Pediatric high grade glioma of the spinal cord: results of the HIT-GBM database.

Standard

Pediatric high grade glioma of the spinal cord: results of the HIT-GBM database. / Wolff, Birte; Ng, Ann; Roth, Daniela; Parthey, Kathleen; Warmuth-Metz, Monika; Eyrich, Matthias; Kordes, Uwe; Kortmann, Rolf; Pietsch, Torsten; Kramm, Christof; Wolff, Johannes Ea.

in: J NEURO-ONCOL, Jahrgang 107, Nr. 1, 1, 2012, S. 139-146.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Wolff, B, Ng, A, Roth, D, Parthey, K, Warmuth-Metz, M, Eyrich, M, Kordes, U, Kortmann, R, Pietsch, T, Kramm, C & Wolff, JE 2012, 'Pediatric high grade glioma of the spinal cord: results of the HIT-GBM database.', J NEURO-ONCOL, Jg. 107, Nr. 1, 1, S. 139-146. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21964697?dopt=Citation>

APA

Wolff, B., Ng, A., Roth, D., Parthey, K., Warmuth-Metz, M., Eyrich, M., Kordes, U., Kortmann, R., Pietsch, T., Kramm, C., & Wolff, J. E. (2012). Pediatric high grade glioma of the spinal cord: results of the HIT-GBM database. J NEURO-ONCOL, 107(1), 139-146. [1]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21964697?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Wolff B, Ng A, Roth D, Parthey K, Warmuth-Metz M, Eyrich M et al. Pediatric high grade glioma of the spinal cord: results of the HIT-GBM database. J NEURO-ONCOL. 2012;107(1):139-146. 1.

Bibtex

@article{4db210313c794adfbd3405816d08844d,
title = "Pediatric high grade glioma of the spinal cord: results of the HIT-GBM database.",
abstract = "Little is known about pediatric spinal cord high grade gliomas (SCHGG) beyond their dismal prognosis. Here, we analyzed the HIT-GBM({\textregistered}) database for the influence of surgical resection on survival. Between 1991 and 2010 the HIT-GBM group collected data from European children diagnosed with high grade glioma. Patients with the following inclusion criteria were analyzed in this study: astrocytic histology, WHO grade III or IV, age at diagnosis <18 years, and tumor localized to the spinal cord. 28 patients (mean age 11.28 years, 14 male) with primary SCHGG were identified. The tumor sizes were measured by the span across adjacent vertebrae and varied greatly (range: 1-20, median: 4). Histology was classified as WHO grade III in 15 and grade IV in 13 tumors. Of note, the four largest tumors identified were WHO grade III. Surgery was classified as complete resection (n = 6), subtotal resection (STR) (n = 7), partial resection (n = 12) or biopsy only (n = 3). 27 patients received chemotherapy, 22 of which also received radiation. With the mean follow-up time of 2.88 (SD ± 2.95) years, 14 patients were still alive resulting in a median overall survival of 2.5 years (SE ± 1.6). The positive prognostic indicators for overall survival were: age younger than 5 years (P = 0.047), WHO grade III (P = 0.046), absence of necrosis (P = 0.025) and gross total resection (GTR) (P = 0.012). The prognosis of SCHGG might not be as miserable as generally assumed. GTR is of benefit. Larger data sets and meta-analysis are necessary to identify patient sub-groups.",
author = "Birte Wolff and Ann Ng and Daniela Roth and Kathleen Parthey and Monika Warmuth-Metz and Matthias Eyrich and Uwe Kordes and Rolf Kortmann and Torsten Pietsch and Christof Kramm and Wolff, {Johannes Ea}",
year = "2012",
language = "English",
volume = "107",
pages = "139--146",
journal = "J NEURO-ONCOL",
issn = "0167-594X",
publisher = "Kluwer Academic Publishers",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Pediatric high grade glioma of the spinal cord: results of the HIT-GBM database.

AU - Wolff, Birte

AU - Ng, Ann

AU - Roth, Daniela

AU - Parthey, Kathleen

AU - Warmuth-Metz, Monika

AU - Eyrich, Matthias

AU - Kordes, Uwe

AU - Kortmann, Rolf

AU - Pietsch, Torsten

AU - Kramm, Christof

AU - Wolff, Johannes Ea

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - Little is known about pediatric spinal cord high grade gliomas (SCHGG) beyond their dismal prognosis. Here, we analyzed the HIT-GBM(®) database for the influence of surgical resection on survival. Between 1991 and 2010 the HIT-GBM group collected data from European children diagnosed with high grade glioma. Patients with the following inclusion criteria were analyzed in this study: astrocytic histology, WHO grade III or IV, age at diagnosis <18 years, and tumor localized to the spinal cord. 28 patients (mean age 11.28 years, 14 male) with primary SCHGG were identified. The tumor sizes were measured by the span across adjacent vertebrae and varied greatly (range: 1-20, median: 4). Histology was classified as WHO grade III in 15 and grade IV in 13 tumors. Of note, the four largest tumors identified were WHO grade III. Surgery was classified as complete resection (n = 6), subtotal resection (STR) (n = 7), partial resection (n = 12) or biopsy only (n = 3). 27 patients received chemotherapy, 22 of which also received radiation. With the mean follow-up time of 2.88 (SD ± 2.95) years, 14 patients were still alive resulting in a median overall survival of 2.5 years (SE ± 1.6). The positive prognostic indicators for overall survival were: age younger than 5 years (P = 0.047), WHO grade III (P = 0.046), absence of necrosis (P = 0.025) and gross total resection (GTR) (P = 0.012). The prognosis of SCHGG might not be as miserable as generally assumed. GTR is of benefit. Larger data sets and meta-analysis are necessary to identify patient sub-groups.

AB - Little is known about pediatric spinal cord high grade gliomas (SCHGG) beyond their dismal prognosis. Here, we analyzed the HIT-GBM(®) database for the influence of surgical resection on survival. Between 1991 and 2010 the HIT-GBM group collected data from European children diagnosed with high grade glioma. Patients with the following inclusion criteria were analyzed in this study: astrocytic histology, WHO grade III or IV, age at diagnosis <18 years, and tumor localized to the spinal cord. 28 patients (mean age 11.28 years, 14 male) with primary SCHGG were identified. The tumor sizes were measured by the span across adjacent vertebrae and varied greatly (range: 1-20, median: 4). Histology was classified as WHO grade III in 15 and grade IV in 13 tumors. Of note, the four largest tumors identified were WHO grade III. Surgery was classified as complete resection (n = 6), subtotal resection (STR) (n = 7), partial resection (n = 12) or biopsy only (n = 3). 27 patients received chemotherapy, 22 of which also received radiation. With the mean follow-up time of 2.88 (SD ± 2.95) years, 14 patients were still alive resulting in a median overall survival of 2.5 years (SE ± 1.6). The positive prognostic indicators for overall survival were: age younger than 5 years (P = 0.047), WHO grade III (P = 0.046), absence of necrosis (P = 0.025) and gross total resection (GTR) (P = 0.012). The prognosis of SCHGG might not be as miserable as generally assumed. GTR is of benefit. Larger data sets and meta-analysis are necessary to identify patient sub-groups.

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

VL - 107

SP - 139

EP - 146

JO - J NEURO-ONCOL

JF - J NEURO-ONCOL

SN - 0167-594X

IS - 1

M1 - 1

ER -