Recursive partitioning analysis of prognostic factors for glioblastoma patients aged 70 years or older

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Abstract

Background: The most-used prognostic scheme for malignant gliomas included only patients aged 18 to 70 years. The purpose of this study was to develop a prognostic model for patients ≥70 years of age with newly diagnosed glioblastoma. Methods: A total of 437 patients ≥70 years of age with newly diagnosed glioblastoma, pooled from 2 tertiary academic institutions, was identified for recursive partitioning analysis (RPA). The resulting prognostic model, based on the final pruned RPA tree, was validated using 265 glioblastoma patients ≥70 years of age from a data set independently compiled by a French consortium. Results: RPA produced 9 terminal nodes, which were pruned to 4 prognostic subgroups with markedly different median survivals: subgroup I = patients <75.5 years of age who underwent surgical resection (9.3 months); subgroup II = patients ≥75.5 years of age who underwent surgical resection (6.4 months); subgroup III = patients with Karnofsky performance status of 70 to 100 who underwent biopsy only (4.6 months); and subgroup IV = patients with Karnofsky performance status <70 who underwent biopsy only (2.3 months). Application of this prognostic model to the French cohort also resulted in significantly different (P

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Scott, J. G., Bauchet, L., Fraum, T. J., Nayak, L., Cooper, A. R., Chao, S. T., … Iwamoto, F. M. (2012). Recursive partitioning analysis of prognostic factors for glioblastoma patients aged 70 years or older. Cancer, 118(22), 5595–5600. https://doi.org/10.1002/cncr.27570

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