| Literature DB >> 20671962 |
James C Marsh1, Benjamin T Gielda, Arnold M Herskovic, Ross A Abrams.
Abstract
Whole brain radiotherapy (WBRT) for the palliation of metastases, or as prophylaxis to prevent intracranial metastases, can be associated with subacute and late decline in memory and other cognitive functions. Moreover, these changes are often increased in both frequency and severity when cranial irradiation is combined with the use of systemic or intrathecal chemotherapy. Approaches to preventing or reducing this toxicity include the use of stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) instead of WBRT; dose reduction for PCI; exclusion of the limbic circuit, hippocampal formation, and/or neural stem cell regions of the brain during radiotherapy; avoidance of intrathecal and/or systemic chemotherapy during radiotherapy; the use of high-dose, systemic chemotherapy in lieu of WBRT. This review discusses these concepts in detail as well as providing both neuroanatomic and radiobiologic background relevant to these issues.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20671962 PMCID: PMC2910483 DOI: 10.1155/2010/198208
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Oncol ISSN: 1687-8450 Impact factor: 4.375
RTOG RPA Classification for brain metastases.
| Class | Characteristics | Median Survival (months) |
|---|---|---|
| I | KPS 70 or greater, age 65 years or less, primary disease controlled, no extracranial metastases | 7.1 |
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| II | All others | 4.2 |
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| III | KPS < 70 | 2.3 |
RTOG/EORTC Late Morbidity Scoring System for Brain.
| Grade 0 | None |
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| Grade 1 | Mild headache, slight lethargy |
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| Grade 2 | Moderate headache, great lethargy |
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| Grade 3 | Severe headache, severe CNS dysfunction (partial loss of power or dyskinesia) |
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| Grade 4 | Seizure, paralysis, coma |
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| Grade 5 | Death |
NCI Common Toxicity Criteria Version 2.0 Summary.
| Grade 0 | Normal |
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| Grade 1 | Confusion/disorientation which resolves without sequelae, somnolence/dizziness/extrapyramidal symptoms/insomnia/memory loss/mood alterations/neuropathy/personality changes/pyramidal symptoms/tremor/vertigo not interfering with daily function, mild atrophy or limited T2 hyperintensities on MRI (<1/3 of cerebrum), nystagmus |
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| Grade 2 | Persistent confusion/disorientation/poor attention span not interfering with daily function, somnolence/dizziness/extrapyramidal symptoms/insomnia/memory loss/mood alterations/neuropathy/personality changes/pyramidal symptoms/tremor/vertigo/cranial neuropathies not interfering with activities of daily living (ADL), moderate atrophy or more extensive T2 hyperintensities on MRI (1/3-2/3 of cerebrum) extending into centrum ovale, nystagmus |
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| Grade 3 | Delusions, hallucinations, syncope, severe atrophy or near total T2 hyperintensities on MRI +/− focal white matter necrosis, persistent confusion/disorientation/poor attention span/somnolence/dizziness/extrapyramidal symptoms/insomnia/memory loss/mood alterations/neuropathy/personality changes/pyramidal symptoms/tremor/vertigo/cranial neuropathies interfering with activities of daily living (ADL) |
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| Grade 4 | Bedridden/disabled due to brain toxicity, requiring hospitalization doe to risk to self/others, psychotic, unable to communicate, amnesia, diffuse calcification or necrosis, paralysis |
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| Grade 5 | Death |
Figure 1Hippocampus and Limbic Circuit (http://www.thebrain.mcgill.ca/).
Figure 2Axial 3D rendering of the hippocampus (purple) and limbic circuit (yellow) contours.
Figure 3MRI images demonstrating location of (a) hippocampus, and (b) fornix and cingulate gyrus (Marsh et al. [121]). (a) Hippocampus contoured on coronal, sagittal, and axial MRI images. (b) Axial MRI demonstrating location of fornix and cingulated gyrus (anterior and posterior).
Figure 4Neural stem cell (NSC) regions of the brain (Barani et al. [143]).