Surgeon experience in glioblastoma surgery of the elderly—a multicenter, retrospective cohort study

Author:

Pöppe Johannes P.,Machegger Lukas,Steinbacher Jürgen,Stefanits Harald,Eisschiel Sophie,Gruber Andreas,Demetz Matthias,Ladisich Barbara,Kraus Theo F.J.,Weis Serge,Spiegl-Kreinecker Sabine,Romagna Alexander,Griessenauer Christoph J.,Jahromi Behnam Rezai,Rautalin Ilari,Niemelä Mika,Korja Miikka,Schwartz Christoph

Abstract

Abstract Purpose To assess the impact of individual surgeon experience on overall survival (OS), extent of resection (EOR) and surgery-related morbidity in elderly patients with glioblastoma (GBM), we performed a retrospective case-by-case analysis. Methods GBM patients aged ≥ 65 years who underwent tumor resection at two academic centers were analyzed. The experience of each neurosurgeon was quantified in three ways: (1) total number of previously performed glioma surgeries (lifetime experience); (2) number of surgeries performed in the previous five years (medium-term experience) and (3) in the last two years (short-term experience). Surgeon experience data was correlated with survival (OS) and surrogate parameters for surgical quality (EOR, morbidity). Results 198 GBM patients (median age 73.0 years, median preoperative KPS 80, IDH-wildtype status 96.5%) were included. Median OS was 10.0 months (95% CI 8.0–12.0); median EOR was 89.4%. Surgery-related morbidity affected 19.7% patients. No correlations of lifetime surgeon experience with OS (P = .693), EOR (P = .693), and surgery-related morbidity (P = .435) were identified. Adjuvant therapy was associated with improved OS (P < .001); patients with surgery-related morbidity were less likely to receive adjuvant treatment (P = .002). In multivariable testing, adjuvant therapy (P < .001; HR = 0.064, 95%CI 0.028–0.144) remained the only significant predictor for improved OS. Conclusion Less experienced neurosurgeons achieve similar surgical results and outcome in elderly GBM patients within the setting of academic teaching hospitals. Adjuvant treatment and avoidance of surgery-related morbidity are crucial for generating a treatment benefit for this cohort.

Funder

Paracelsus Medical University

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cancer Research,Neurology (clinical),Neurology,Oncology

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