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The ATLAS/NOA-29 trial is a prospective, multicenter, phase III randomized controlled study evaluating whether anterior temporal lobectomy (ATL), a standardized resection technique adapted from epilepsy surgery, improves clinical outcomes in patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma of the anterior temporal lobe compared to conventional gross-total resection (GTR). The rationale is based on the concept of glioblastoma as a diffusely connected tumor network, with infiltrative spread extending beyond MRI-detectable tumor margins. ATL offers a reproducible supramarginal resection approach within anatomical boundaries that are routinely respected in epilepsy surgery.
Patients are randomized intraoperatively in a 1:1 ratio following histopathological confirmation via intraoperative frozen section procedure. The trial's primary objective is to demonstrate superiority of ATL in overall survival (OS), while confirming non-inferiority in health-related quality of life (QoL), measured by the global health status scale of the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) - Quality of Life Questionnaire Core 30 (QLQ-C30). Secondary outcomes include progression-free survival (PFS), seizure control, neurocognitive functioning, and longitudinal assessments of selected EORTC QLQ-C30 and BN20 domains. A total of 178 patients will be enrolled over three years, with a minimum follow-up of three years. An interim safety analysis after inclusion of 57 patients will assess functional outcome differences using the modified Rankin Scale (mRS) at 6 months postoperatively. The study is powered (>80%) to detect a survival benefit assuming a median OS increase from 17 to 27.5 months. If proven superior to GTR, ATL could emerge as the preferred surgical strategy for isolated temporal lobe glioblastoma, offering robust evidence in favor of extending supramarginal resection principles to the broader context of glioblastoma care.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Suspected glioblastoma with contrast-enhancement in preoperative MRI
Diffuse high-grade glioma in frozen section procedure, newly-diagnosed
Tumor localization (in gadolinium-enhanced MRI): solely temporal, non-dominant side (right hemisphere in right-handed patients, or left-handed patients after testing for dominance): within 6.5 cm from the temporal pole; dominant side (left hemisphere in right-handed patients, all left-handed patients unless additional testing for dominance performed): within 4.0 cm from the temporal pole, as determined dorsally along the Sylvian fissure.
Macroscopic complete resection (no remaining contrast-enhancing tumoral lesion on early postoperative MRI) is achievable (decision of the treating neurosurgeon)
In case further T1-contrast-enhancing and/or T2/FLAIR lesions are detected beyond the resection margins (6.5 cm on the non-dominant side and 4.0 cm on the dominant side), these lesions are not attributed to the tumor (except perifocal edema) but to other conditions according to the local treating neurosurgeon
≥ 18 and < 75 years of age
KPS ≥ 70%
Estimated life expectancy of at least 6 months
Written informed consent
Cognitive state to understand the rationale and necessity of the study therapy and procedures
Patient compliance and geographic proximity that allow adequate follow-up
For patients with childbearing potential: negative serum pregnancy test (beta-HCG) at baseline visit, patient's commitment to use an approved contraceptive method during the trial and for 3 months after (Pearl index < 1%)
Adequate organ function at baseline visit that does not preclude alkylating chemotherapy and neurosurgical procedures (all criteria required):
Adequate blood clotting: Partial Thromboplastin Time (PTT) not exceeding the upper limit of normal range and International Normalized Ratio (INR) <1.5; in case of intake of anticoagulant medication or platelet function inhibitors, the coagulation analysis must show no detectable effect in specific blood tests (as described below) at the time of surgery, and discontinuation of the anticoagulant medication must be justifiable for at least 1 week postoperatively
For details see study protocol.
Primary purpose
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178 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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