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05-03-2025 | Glioma | Case Study

Impact of pregnancy on the treatment and outcomes of glioma: a cohort study

Authors: Jack M. Shireman, Emily Distler, Cheyenne Schepp, Yilong Tao, Liam McCarthy, Varshitha Kasulabada, Mahua Dey

Published in: Journal of Neuro-Oncology

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Abstract

Background

Pregnancy’s impact on cancer has been understudied throughout the literature. The current authoritative cancer database in the US, NCI’s SEER database, tracks nearly all aspects of cancer care however has no provision to track pregnancy. Consequently, there are no systematic evidence based clinical guidelines available for this vulnerable population.

Objective

This retrospective cohort study outlines reported clinical presentation, obstetric outcomes, and treatment regimens for pregnant patients diagnosed with glioma to better understand current practice pattern for glioma during pregnancy.

Evidence review

An exhaustive PubMed and Cochrane based literature search was performed for pregnancy and glioma. Individual patient data was extracted primarily from case reports and case series, since pregnancy is an exclusion criterion for most clinical trials.

Findings

We identified a cohort of 94 patients, 54% of whom (n = 51/94) were diagnosed prior to their pregnancy. Of the patients who were diagnosed during their pregnancy, diagnosis was most common in the second trimester (27%, n = 25/94). Seizure was the most common presenting symptom and maternal survival varied significantly by glioma grade. Treatment delays were common and were most detrimental to maternal survival in glioblastoma (GBM) (22 months (no delay) vs 8 months (delay) p < 0.10). Most patients regardless of tumor grade delivered healthy babies (80%, n = 75/94) while GBM carried the highest rate of birth complications or defects (15% n = 3/20). Fetal exposure to chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy increased the rate of birth defects or complications from 5% (n = 2/47) to 16% (n = 6/37).

Conclusions and relevance

In summary, we found wide practice variation in management of glioma during pregnancy. Systematic reporting on this vulnerable population is needed to better serve mothers and fetuses during this incredibly challenging life event.
Appendix
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Literature
Metadata
Title
Impact of pregnancy on the treatment and outcomes of glioma: a cohort study
Authors
Jack M. Shireman
Emily Distler
Cheyenne Schepp
Yilong Tao
Liam McCarthy
Varshitha Kasulabada
Mahua Dey
Publication date
05-03-2025
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of Neuro-Oncology
Print ISSN: 0167-594X
Electronic ISSN: 1573-7373
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11060-025-04961-x

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