Inability of computed tomography appearance of recurrent malignant astrocytoma to predict survival following reoperation.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
Computed tomographic (CT) scans of 39 patients who underwent reoperation for recurrent malignant astrocytoma at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center from 1980 through 1987 were reviewed and correlated with the patients' clinical course. Histologic diagnosis (anaplastic astrocytoma v glioblastoma multiforme) had a statistically significant impact on survival following reoperation (P = .038). Patients with high preoperative performance status (P = .29), total resection by postoperative CT scan (P = .15), and frontal lobe tumors (P = .17) tended to survive longer following reoperation. The size of the tumor at the time of recurrence did not correlate with survival following reoperation. Patients with a small amount of peritumoral edema at the time of recurrence tended to survive longer, but the effect was small (P = .16). Prognosis following reoperation cannot be accurately predicted on the basis of tumor appearance on CT scan.