| Literature DB >> 22908046 |
Matthew E Hardee1, Silvia C Formenti.
Abstract
Brain metastases are unfortunately very common in the natural history of many solid tumors and remain a life-threatening condition, associated with a dismal prognosis, despite many clinical trials aimed at improving outcomes. Radiation therapy options for brain metastases include whole brain radiotherapy (WBRT) and stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS). SRS avoids the potential toxicities of WBRT and is associated with excellent local control (LC) rates. However, distant intracranial failure following SRS remains a problem, suggesting that untreated intracranial micrometastatic disease is responsible for failure of treatment. The oral alkylating agent temozolomide (TMZ), which has demonstrated efficacy in primary malignant central nervous system tumors such as glioblastoma, has been used in early phase trials in the treatment of established brain metastases. Although results of these studies in established, macroscopic metastatic disease have been modest at best, there is clinical and preclinical data to suggest that TMZ is more efficacious at treating and controlling clinically undetectable intracranial micrometastatic disease. We review the available data for the primary management of brain metastases with SRS, as well as the use of TMZ in treating established brain metastases and undetectable micrometastatic disease, and suggest the role for a clinical trial with the aims of treating macroscopically visible brain metastases with SRS combined with TMZ to address microscopic, undetectable disease.Entities:
Keywords: brain metastases; radiosurgery; temozolomide
Year: 2012 PMID: 22908046 PMCID: PMC3414728 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2012.00099
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Outcomes following SRS alone for limited brain metastases.
| Aoyama et al., | PRCT | 67 | 1–4 | NR | 72.5 | NR | 7.5 | 19.3 |
| Lutterbach et al., | PO | 101 | 1–3 | 92 | 91 | 79 | 7.6 | NR |
| Williams et al., | PO | 273 | 1–2 | 76 | NR | NR | 10.3 | NR |
| Chitapanarux et al., | PO | 41 | 1–4 | NR | 68 | NR | 10 | 12 |
| Gerosa et al., | R | 804 | 1–3 | 93 | NR | NR | 13.5 | 15.6 |
| Kihlstrom et al., | R | 160 | 1–5 | 94 | NR | NR | 7 | 9.7 |
| Hasegawa et al., | R | 172 | 1–4 | 87 | 79 | 75 | 8 | 16.5 |
| Flickinger et al., | R | 116 | 1 | 85 | NR | 67 | 11 | NR |
| Petrovich et al., | R | 458 | 1–5 | NR | 90 | NR | 9 | 32.6 |
| Elliott et al., | R | 109 | 1–3 | 93 | 93 | 89 | 13.8 | 11.9 |
PRCT, prospective, randomized controlled trial; PO, prospective observational trial; R, retrospective series; NR, not reported.
Results of TMZ treatment for established brain metastases.
| Schadendorf et al., | II | Melanoma | 45 | 125–150 mg/m2 | 2 PR (4%) |
| D1–7, 15–21 q28d | 5 SD (11%) | ||||
| Siena et al., | II | Melanoma, breast, NSCLC | 157 | 150 mg/m2 | 1 CR |
| D1–7, 15–21, q28 or q35d | 9 PR (6%) | ||||
| 31 SD (20%) | |||||
| Christodoulou et al., | II | Solid tumors | 27 | 150 mg/m2 | 1 PR (4%) |
| 5 days q28d | 4 SD (17%) | ||||
| Neuro status improved in 37% patients | |||||
| Omuro et al., | I | Recurrent/ progressive brain mets | 21 | 150 mg/m2 | 2 PR (11%) |
| D1–7, 15–21 q28d | 6 SD (33%) | ||||
| Vinorelbine D1 and D8 | |||||
| Iwamoto et al., | II | Solid tumors | 38 | 150 mg/m2 | 1 CR (3%) |
| D1–7, 15–21 q28d | 1 PR (3%) | ||||
| Vinorelbine D1 and D8 | 5 SD (13%) | ||||
| Rivera et al., | I | Breast | 24 | 75 mg/m2 | 1 CR (4%) |
| Capecitabine 1800 mg/m2 | 3 PR (13%) | ||||
| D1–5, 8–12 q21d | |||||
| Christodoulou et al., | II | Solid tumors | 32 | 150–200 mg/m2 | 1 CR (3%) |
| D1–5 | 9 PR (28%) | ||||
| CDDP 75 mg/m2 | 5 SD (16%) | ||||
| D1 q28d | |||||
| Abrey et al., | II | Recurrent brain mets | 34 | 150–200 mg/m2 | 2 PR (6%) |
| D1–5 q28d | 5 SD (15%) |
PR, partial response; CR, complete response; SD, stable disease.
Results with TMZ and WBRT for established brain metastases.
| Mikkelsen et al., | Solid tumors | I/II | 17 | 95 mg/m2 | 3 PR (18%) |
| WBRT 30 Gy | 10 SD (59%) | ||||
| 6 mo PFS 18%; median PFS 2.4 mo | |||||
| Kouvaris et al., | Solid tumors | II | 33 | 60 mg/m2 | 7 CR (21%) |
| D1–15 | 11 PR (33%) | ||||
| WBRT 36 Gy | 5 SD (15%) | ||||
| Median OS 12 | |||||
| Addeo et al., | Breast, NSCLC | II | 27 | 75 mg/m2 | 2 CR (7%) |
| D1–10 q21–28d | 11 PR (41%) | ||||
| WBRT 30 Gy | Median PFS 6 mos, OS 8.8 mos | ||||
| Verger et al., | Solid tumors | II | 82 | ±75 mg/m2 | Randomized ± TMZ |
| WBRT 30 Gy | No difference in PFS or OS | ||||
| Neuro death decreased with TMZ (69% vs 41%) | |||||
| Addeo et al., | Solid tumors | II | 59 | 75 mg/m2 | 5 CR (8%) |
| D1–10 | 21 PR (36%) | ||||
| WBRT 30 Gy | 18 SD (31%) | ||||
| Improved QoL with TMZ | |||||
| Antonadou et al., | Solid tumors | II | 43 | ±75 mg/m2 | ORR increased (96% vs 67%) |
| D1–5 | Decreased need for steroids 2 mos after treatment (67% vs 91%) | ||||
| WBRT 40 Gy | |||||
| Margolin et al., | Melanoma | II | 31 | 75 mg/m2 | 1 CR (3%) |
| Daily × 6 weeks | 2 PR (6%) | ||||
| WBRT 30 Gy |
Randomized phase II trial; PR, partial response; CR, complete response; SD, stable disease; ORR, objective response rate; PFS, progression free survival; OS, overall survival.