Abstract

Aims. We intended to assess the clinicopathological features and treatment outcome in patients of primary gliosarcoma, a rare malignant brain tumour.Materials and methods. Medical records were reviewed and data collected on primary gliosarcoma over an 8-year period (2002–2009) from the departmental archives. Overall survival (OS) was analysed by Kaplan–Meier method.Results. Seventeen patients met the study criterion (male:female = 9:8). Median age and performance status at presentation were 50 years and Karnofsky performance scale (KPS) 70, respectively. Symptoms of raised intracranial tension (in 100%) and motor impairment (in 64.7%) were commonly observed. Tumour location was frontal in four patients, temporal in three, parietal in three, thalamic in one, multilobed in five and multicentric in one. All patients underwent maximal safe surgery (total excision-10, near-total excision-2, subtotal excision and decompression-5). On histopathology, all tumours showed biphasic pattern, glial component positive for glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and mesenchymal component positive for vimentin and reticulin. Atypia, mitoses, necrosis and endothelial proliferation were identified in the glial component. Post-operative radiotherapy (median dose – 60 Gy/30#/6 weeks) was used in 15 patients (88.2%). Concurrent and adjuvant chemotherapy with temozolomide (TMZ) were used in two patients depending upon affordability. After the completion of treatment, 35.3% patients were asymptomatic, 23.5% had symptomatic improvement, while 41.2% deteriorated. Salvage therapy for local recurrence was used in three patients (temporal lobectomy-1; total excision-1; TMZ+ bevacizumab-1). At last follow-up (FU), eight patients were alive, seven patients dead and two patients lost to FU with symptom. Median overall survival in the evaluable patients (N = 15) was noted to be 8.27 months (6 month survival 60.76%).Conclusions. Primary gliosarcoma, a variant of glioblastoma poses clinical challenge because of rarity, poor prognosis and limited experience. In our centre, principle of therapy is akin to that of glioblastoma – surgery followed by radiation along with concurrent and adjuvant TMZ. However, chemotherapy is often cost-prohibitive in our setting as mirrored by limited use (17.6%). Median survival of only 8.27 months in our series is in concert with the existing survival result of primary gliosarcoma in world literature (6.25–11.5 months).

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