Introduction
Guidelines for treatment of diffuse glioma in adults at diagnosis and at first recurrence are well established. Reference Weller, van den Bent and Preusser1,Reference Mohile, Messersmith and Gatson2 However, there is no general consensus on how to treat further recurrences of glioma. Patient-related factors and the effect of previous treatments influence the decision for re-resection, radiotherapy, and/or further lines of systemic therapy. Although re-resection or radiation might be considered, these options are of limited impact due to an unfavorable prognosis and potential complications and toxicities. Options for systemic therapy for patients with multiply recurrent gliomas are limited, and few trials have been conducted for glioma beyond first progression. Prior cohort studies have evaluated the effect of etoposide combined with carboplatin in heavily pretreated patients with glioma. Reference Chen, Zhao and Hou3–Reference Franceschi, Cavallo and Scopece5 There are no data available on the efficacy of oral etoposide monotherapy in recurrent glioma. This retrospective study evaluated the efficacy and toxicity of oral etoposide chemotherapy for multiply recurrent WHO grade 2–4 diffuse glioma. 6
Methods
In this retrospective, single-center observational cohort study, we included all adult (≥18 years-old) patients diagnosed with a histologically proven diffuse glioma (WHO grade 2–4) and with a radiographically proven recurrent diffuse glioma, treated with oral etoposide chemotherapy between January 2016 and December 2020 at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, Toronto, Canada. Patient-related characteristics (sex, age at diagnosis, and performance status before starting etoposide) and tumor characteristics (tumor type: astrocytoma/oligodendroglioma/glioblastoma, WHO grade, and MGMT methylation status) were collected from chart analysis. Detailed treatment history (extent of resection, previous chemotherapy and radiation) was obtained. Oral etoposide was given at a dose of 50mg/m2 for 21 days of a 28-day cycle. PFS was defined as time from starting etoposide to radiographic progression or death from any cause. OS was defined as time from starting etoposide to death from any cause.
Survival was calculated for the total cohort and separately for oligodendroglioma (grade 2 or 3), astrocytoma (grade 2 or 3), and glioblastoma (grade 4) as defined by the 2016 WHO guidelines. These categories were based on histological information, since molecular data were not available on all samples. Survival was also analyzed for those who received etoposide monotherapy versus those who received bevacizumab concurrently. Survival analyses were done with the Kaplan–Meier method with a 95% confidence interval (CI). Differences between groups were calculated with a log-rank test. Toxicity (anemia, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, kidney, and liver function) was graded according to the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events v5.0 (CTCAE). The study was approved by the Institutional Research Board of the University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Results
We included 48 patients (31.3% female) with a median age of 43 years-old (range 24–78) at the time of diagnosis; only four patients were ≥65 years old. The majority were diagnosed with grade 4 glioblastoma (27 patients, 56.3%), followed by astrocytoma grade 2 or 3 (12 patients, 25.0%), and oligodendroglioma (9 patients, 18.8%); one patient was diagnosed with pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma (PXA). O6-methylguanine-DNA methyl-transferase (MGMT) methylation status was known for 15 patients, with 4 patients having hypermethylated MGMT (Table 1).
All patients received radiotherapy (with or without concurrent temozolomide) and adjuvant temozolomide as first-line therapy. And, all but four patients were also treated with lomustine before etoposide was given. Furthermore, depending on the pathological diagnosis, a variety of other treatments, including procarbazine, lomustine, and vincristine (PCV)-chemotherapy, and trial medication were given prior to etoposide. Etoposide was given as third-, fourth-, or fifth-line treatment in 37.5%, 33.3%, and 29.2% of the patients, respectively. The vast majority (32 patients, 66.7%) received 1–2 cycles of etoposide. All patients received 50 mg/m2 for 21 days of a 28-day cycle; 16 patients received>2 cycles (range 3–7). Only two patients received a lower dose because of minor toxicities. Etoposide was combined with bevacizumab in 8 patients. Etoposide was stopped because of progression in 39 patients (81.3%) and in 5 (10.4%) because of toxicity. Four patients were censored after being lost to follow-up. Only one patient had grade 3 toxicity (anemia), Table 2. Twenty-two patients (45.9%) received another line of treatment after etoposide was stopped, and the remaining 26 patients were transferred to palliative care. From those who received salvage therapy after etoposide, 10 received bevacizumab, 8 received procarbazine monotherapy, another 2 received lomustine, and the remaining two patients received a second radiation, one with and one without a re-challenge of temozolomide.
