| Literature DB >> 29868476 |
Dianne Hartgerink1, Britt van der Heijden1, Dirk De Ruysscher1,2, Alida Postma3, Linda Ackermans4, Ann Hoeben5, Monique Anten6, Philippe Lambin1, Karin Terhaag1, Arthur Jochems1, Andre Dekker1,2, Janna Schoenmaekers7, Lizza Hendriks7, Jaap Zindler1,2.
Abstract
Brain metastases (BM) frequently occur in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients. Most patients with BM have a limited life expectancy, measured in months. Selected patients may experience a very long progression-free survival, for example, patients with a targetable driver mutation. Traditionally, whole-brain radiotherapy (WBRT) has been the cornerstone of the treatment, but its indication is a matter of debate. A randomized trial has shown that for patients with a poor prognosis, WBRT does not add quality of life (QoL) nor survival over the best supportive care. In recent decades, stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) has become an attractive non-invasive treatment for patients with BM. Only the BM is irradiated to an ablative dose, sparing healthy brain tissue. Intracranial recurrence rates decrease when WBRT is administered following SRS or resection but does not improve overall survival and comes at the expense of neurocognitive function and QoL. The downside of SRS compared with WBRT is a risk of radionecrosis (RN) and a higher risk of developing new BM during follow-up. Currently, SRS is an established treatment for patients with a maximum of four BM. Several promising strategies are currently being investigated to further improve the indication and outcome of SRS for patients with BM: the effectivity and safety of SRS in patients with more than four BM, combining SRS with systemic therapy such as targeted agents or immunotherapy, shared decision-making with SRS as a treatment option, and individualized isotoxic dose prescription to mitigate the risk of RN and further enhance local control probability of SRS. This review discusses the current indications of SRS and future directions of treatment for patients with BM of NSCLC with focus on the value of SRS.Entities:
Keywords: brain metastases; isotoxic dose prescription; non-small cell lung cancer; shared decision; stereotactic radiosurgery
Year: 2018 PMID: 29868476 PMCID: PMC5954030 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2018.00154
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Summary of selected trials evaluating the role of SRS ± WBRT for patients with limited brain metastases.
| Trial | Patient selection | Primary endpoint | Local control | OS | Functional outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aoyama et al. ( | 1–4 metastases, KPS ≥ 70, lesion diameter <3 cm | Cranial recurrence | 1 year: 72.5 vs 88.7% ( | 1 year: 28.4 vs 38.5% ( | No difference in cognition based on MMSE |
| Aoyama et al. ( | 1–4 metastases, NSCLC patients | OS according DS-GPA score | – | DS-GPA favorable: 10.6 vs 16.7 months ( | No difference in neurocognitive function based on MMSE |
| Chang et al. ( | 1–3 metastases, KPS ≥ 70 | Neurocognition (using HVLT-R) | 1 year: 67 vs 100% ( | 15.2 vs 5.7 months | HVLT-R decline |
| Kocher et al. ( | 1–3 metastases, WHO ≤ 2 | Functional independence (WHO ≥ 2) | 2 year: 69 vs 81% ( | 10.9 vs 10.7 months ( | No difference |
| Brown et al. ( | 1–3 metastases, diameter < 3 cm, ECOG performance score ≤2 | Cognitive deterioration | 3 months: 75.3 vs 93.7% ( | 10.4 vs 7.4 months ( | Higher deterioration in verbal fluency and delayed/immediate memory in SRS + WBRT arm |
| Churilla et al. ( | 1–3 metastases, NSCLC patients | OS according DS-GPA score | – | 10.8 vs 7.5 months | No difference in survival in favorable-prognosis NSCLC patient |
KPS, Karnofsky performance status; WBRT, whole-brain radiotherapy; SRS, stereotactic radiosurgery; WHO, World Health Organization; HVLT-R, Hopkins Verbal Learning Test revised; OS, overall survival. NSCLC, non-small cell lung cancer. MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination; DS-GPA; diagnosis-specific Graded Prognostic Assessment.
Figure 1Treatment options for BM of NSCLC. Abbreviations: KPS, Karnofsky performance status; WBRT, whole-brain radiotherapy; SRS, stereotactic radiosurgery; BM, brain metastases; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; NSCLC, non-small cell lung cancer.