The molecular classification on the basis of IDH1/2 mutation, TP53 mutation, and 1p/19q loss has power similar to histological classification and avoids the ambiguity inherent to the diagnosis of oligoastrocytoma.
The effect of allergy on survival was significant (p = 0.025, HR 0.525, 95% CI 0.299-0.924), independent of the effect of chromosome 1p (p < 0.001, HR 93.4, 95% CI 16-546) and 19q (p = 0.801, HR 1.2, 95% CI 0.23-6.9) codeletion or TP53 mutation (p = 0.015, HR 2.7, 95% CI 1.2-5.9), unrelated to TERT expression (p = 0.365, HR 1.1, 95% CI 0.89-1.4) or ATRX mutation (p = 0.904, HR 1.04, 95% CI 0.51-2.14), independent of tumor grade (grade 2 versus grade 3, p = 0.004, HR 2.2, 95% CI 1.3-3.8), not independent of histology (oligodendroglioma and oligoastrocytoma, NOS versus astrocytoma, p = 0.08, HR 0.62, 95% CI 0.36-1.1).
The presence of TP53 mutations was associated with shorter survival of patients with low-grade diffuse gliomas (log-rank test; P=0.047), but when each histological type was analyzed separately, an association was observed only for oligoastrocytoma ( P=0.05).
Loss of 1p and 19q were associated with LGO but not LGOA (P =.009), were inversely associated with p53 detection, and were not associated with response to PCV (possibly because of the small sample size).