For the total cohort, the median PFS after initiating etoposide was 8.6 weeks (95% CI: 8.3–8.9), and OS after initiating etoposide was 4.0 months (median, 95% CI: 2.4–5.6, Fig. 1a, b). The OS after initiating etoposide in patients with oligodendroglioma was better with a median OS (95% CI) of 13 months (0.7–25.3), compared to those with an astrocytoma (3 months, 1.3–4.6) or a glioblastoma (4 months, 2.6–5.4, Fig. 1c). The difference in OS between these three groups was not statistically significant (p = 0.15). Bevacizumab was combined with etoposide in only 8 patients, and OS was not significantly different from those who received etoposide monotherapy (median 4 vs 5 months, p = 0.61, Fig. 1d). There is no statistically significant difference in OS between those who received etoposide as 3rd, 4th, or 5th line of treatment, median OS (95% CI): 5 months (2.2–7.7), 6 months (0.0–14.6), 3 months (1.5–4.5), respectively (p = 0.105).
Discussion
In this single center cohort study, we demonstrated that, in heavily pretreated patients with multiply recurrent diffuse glioma who had very limited therapeutic options, oral etoposide was well tolerated. The overall survival in this heterogeneous cohort was 4 months. The PFS we observed for this cohort is similar to what has been reported in two other smaller studies. Reference Chen, Zhao and Hou3,Reference Tonder, Weller, Eisele and Roth4 The OS was slightly higher (median 9–10 months) in other studies. Reference Chen, Zhao and Hou3,Reference Franceschi, Cavallo and Scopece5 In all studies, the effect of etoposide in multiply recurrent glioma was analyzed retrospectively. In one study, 47 patients, mainly with a WHO grade 4 glioma, were treated with carboplatin and etoposide as third or fourth line of salvage treatment and the investigators found a PFS of 3 months and an OS of 9 months in the total population, but with better outcomes for grade 2 and 3 glioma: PFS of 4 months and an OS of 13 months. The survival in the grade 4 glioma is slightly higher than in our cohort, which might be explained by the combination of etoposide with carboplatin. The results in lower grade glioma are similar to our population. Reference Chen, Zhao and Hou3 Another smaller (n = 12) European study analyzed the effect of bevacizumab in combination with etoposide in heavily pretreated patients with high-grade glioma and found a PFS of 2.5 months and an OS of 3.3 months, which is slightly lower than we found in our population. Reference Tonder, Weller, Eisele and Roth4 Notably, these prior studies looked at etoposide in combination with other agents and not as monotherapy. The toxicity was much higher (CTCAE grade 3 or 4 in 30%–67% of the patients). Reference Tonder, Weller, Eisele and Roth4,Reference Franceschi, Cavallo and Scopece5 However, in all these studies, etoposide was combined with carboplatin in recurrent glioma patients. Reference Chen, Zhao and Hou3–Reference Franceschi, Cavallo and Scopece5 Although just 9 patients with an oligodendroglioma were included in this study, interestingly, we observed a median OS of 13 months. This could be explained by oligodendrogliomas being more chemosensitive Reference van den Bent7,Reference Cairncross and Berkey8 and having a better prognosis overall.
In this study of a highly selected heterogeneous group of patients, who received a median of 1 cycle of oral etoposide, this therapy was well tolerated, and appears to have a better toxicity profile than temozolomide and lomustine. Only 1 patient in our cohort had a grade 3–4 toxicity (2.1%), compared to historical studies showing grade 3–4 toxicities in 14% of patients treated with temozolomide and up to 25% in patients treated with lomustine. Reference Stupp, Mason and van den Bent9,Reference Weller and Le Rhun10 This study has demonstrated that etoposide can be administered safely as 3rd, 4th, or 5th line treatment. Given that survival was not influenced by timing of etoposide treatment, our results do not suggest an optimal time to use etoposide. In addition, previous treatment with multiple lines of systemic treatments might have influenced the response to etoposide. Since treatment options are few and limited in multiply recurrent glioma patients and lack of better drugs, our results suggest that etoposide is an option following second recurrence.
Limitations of this analysis include the small cohort of selected patients and the fact that most patients received just 1 or 2 cycles of etoposide. Etoposide was only given when no other systemic or local options were available. Moreover, due to the retrospective nature of this series, the interpretation is limited by missing molecular data, including isocitrate dehydrogenase and MGMT methylation status in some patients. However, the role of MGMT status for the effect of etoposide is unclear. Conclusion about the efficacy of etoposide cannot be made, since no comparison with other treatments or best supportive care were made. However, our study is the first series that describes the effect of a relatively tolerable regimen with oral etoposide alone in adults with a recurrent diffuse glioma.
Conclusion
Oral etoposide is a well-tolerated chemotherapy in adult patients with a recurrent diffuse glioma. The treatment should be considered in very poor prognosis patients, provided their performance status is sufficient to receive another line of chemotherapy.
Acknowledgments
None.
Competing interests
Dr Warren Mason reports consulting for Servier, Novocure, Merck, Boehringer Ingelheim, and AnHeart Therapeutics, fees paid to the institution. The other authors declare no conflicts of interest relevant for this work.
Statement of authorship
MvdM: collected and interpreted the data, wrote the first version of the manuscript, MC: analyzed and interpreted the data, revised the manuscript, WPM: interpreted the data and supervised this study.