, M. Martinez-Garcia, M. Covela, A. Cooper, S. Brown, M. Rosenthal,J. Torres, I. M. Collins, P. Gibbs, C. Balana

Journal of Neuro-Oncology(2024)

引用 0|浏览0
暂无评分
摘要
Purpose The optimal duration of post-radiation temozolomide in newly diagnosed glioblastoma remains unclear, with no published phase III randomised trials. Standard-of-care stipulates 6 months. However, in routine care, it is often extended to 12 months, despite lacking robust supporting data. Methods GEINO14-01 (Spain) and EX-TEM (Australia) studies enrolled glioblastoma patients without progression at the end of 6 months post-radiation temozolomide. Participants were randomised 1:1 to six additional months of temozolomide or observation. Primary endpoint was 6-month progression free survival from date of randomisation (6mPFS). Secondary endpoints included overall survival (OS) and toxicity. 204 patients were required to detect an improvement in 6mPFS from 50 to 60% (80% power). Neither study recruited sufficient patients. We performed a combined analysis of individual patient data. Results 205 patients were recruited: 159 in GEINO14-01 (2014–2018) and 46 in EX-TEM (2019–2022). Median follow-up was 20.0 and 14.5 months. Baseline characteristics were balanced. There was no significant improvement in 6mPFS (57.2% vs 64.0%, OR0.75, p = 0.4), nor across any subgroups, including MGMT methylated; PFS (HR0.92, p = 0.59, median 7.8 vs 9.7 months); or OS (HR1.03, p = 0.87, median 20.1 vs 19.4 months). During treatment extension, 64% experienced any grade adverse event, mainly fatigue and gastrointestinal (both 54%). Only a minority required treatment changes: 4.5% dose delay, 7.5% dose reduction, 1.5% temozolomide discontinuation. Conclusion For glioblastoma patients, extending post-radiation temozolomide from 6 to 12 months is well tolerated but does not improve 6mPFS. We could not identify any subset that benefitted from extended treatment. Six months should remain standard-of-care.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Glioblastoma,Temozolomide,Survival
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要