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Association of hyperglycemia and molecular subclass on survival in IDH-wildtype glioblastoma

BACKGROUND: Hyperglycemia has been associated with worse survival in glioblastoma. Attempts to lower glucose yielded mixed responses which could be due to molecularly distinct GBM subclasses. METHODS: Clinical, laboratory, and molecular data on 89 IDH-wt GBMs profiled by clinical next-generation seq...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Liu, Elisa K, Vasudevaraja, Varshini, Sviderskiy, Vladislav O, Feng, Yang, Tran, Ivy, Serrano, Jonathan, Cordova, Christine, Kurz, Sylvia C, Golfinos, John G, Sulman, Erik P, Orringer, Daniel A, Placantonakis, Dimitris, Possemato, Richard, Snuderl, Matija
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9653172/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36382106
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/noajnl/vdac163
Descripción
Sumario:BACKGROUND: Hyperglycemia has been associated with worse survival in glioblastoma. Attempts to lower glucose yielded mixed responses which could be due to molecularly distinct GBM subclasses. METHODS: Clinical, laboratory, and molecular data on 89 IDH-wt GBMs profiled by clinical next-generation sequencing and treated with Stupp protocol were reviewed. IDH-wt GBMs were sub-classified into RTK I (Proneural), RTK II (Classical) and Mesenchymal subtypes using whole-genome DNA methylation. Average glucose was calculated by time-weighting glucose measurements between diagnosis and last follow-up. RESULTS: Patients were stratified into three groups using average glucose: tertile one (<100 mg/dL), tertile two (100–115 mg/dL), and tertile three (>115 mg/dL). Comparison across glucose tertiles revealed no differences in performance status (KPS), dexamethasone dose, MGMT methylation, or methylation subclass. Overall survival (OS) was not affected by methylation subclass (P = .9) but decreased with higher glucose (P = .015). Higher glucose tertiles were associated with poorer OS among RTK I (P = .08) and mesenchymal tumors (P = .05), but not RTK II (P = .99). After controlling for age, KPS, dexamethasone, and MGMT status, glucose remained significantly associated with OS (aHR = 5.2, P = .02). Methylation clustering did not identify unique signatures associated with high or low glucose levels. Metabolomic analysis of 23 tumors showed minimal variation across metabolites without differences between molecular subclasses. CONCLUSION: Higher average glucose values were associated with poorer OS in RTKI and Mesenchymal IDH-wt GBM, but not RTKII. There were no discernible epigenetic or metabolomic differences between tumors in different glucose environments, suggesting a potential survival benefit to lowering systemic glucose in selected molecular subtypes.