Abstract
To study the effect of metabolic characteristics of the tumor determined by 99mTc-MIBI single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) and various molecular genetic features on the outcomes of combination treatment of hemispheric glioblastomas. This single-center prospective cohort study involved 68 patients aged 25-78 years (38 males and 30 females) with primary glioblastomas. Hypermetylation of the promotor region of the MGMT gene was observed in 24 (42%) out of 57 patients. The IDH1 mutation was revealed in two (3.5%) patients. The catamnestic data were available for 66 out of 68 patients. The first SPECT/CT study was carried out before chemoradiation therapy; the second SPECT/CT study was performed after the chemoradiation therapy. In each study, quantitative measures were calculated for the early (15-30 min after the patient had received a radiopharmaceutical) and late (after 45-60 min) phases. The actuarial survival rates after 12 and 24 months were 69.6 and 29.1%, respectively. The median overall survival rate was 17.5 months (95% CI 12.9-20.3). Favorable prognostic factors for overall survival included the higher uptake index (UI) in the late phase compared to UI in the early phase of the first SPECT/CT study (p=0.0444), dynamics of changes in UI during the second SPECT/CT compared to baseline over 10% (p=0.0436), MGMT hypermethylation (p=0.0003), and duration of the period between surgery and initiation of chemoradiotherapy being <1 month (p=0.0008). No statistically significant correlations were revealed between the absolute UI values in the tumor and its molecular genetic features. The 99mTc-MIBI SPECT/CT can be used to predict overall survival and to plan radiation therapy of glioblastoma as it is more readily available at primary healthcare facilities than amino acid PET.
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