Abstract

Abstract Combined chemotherapy with temozolomide (TMZ), bevacizumab (BEV) and irinotecan (IRI) [TBI] has been used in patients with recurrent or progressive high-grade gliomas. Patients tolerated the regimen well with increased frequency of reversible clinical myelosuppression (CM), hypertension and proteinuria. However, organ-specific toxicities have never been evaluated by post-mortem examination. From 2009 to 2019, post-mortem examinations were performed in seventy-six decedents, including gliomas (N=68, 44/M and 24/F, median age: 59, ranging 23–80 years old) and brain metastases (N=8, 5/M and 3/F, ranging 39–75 years old). Twenty-four glioma subjects were treated with 1–25 cycles TBI (median 5.5) at glioma recurrence. All subjects’ clinical information, treatment histories and adverse events were collected. Five (7.7%, 5/65) glioma decedents (excluding three glioma patients who never received TMZ) permanently discontinued TMZ due to severe CM during concurrent chemoradiation therapy. There is no significantly elevated severity of CM from TBI when compared to standard of care therapies, nor when comparing extended TMZ treatment to the standard 12 cycles of TMZ. However, exposure to IRI significantly increased the CM occurrence (p< 0.05). Among glioma decedents, the most common cause of death was tumor progression (63.2 %, N=43), followed by aspiration pneumonia (48.5%, N=33). No deaths were attributed to acute toxicity from TBI. An electromicroscopic (EM) examination was performed in addition to routine autopsy procedures to investigate the cause of hypertension and proteinuria frequently developing in patients received BEV therapy. Ultrastructural evidence of thrombotic microangiopathy was observed in the kidneys among BEV users; however, it is difficult to conclude such changes were related to BEV due to rapid autolytic changes and artifacts. CONCLUSION: IRI, not the extended use of TMZ, significantly increased the frequency of reversible CM in recurrent glioma patients. There are no unexpected adverse events or organ-specific toxicities detected among glioma decedents who received the TBI regimen.

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