Induction of autophagy is a general mechanism associated with resistance to anticancer drugs and that its inhibition is a promising therapeutic strategy to enhance the effects of chemotherapy and improve clinical outcomes.
e20519 Background: Radiation Therapy Oncology Group 9402 compared PCV chemotherapy plus radiation therapy (PCV+RT) versus RT alone for anaplastic oligodendroglioma. Here we report 1) longitudinal changes in cognition and quality of life, 2) effects of patient factors and treatments on cognition, quality of life and survival, and 3) prognostic implications of cognition and quality of life. Methods: Cognition was assessed by Mini Mental Status Examination (MMSE) and quality of life by Brain-Quality of Life (B-QOL) by repeat assessments. Scores were analyzed for survivors and within five years of death. Shared parameter models evaluated MMSE/B-QOL with survival. Results: For survivors, MMSE and B-QOL scores were similar longitudinally and between treatments. For those dying within 5 years, MMSE scores were stable initially, while B-QOL scores decreased; both declined rapidly in the last year of life and similarly between arms. In the aggregate, scores decreased over time (P=0.0413 for MMSE; P=0.0016 for B-QOL) and were superior with age < 50 years (P<0.001 for MMSE; P=0.0554 for B-QOL) and KPS 80–100 (P<0.001). Younger age and higher KPS were associated with longer survival. After adjusting for patient factors and drop-out, survival was longer after PCV+RT (HR=0.66, 95% CI=0.49–0.9, P=0.0084; HR=0.74, 95% CI=0.54–1.01, P=0.0592) in models with MMSE and B-QOL. There were no differences in MMSE and B-QOL scores between arms (P=0.4752 and P=0.2767, respectively); higher scores predicted longer survival. Conclusions: MMSE and B-QOL scores held steady in both arms for survivors. For those who died, B-QOL scores declined slowly until the last year of life, then rapidly. Younger, fitter patients had better MMSE and B-QOL scores and longer survival. No significant financial relationships to disclose.
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