Abstract

e14035 Background: With an average overall survival of 12-18 months, glioblastoma has a particularly grim diagnosis. Standard treatment of glioblastoma, following detection on MRI, is surgical resection followed by radiation therapy and chemotherapy and is monitored through MR imaging. Glioblastoma has a unique heterogenous nature that complicates visualization of subtly enhancing tumor. This study used autopsy tissue samples taken from glioblastoma patients with varying treatment, to examine the effects of treatment on cell density within regions of contrast enhancement, using T1-weighted subtraction maps (T1S) from the last MR images to death. Methods: Eight patients diagnosed with glioblastoma at autopsy were recruited for this study. Two patients had no treatment and six received a combination of chemo-radiation and other treatments, including but not limited to bevacizumab (Bev) and TTFields therapy. At autopsy, whole brain samples were sliced axially aligned to the patient’s final MRI to death. Time between last MRI and death ranged from 4-27 days (mean 16 days). Overall survival (OS) ranged from 4-538 days (mean 307 days). Large tissue samples were taken from regions of suspected tumor or treatment effect, for a total of 18 tissue samples. Tissue samples were processed, H&E stained, and digitized at 40X resolution (Huron Slide Scanner). Cell density (cells/mm2) was calculated using digital histology. T1S were created for each patient by subtracting intensity normalized T1 weighted images from T1 post contrast images (T1C). Digital histology was aligned and resampled into MRI space using manual control point registration. Mixed effect models were used to compare differences in cell density across contrast enhancement (T1SE vs. NE) as well as across treatment groups (treatment vs. no treatment). Results: Cellularity was compared across regions of T1S enhancement (T1SE) and non-enhancement (NE) within manually selected regions of interest. Cell density compared between regions of T1SE and NE was not different (p=0.219). Total cell density was increased in patients who had received treatment compared to no treatment in both regions of T1SE and NE (p=0.014). Conclusions: Overall, cell density was increased in patients who had received treatment after diagnosis of glioblastoma. Additional research is needed to examine the extent of treatment’s effect on cellularity of glioblastoma. This work begins to characterize the use of T1S in evaluating glioblastoma tumor burden in patients with varying treatment histories.[Table: see text]

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