Abstract

Abstract BACKGROUND The clinical trial NRG/RTOG 0825 sought to determine if the addition of bevacizumab to temozolomide and radiation improves survival in patients with newly diagnosed glioblastomas. Tertiary objectives included measuring the effect of the addition of bevacizumab to standard chemoradiation on neurocognitive function and quality of life. In this study, we describe brain atrophy changes as measured by ventricular volume expansion. METHODS We analyzed longitudinal MRI brain studies obtained from NRG/RTOG-0825. Volume changes in the contralesional (non-tumor) lateral ventricle were measured. Patients were included if they had either a scan at post operative (week 0) or post radiation baseline (week 10). Patients were also required to have at least one follow-up MRI brain scan 6 months or more from their baseline scans (at Week 0 or Week 10). Volumes were delineated using tissue segmentation in Slicer software. RESULTS 177 patients were identified with eligible baseline scans at Week 0 and 162 patients at Week 10. For participants analyzed at 6 months from the Week 0 scan, mean ventricular volume increased by 54.70% (SEM: 3.21%, t = 6.41, p < 0.001, N = 135). For patients analyzed at 6 months from the Week 10 scan, mean ventricular volume increased by 31.89% (SEM: 2.52%, t = 3.96, p < 0.001, Nf117). CONCLUSIONS This study presents evidence of progressive brain volume loss in patients with glioblastoma treated with standard chemoradiation with or without anti-VEGF therapy. This is one of the largest sample sizes of volumetric analysis in real world patients with glioblastoma. These volume changes begin early in the disease course and may precede treatment. Next directions include correlating these volumetric changes with neurocognitive score changes, quality of life scores and analyzing these changes by treatment arm.

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