Clinical features, mechanisms, and management of pseudoprogression in malignant gliomas

May 3, 2008The Lancet. Oncology

Symptoms, causes, and treatment of false tumor growth in aggressive brain cancers

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Abstract

Pseudoprogression can occur in up to 20% of patients treated with temozolomide chemoradiotherapy for glioblastoma.

  • Progressive lesions observed on MRI after treatment may not indicate tumour progression but rather a treatment effect.
  • These lesions often decrease in size or stabilise without additional treatment and tend to be clinically asymptomatic.
  • Treatment-related necrosis occurs more frequently and earlier after temozolomide chemotherapy compared to radiotherapy alone.
  • Chemoradiotherapy may result in greater tumour-cell and blood vessel cell death, leading to side effects that resemble tumour progression.
  • Management strategies for asymptomatic patients include continuing adjuvant temozolomide, while symptomatic patients may require surgery.

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