Background: Due to their rarity, the clinicopathological characteristics and prognostic factors of spinal cord gliomas are still unclear. Here, we aimed to clarify these issues in a cohort of 108 spinal cord astrocytomas.
Methods: We characterized the clinicopathological characteristics, including 2016 World Health Organization (WHO) grade, age, sex, location, segment length, resection, pre- and postsurgery, Modified McCormick Scale (MMS), radio- and chemotherapy, and Ki-67 and H3 K27M mutations, in 108 spinal cord astrocytomas through heatmaps. The Cox regression analysis and Kaplan-Meier curves were used to study the prognostic value of these clinicopathological features.
Results: There are a total 38 H3 K27M-mutant tumors, including 31 cases with histological grade II/III tumors. The age of low-grade astrocytoma patients (WHO grade I/II, n = 54) was significantly younger (27.0 vs 35.5 years, P = .001) than those with high-grade tumors (WHO grade III/IV, n = 54). All patients underwent surgical resection with neurophysiological monitoring, and the surgery did not result in significant changes in MMS. The presurgery MMS was associated with overall survival in the high-grade subgroup (P = .008) but not in the low-grade subgroup (P = .312). While, the high content of resection improved the survival of only patients with low-grade astrocytomas (P = .016) but not those with high-grade astrocytomas (P = .475). Both the low-grade and high-grade astrocytomas had no obvious benefit from neither adjuvant chemotherapy nor radiotherapy (all P > .05).
Conclusions: We characterized the clinicopathological characteristics and their prognostic values in 108 spinal cord astrocytomas, which could help with evidence-based management of spinal cord astrocytomas.
Keywords: H3 K27M; astrocytoma; clinicopathological feature; spinal cord tumor; survival.
© 2020 The Authors. Cancer Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.