| Literature DB >> 22544651 |
Shoji Yomo1, Motohiro Hayashi, Claire Nicholson.
Abstract
The purpose of this prospective study is to evaluate the efficacy and limitations of two-session Gamma Knife radiosurgery (GKS) alone for large metastatic brain tumors. Inclusion criteria were as follows: (i) patients with large metastatic brain tumors (volume >15 cm(3) in the supratentorial region or >10 cm(3) in the infratentorial region), and (ii) tumors not causing clinical signs of impending cerebral herniation. Twenty-eight lesions in 27 consecutive patients (18 men and 9 women, age range 32 to 88 years, median age 65 years) were included in this study. The radiosurgical protocol was as follows: 20-30 Gy given in two fractions 3-4 weeks apart. The local tumor control rate and the overall survival rate were calculated by using the Kaplan-Meier method. Median tumor volumes were 17.8 cm(3) at first GKS and 9.7 cm(3) at second GKS. Median follow-up time was 8.9 months. The local control rate was 85 % at 6 months and 61 % at 12 months. The overall survival rate after GKS was 63 % at 6 months and 45 % at 12 months. The 1-year rate of prevention of neurological death was maintained at 78 %. Mean Karnofsky performance status (KPS) improved from 61 [95 % confidence interval (CI), 57-71] at first GKS to 80 (95 % CI, 74-85) at second GKS; the best follow-up mean KPS was 85 (95 % CI, 78-91) (p < 0.001). Local tumor recurrence necessitated craniotomy in two patients and repeat GKS in three patients. Seventeen patients died, and the causes of death were as follows: 3 from local progression, 2 from meningeal carcinomatosis, and 12 from progression of the primary tumor. Delayed symptomatic perilesional edema developed in one patient and eventually resolved with conservative treatment. Two-session GKS for large brain metastases appears to be an effective treatment in terms of both local tumor control and neurological palliation with minimal treatment-related morbidity. These data suggest that two-session GKS could be used as an alternative to surgical resection of large tumors in patients with significant comorbidity and/or at an advanced age. The optimum regimen for dose and fraction schedule remains to be established.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22544651 PMCID: PMC3402679 DOI: 10.1007/s11060-012-0882-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurooncol ISSN: 0167-594X Impact factor: 4.130
Patient characteristics
| Characteristic | Value |
|---|---|
| Total no. of patients | 27 |
| Men/women | 18/9 |
| Age (years), median (range) | 65 (32–88) |
| KPS, mean (range) | 61 (30–90) |
| RTOG-RPA classification | |
| Class 1 | 0 |
| Class 2 | 9 |
| Class 3 | 18 |
| No. of intracranial lesions, median (range) | 2 (1–6) |
| Location | |
| Supratentorial | 13 |
| Infratentorial | 15 |
| Primary tumors | |
| Lung | 17 |
| Breast | 4 |
| Colon and rectum | 4 |
| Esophagus | 1 |
| Ovary | 1 |
| Procedures prior to GKS | |
| Craniotomy | 6 |
| Ommaya reservoir | 3 |
| WBRT | 2 |
RTOG Radiation Therapy Oncology Group, RPA recursive partitioning analysis, GKS Gamma Knife surgery, WBRT whole-brain radiation therapy
Fig. 1Local tumor control rate
Fig. 2Overall survival rate and rate of prevention of neurological death
Fig. 3A 72-year-old man with small cell lung cancer presented with reduced conscious level. MR imaging demonstrated a large necrotic metastatic brain tumor in the pons. Due to the severity of neurological symptoms, the risk of WBRT was rated as high. As an alternative treatment option, the patient was allocated to two-session GKS. The first treatment delivered 10 Gy to the 40 % isodose (Fig. 3a). Three weeks later, at the second session, significant tumor volume reduction was observed and 10 Gy to the 40 % isodose was delivered to the tumor margin (Fig. 3b). Follow-up MR imaging after 4 months showed a considerable decrease in tumor size but brain stem perifocal edema (Fig. 3c). The perifocal edema subsided by the 8-month follow-up (Fig. 3d), and the KPS improved from 30 to 70. Although transient neurological deterioration occurred due to delayed radiation injury, the patient could lead an independent life until 2 months before he died from systemic disease progression
Treatment results and outcome in 27 patients after two-session GKS for large brain metastases
| Characteristic | Percentage points | No. of patients |
|---|---|---|
| 1-Year local control rate | 61 | |
| 1-Year overall survival rate | 45 | |
| 1-Year rate of prevention of neurological death | 78 | |
| Mean KPS (95 % CI) | ||
| At first GKS | 61 (57–71) | |
| At second GKS | 80 (74–85) | |
| Best in follow-up | 85 (78–91) | |
| Local recurrence | 5 | |
| Symptomatic radiation injury | 1 | |
| Distant new metastases | 11 | |
| Subsequent treatment | ||
| Craniotomy for local recurrence | 2 | |
| GKS for local recurrence | 3 | |
| GKS for new metastases | 11 | |
| Cause of death | ||
| Systemic disease progression | 12 | |
| CNS progression | 5 | |
GKS Gamma Knife surgery, CI confidence interval, KPS Karnofsky performance scale, CNS central nervous system