Bevacizumab continuation beyond initial bevacizumab progression among recurrent glioblastoma patients.
Journal Article (Journal Article)
BACKGROUND: Bevacizumab improves outcome for most recurrent glioblastoma patients, but the duration of benefit is limited and survival after initial bevacizumab progression is poor. We evaluated bevacizumab continuation beyond initial progression among recurrent glioblastoma patients as it is a common, yet unsupported practice in some countries. METHODS: We analysed outcome among all patients (n=99) who received subsequent therapy after progression on one of five consecutive, single-arm, phase II clinical trials evaluating bevacizumab regimens for recurrent glioblastoma. Of note, the five trials contained similar eligibility, treatment and assessment criteria, and achieved comparable outcome. RESULTS: The median overall survival (OS) and OS at 6 months for patients who continued bevacizumab therapy (n=55) were 5.9 months (95% confidence interval (CI): 4.4, 7.6) and 49.2% (95% CI: 35.2, 61.8), compared with 4.0 months (95% CI: 2.1, 5.4) and 29.5% (95% CI: 17.0, 43.2) for patients treated with a non-bevacizumab regimen (n=44; P=0.014). Bevacizumab continuation was an independent predictor of improved OS (hazard ratio=0.64; P=0.04). CONCLUSION: The results of our retrospective pooled analysis suggest that bevacizumab continuation beyond initial progression modestly improves survival compared with available non-bevacizumab therapy for recurrent glioblastoma patients require evaluation in an appropriately randomised, prospective trial.
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Duke Authors
- Bigner, Darell Doty
- Desjardins, Annick
- Friedman, Allan Howard
- Friedman, Henry Seth
- Herndon II, James Emmett
- Peters, Katherine Barnett
- Sampson, John Howard
Cited Authors
- Reardon, DA; Herndon, JE; Peters, KB; Desjardins, A; Coan, A; Lou, E; Sumrall, AL; Turner, S; Lipp, ES; Sathornsumetee, S; Rich, JN; Sampson, JH; Friedman, AH; Boulton, ST; Bigner, DD; Friedman, HS; Vredenburgh, JJ
Published Date
- October 23, 2012
Published In
Volume / Issue
- 107 / 9
Start / End Page
- 1481 - 1487
PubMed ID
- 23037712
Pubmed Central ID
- PMC3493761
Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)
- 1532-1827
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
- 10.1038/bjc.2012.415
Language
- eng
Conference Location
- England