Extent of radiological response does not reflect survival in primary central nervous system lymphoma

Publication date

2021-02-23

Authors

van der Meulen, Matthijs
Postma, Alida A
Smits, Marion
Bakunina, Katerina
Minnema, Monique C.ORCID 0000-0002-3139-8379ISNI 0000000394782842
Seute, TatjanaORCID 0000-0002-3668-6177
Cull, Gavin
Enting, Roelien H
van der Poel, Marjolein
Stevens, Wendy B C

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Abstract

Background: In primary central nervous system lymphoma (PCNSL), small enhancing lesions can persist after treatment. It is unknown whether a difference in response category (complete response [CR], complete response unconfirmed [CRu], or partial response [PR]) reflects survival. We aimed to determine the value of a central radiology review on response assessment and whether the extent of response influenced progression-free and/or overall survival. Methods: All patients in the HOVON 105/ALLG NHL 24 study with at least a baseline MRI and one MRI made for response evaluation available for central review were included. Tumor measurements were done by 2 independent central reviewers, disagreements were adjudicated by a third reviewer. Crude agreement and interobserver agreement (Cohen's kappa) were calculated. Differences in progression-free and overall survival between different categories of response at the end-of-protocol-treatment were assessed by the log-rank test in a landmark survival-analysis. Results: Agreement between the central reviewers was 61.7% and between local and central response assessment was 63.0%. Cohen's kappa's, which corrects for expected agreement, were 0.44 and 0.46 (moderate), respectively. Progression agreement or not was 93.3% (kappa 0.87) between local and central response assessment. There were no significant differences in progression-free and overall survival between patients with CR, CRu, or PR at the end-of-protocol-treatment, according to both local and central response assessment. Conclusions: Reliability of response assessment (CR/CRu/PR) is moderate even by central radiology review and these response categories do not reliably predict survival. Therefore, primary outcome in PCNSL studies should be survival rather than CR or CR/CRu-rate.

Keywords

central radiology review, complete response, MRI, response evaluation, survival, Clinical Neurology, Oncology, Surgery, Journal Article

Citation

van der Meulen, M, Postma, A A, Smits, M, Bakunina, K, Minnema, M C, Seute, T, Cull, G, Enting, R H, van der Poel, M, Stevens, W B C, Brandsma, D, Beeker, A, Doorduijn, J K, Issa, S, van den Bent, M J & Bromberg, J E C 2021, 'Extent of radiological response does not reflect survival in primary central nervous system lymphoma', Neuro-oncology advances, vol. 3, no. 1, vdab007, pp. 1-10. https://doi.org/10.1093/noajnl/vdab007