Survival in glioblastoma: a review on the impact of treatment modalities
Clin. transl. oncol. (Print)
; 18(11): 1062-1071, nov. 2016. tab
Article
in English
| IBECS
| ID: ibc-156871
Responsible library:
ES1.1
Localization: BNCS
ABSTRACT
Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common and lethal tumor of the central nervous system. The natural history of treated GBM remains very poor with 5-year survival rates of 5 %. Survival has not significantly improved over the last decades. Currently, the best that can be offered is a modest 14-month overall median survival in patients undergoing maximum safe resection plus adjuvant chemoradiotherapy. Prognostic factors involved in survival include age, performance status, grade, specific markers (MGMT methylation, mutation of IDH1, IDH2 or TERT, 1p19q codeletion, overexpression of EGFR, etc.) and, likely, the extent of resection. Certain adjuncts to surgery, especially cortical mapping and 5-ALA fluorescence, favor higher rates of gross total resection with apparent positive impact on survival. Recurrent tumors can be offered re-intervention, participation in clinical trials, anti-angiogenic agent or local electric field therapy, without an evident impact on survival. Molecular-targeted therapies, immunotherapy and gene therapy are promising tools currently under research (AU)
RESUMEN
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Collection:
National databases
/
Spain
Database:
IBECS
Main subject:
Prognosis
/
Biomarkers, Tumor
/
Central Nervous System
/
Glioblastoma
/
Natural History
/
Immunotherapy
Type of study:
Prognostic study
Limits:
Female
/
Humans
/
Male
Language:
English
Journal:
Clin. transl. oncol. (Print)
Year:
2016
Document type:
Article
Institution/Affiliation country:
Hospital Universitario de Burgos/España