| Literature DB >> 32087691 |
Paul Lesueur1,2, William Kao1, Alexandra Leconte3, Julien Geffrelot1, Justine Lequesne3, Joëlle Lacroix4, Pierre-Emmanuel Brachet3,5, Ioana Hrab5, Philippe Royer6, Bénédicte Clarisse3, Dinu Stefan7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Brain metastases often occur in cancer evolution. They are not only responsible for death but also for disorders affecting the quality of life and the cognitive functions. Management of brain metastases usually consists in multi-modality treatments, including neurosurgery, whole brain radiotherapy (WBRT), and more recently radiosurgery (SRS) or fractionated stereotactic radiotherapy (FSRT), systemic treatment (chemotherapy or targeted therapy), combined or not with corticosteroids. Almost 20% of brain metastases can present recent (within 15 days) bleeding signs on neuro-imagery. In these conditions, WBRT is the usual treatment. Yet, patients may benefit from a more aggressive strategy with SRT or FSRT. However, these options were suspected to possibly major the risk of brain haemorrhage, although no scientifically proven. Radiation oncologists therefore usually remain reluctant to deliver SRS/FSRT for bleeding brain metastases. It is therefore challenging to establish a standard of care for the treatment of bleeding brain metastases. We propose a phase II trial to simultaneously assess safety and efficacy of FSRT to manage brain metastases with hemorrhagic signal.Entities:
Keywords: Bleeding; Brain metastases; Quality of life; Stereotactic radiotherapy
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32087691 PMCID: PMC7036220 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-020-6569-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Study eligibility criteria
| Inclusion criteria | - Age > 18 years old - WHO performance status 0 or 1 - Patient having less than 4 brain metastases of solid tumour with a histologically proven diagnosis of solid tumour; patients who have had a metastasectomy and having 1 to 3 brain metastases are eligible; - Brain(s) lesion(s) measuring between 5 and 30 mm in diameter - Patient eligible for stereotactic radiotherapy after a local multidisciplinary committee decision - Signs of intra-tumour bleeding before stereotactic irradiation in at least one brain metastasis and defined on the presence of at least one of these criteria: • Spontaneous high-density lesion on brain CT scan without injection • Spontaneous hyper-intense lesion on brain MRI sequences: on T1 sequence • Lesion with hypo signal on T2* sequences - Patients with an extra-cranial control disease treated with systemic therapy (chemotherapy, immunotherapy or targeted therapy) could be included only if they show a: • complete response disease • partial response or stable disease for more than 3 months - Patient sufficiently cooperating to perform the treatment with the use of a thermoformed mask; - Patient whose neuropsychological abilities allow to follow the requirements of the protocol; - Signed informed consent. |
| Exclusion criteria | - Patients with small cell lung cancer, germ-cell tumors, lymphoma, melanoma, leukemia and multiple myeloma are not eligible; - Patients with an associated neurodegenerative disease; - Any symptoms not attributable to brain metastasis or cancer disease requiring long term corticosteroid use (regardless of dose); - Contraindication to perform the brain MRI, or to infuse gadolinium or iodinated contrast product - Bleeding disorders; - Genetic disorder leading to hyper radiosensitivity (Neurofibromatosis, ataxia-telangiectasia ...); - Thrombocytopenia < 100,000 cells / mm3; - Anticoagulant therapy with curative intent dosing (deep vein thrombosis …), and/or anti-platelet aggregation during FSRT - Hemorrhagic metastasis of the brainstem; - Patients for whom a treatment plan dedicated to one of the metastasis delivers more than 5 Gy on the other brain metastasis; - Patients with previous brain stereotactic irradiation - Whole brain irradiation history; - Progressive extracranial disease; - Any geographical conditions, social and associated psychopathology that may compromise the patient’s ability to participate in the study; - Participation in a therapeutic trial for less than 30 days; - Patient deprived of liberty or under guardianship. |
Fig. 1Methodology design of the STEREO-HBM study
Fig. 2Schematic representation of the STEREO-HBM study. *Each targeted brain metastasis (hemorrhagic or not) will be treated at the dose of 30 Gy in 3 fractions at 10 Gy per fraction every 2 days. All target lesions (maximum 3 brain metastases plus one tumor bed) will be treated as much as possible over 1 week. However, cerebral irradiation of all the lesions may be spread over 7–10 calendar days. **Standard MRI imaging protocol plus optional multivoxel spectroscopy imaging (MSI) only for voluntary patients with specific signed informed consent. Abbreviation: FSRT hypofractionated stereotactic radiotherapy; MRI Magnetic Resonance Imaging. *Each targeted brain metastasis (hemorrhagic or not) will be treated at the dose of 30 Gy in 3 fractions at 10 Gy per fraction every 2 days. All target lesions (maximum 3 brain metastases plus one tumor bed) will be treated as much as possible over 1 week. However, cerebral irradiation of all the lesions may be spread over 7–10 calendar days. **Standard MRI imaging protocol plus optional multivoxel spectroscopy imaging (MSI) only for voluntary patients with specific signed informed consent. Abbreviation: FSRT hypofractionated stereotactic radiotherapy; MRI Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Table caption
| Before initiation of treatment D-15 to D0 | Stereotactic irradiation week FSRT | End of irradiation W1 (1 week after the end of irradiation) | Follow-up visits after treatment | Follow-up after progressionf | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Each week up to 2 months after end of treatment W2 to W9 | 4 months after end of treatment W16 | 6 months after end of treatment W24 | Every 3 months up to disease progressionc | |||||
| Stereotactic irradiation | Each brain metastasis (hemorraghic or not) will be treated at 30 Gy in 3 fractions of 10 Gy / fraction every 2 days on maximum 7 days | |||||||
| Signature of informed consent | ✓ | |||||||
| Clinical exam including: | ||||||||
| - Disease medical history, weight, height, SC, PS) Patient pronostic (DS-GPA) | ✓ | |||||||
| - Complete clinical evaluation and neurological examination | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| - Evaluation of toxicities | ✓(once a week) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Biological assessmenta | ||||||||
| - Complete Blood Count | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| - Creatinin- | ✓ | ✓ | ✓b | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| Imagery including: | ✓ | |||||||
| - Cerebral scan | ✓ | ✓ | ✓b | ✓ | ✓ | |||
| - Cerebral MRI with T1 sequency Followed by Spectro-MRIe (ancillary study) | ✓ | ✓ (in case of neurological degradation due to treated lesions) | ✓ | ✓b | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ ✓ | |
| Quality of life questionnaires (EORTC QLQ C30 and BN20) | ✓ | ✓ Only at 1 month | ✓ | ✓ | ✓d | |||
aCreatinin must be performed before MRI
b4 weeks and 8 weeks after the end of irradiation (W4 and W8)
cEvery 3 months up to at least one target irradiated lesion in disease progression
donly every 6 months
eSpectro-MRI is performed at the same time of standard cerebral MRI and only applies to patients who have given their signed consent
fAfter progression, a survival status will be collected every 3 months with persistent toxicities due to radiotherapy