Literature DB >> 11455217

Surgical management of single and multiple brain metastases: results of a retrospective study.

G Schackert1, A Steinmetz, U Meier, S B Sobottka.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Advancement in diagnosis and treatment of various cancer entities led to an increasing incidence of brain metastases in the last decades. Surgical excision of single and multiple brain metastases is one of the central treatment options beside radiotherapy, radiosurgery and chemotherapy. To evaluate the benefit of surgery with/without whole-brain radiation therapy (WBRT) in single brain metastases and the influence of image guidance for brain metastases resection, 104 patients were retrospectively evaluated for post-operative outcome. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Between January 1994 and December 1999 150 patients were surgically treated for brain metastases at the Department of Neurosurgery at the Technical University of Dresden. Outcome could be evaluated in 104 patients with respect to special treatment strategies and survival time (69 patients with single and 35 patients with multiple lesions).
RESULTS: Most metastases originated from primary lung and breast tumours. Karnofsky performance score improved on average by 10 after surgery. The extent of the extracerebral tumour burden was the main influence on survival time. Patients' age below 70 years was combined with prolonged survival time (median survival time, MST: 4.5 months vs. 7 months). Patients with solitary cerebral metastasis had a MST of 16 months, whereas patients with singular lesions had a MST of 7 and 4 months, depending on the extent of the extracerebral tumour growth. Additional post-operative WBRT with 30 Gy was combined with an increase in MST in patients with single brain metastasis (surgery + WBRT: MST 13 months; surgery only: MST 8 months). In addition, the rate of recurrent cerebral tumour growth was distinctly higher in the non-WBRT group. Neuronavigation did not significantly improve post-operative survival time. In 80% of patients extracerebral tumour growth limited patients' survival.
CONCLUSION: Surgery is an initial treatment option in patients with single and multiple brain metastases especially with large tumours (> 3 cm). Post-operative WBRT seems to prolong survival time in patients with single brain metastasis by decreasing local and distant tumour recurrence. Neuronavigational devices permit a targeted approach. Multiple processes can be extirpated in one session without prolonging the hospitalisation time for the patient. However, neuronavigational devices cannot assure complete tumour resection. Copyright 2001 S. Karger GmbH, Freiburg

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11455217     DOI: 10.1159/000055087

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Onkologie        ISSN: 0378-584X


  14 in total

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3.  Surgical treatment for brain metastases: prognostic factors and survival in 177 patients.

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7.  Neurosurgical treatment of breast cancer metastases to the neurocranium.

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Review 8.  Stereotactic radiosurgery versus whole-brain radiotherapy after intracranial metastasis resection: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

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9.  Retrospective study of 229 surgically treated patients with brain metastases: Prognostic factors, outcome and comparison of recursive partitioning analysis and diagnosis-specific graded prognostic assessment.

Authors:  Mirza Pojskic; Miriam H A Bopp; Markus Schymalla; Christopher Nimsky; Barbara Carl
Journal:  Surg Neurol Int       Date:  2017-10-24

10.  The role of surgical resection in patients with brain metastases.

Authors:  Mustafa Aziz Hatiboglu; David M Wildrick; Raymond Sawaya
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