Reynolds Joshua A, Pecorari Isabella L, Ledet Alexander, Agarwal Vijay
Department of Neurological Surgery, Albert Einstein College of Medicine/Montefiore Medical Center, Bronx, NY 10461, USA.
Cancers (Basel). 2024 Apr 20;16(8):1579. doi: 10.3390/cancers16081579.
High-grade gliomas (HGGs; WHO grade III or IV) are the most common and lethal brain malignancy. Patients of Hispanic ethnicity are diagnosed with HGGs earlier than non-Hispanic patients, but they exhibit improved HGG survival following diagnosis. Either environmental or biological factors could explain this survival benefit. We aimed to determine if post-diagnosis advantages would still be present in Hispanic patients with high social vulnerability, an environmental condition predisposing patients to poor oncologic outcomes. HGG outcomes were retrospectively assessed in a cohort of 22 Hispanic patients and 33 non-Hispanic patients treated for HGGs from 2015 to 2020 at a single institution that serves a highly vulnerable region. Compared to non-Hispanic patients, Hispanic patients demonstrated higher social vulnerability index scores (96.8 + 0.7 vs. 76.3 + 4.6; *** = 0.0002) and a 14-month longer interval between diagnosis and recurrence (19.7 + 5.9 (n = 13) vs. 5.5 + 0.6 months (n = 19); ** = 0.001). In only those patients with more aggressive IDH-1 wildtype tumors (glioblastoma), Hispanic ethnicity still related to a longer time before recurrence (15.8 + 5.9 months (n = 9); 5.5 + 0.6 months (n = 18); * = 0.034), and in a multivariate analysis, Hispanic ethnicity predicted time-to-recurrence (* = 0.027) independent of patient age, functional status, MGMT gene methylation, or treatments received. Therefore, environmental factors, specifically social vulnerability, did not obscure the post-diagnosis benefits associated with Hispanic ethnicity. In future experiments, basic studies should be prioritized which investigate the cellular or genetic mechanisms underlying this ethnicity effect on HGG progression in the hopes of improving care for these devastating malignancies.
高级别胶质瘤(HGG;世界卫生组织III级或IV级)是最常见且致命的脑恶性肿瘤。西班牙裔患者被诊断出患有HGG的时间比非西班牙裔患者更早,但他们在诊断后的HGG生存期有所改善。环境或生物学因素都可以解释这种生存优势。我们旨在确定,对于社会脆弱性高的西班牙裔患者(一种使患者易出现不良肿瘤学结局的环境状况),诊断后的优势是否依然存在。对2015年至2020年在一个服务于高脆弱地区的单一机构接受HGG治疗的22名西班牙裔患者和33名非西班牙裔患者队列进行了HGG结局的回顾性评估。与非西班牙裔患者相比,西班牙裔患者表现出更高的社会脆弱性指数得分(96.8±0.7对76.3±4.6;***P = 0.0002),且诊断与复发之间的间隔时间长14个月(19.7±5.9个月(n = 13)对5.5±0.6个月(n = 19);**P = 0.001)。仅在那些患有侵袭性更强的异柠檬酸脱氢酶-1(IDH-1)野生型肿瘤(胶质母细胞瘤)的患者中,西班牙裔仍与更长的复发前时间相关(15.8±5.9个月(n = 9);5.5±0.6个月(n = 18);*P = 0.034),并且在多变量分析中,西班牙裔种族可独立于患者年龄、功能状态、O6-甲基鸟嘌呤-DNA甲基转移酶(MGMT)基因甲基化或接受的治疗来预测复发时间(*P = 0.027)。因此,环境因素,特别是社会脆弱性,并未掩盖与西班牙裔种族相关的诊断后益处。在未来的实验中,应优先进行基础研究,调查这种种族效应影响HGG进展的细胞或遗传机制,以期改善对这些毁灭性恶性肿瘤的治疗。