Imaging-Based Patterns of Failure following Re-Irradiation for Recurrent/Progressive High-Grade Glioma

J Pers Med. 2023 Apr 19;13(4):685. doi: 10.3390/jpm13040685.

Abstract

Background: Re-irradiation (ReRT) is an effective treatment modality in appropriately selected patients with recurrent/progressive high-grade glioma (HGG). The literature is limited regarding recurrence patterns following ReRT, which was investigated in the current study.

Methods: Patients with available radiation (RT) contours, dosimetry, and imaging-based evidence of recurrence were included in the retrospective study. All patients were treated with fractionated focal conformal RT. Recurrence was detected on imaging with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and/ or amino-acid positron emission tomography (PET), which was co-registered with the RT planning dataset. Failure patterns were classified as central, marginal, and distant if >80%, 20-80%, or <20% of the recurrence volumes were within 95% isodose lines, respectively.

Results: Thirty-seven patients were included in the current analysis. A total of 92% of patients had undergone surgery before ReRT, and 84% received chemotherapy. The median time to recurrence was 9 months. Central, marginal, and distant failures were seen in 27 (73%), 4 (11%), and 6 (16%) patients, respectively. None of the patient-, disease-, or treatment-related factors were significantly different across different recurrence patterns.

Conclusion: Failures are seen predominantly within the high-dose region following ReRT in recurrent/ progressive HGG.

Keywords: MRI; PET; high-grade glioma; patterns of failure; re-irradiation; recurrence.

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.