Bioengineering (Jan 2019)

Looking for A Place for Dose-Dense TMZ Regimens in GBM Patients: An Experience with MGMT Exploratory Evaluation

  • Luca Napoleoni,
  • Alessio Cortellini,
  • Katia Cannita,
  • Alessandro Parisi,
  • Antonella Dal Mas,
  • Giuseppe Calvisi,
  • Olga Venditti,
  • Paola Lanfiuti Baldi,
  • Valentina Cocciolone,
  • Alessandro Ricci,
  • Corrado Ficorella

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering6010011
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
p. 11

Abstract

Read online

Prolonged exposure to temozolomide (TMZ) could improve clinical outcomes in recurrent glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) patients. We previously developed a dose-dense regimen of TMZ in a phase II study (180 mg/m2 from days 1 to 5 every two weeks). A retrospective analysis of patients with macroscopic residual GBM treated with “post-induction” dose-dense TMZ was conducted, adding an explorative subgroup analyses among patients with different O6-methylguanine DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) expressions (negative vs positive, < vs ≥ of 50 % of cells stained, < vs ≥ 70% of cells stained). Thirty-six patients were evaluated; after a median follow-up of 36 weeks, median Progression Free Survival (PFS) and median Overall Survival (OS) were 19 and 34 weeks, respectively. MGMT expression (70% cut-off) and sex were confirmed as independent predictors for disease control rate (DCR) at multivariate analysis. At univariate analysis ECOG-PS, Sex (female), extensive tumor resection was shown to be related to a longer PFS, while MGMT expression (cutoff 70%) to a shorter PFS. Multivariate analysis with Cox hazard regression confirmed only ECOGPS as an independent predictor for PFS. ECOG-PS showed to be significant related to a longer OS. Our analysis showed that dose-dense TMZ regimens are still an option for patients with recurrent GBM, but should be used for re-challenge treatments. MGMT immunohistochemistry high expression might be used as a “surrogate” negative predictor for DCR for dd-TMZ treatments.

Keywords