| Literature DB >> 32303195 |
Koichi Mitsuya1, Yoko Nakasu2, Nakamasa Hayashi2, Shoichi Deguchi2, Takuma Oishi3, Takashi Sugino3, Kazuaki Yasui4, Hirofumi Ogawa4, Tsuyoshi Onoe4, Hirofumi Asakura4, Hideyuki Harada4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Stereotactic irradiation (STI) is a primary treatment for patients with newly diagnosed brain metastases. Some of these patients experience local progression, which is difficult to differentiate from radiation necrosis, and difficult to treat. So far, just a few studies have clarified the prognosis and effectiveness of salvage surgery after STI. We evaluated the diagnostic value and improvement of functional outcomes after salvage surgery. Based on these results, we reconsidered surgical indication for patients with local progression after STI.Entities:
Keywords: Brain metastasis; Prognostic factor; Radiation necrosis; Recurrence; Stereotactic irradiation; Surgery
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32303195 PMCID: PMC7165413 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-020-06800-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1Local progression of brain metastasis from renal cell carcinoma previously treated with SRS was depicted at navigation surgery a, with an enhanced mass with navigation trajectory in the occipito-parietal region b. A histopathological picture of the border zone c. The margin between the tumor and the brain was collapsed. Hematoxylin and eosin staining showed neutrophil infiltration at the tumor margin, gliotic changes and a large number of microvessels in the surrounding brain tissue (× 10)
Patient characteristics
| No. (%) | |
|---|---|
| Patients | 48 |
| Lesions | 54 |
| Median overall survival from surgery (months) | 20.2 |
| Median age at surgery (years) | 63.5 |
| Median time from STI to surgery (months) | 12 |
| Gender | |
| Male | 32 (66.7) |
| Female | 16 (33.3) |
| Primary cancer | |
| Lung | 31 (64.6) |
| Breast | 9 (18.8) |
| Others | 8 (16.6) |
| Location | |
| Supratentrial | 47 (87) |
| Infratentrial | 7 (13) |
| Neurological deficit | |
| Yes | 36 (67) |
| No | 18 (33) |
| RPA classification at surgery | |
| Class1 | 7 (13) |
| Class2 | 18 (33) |
| Class3 | 29 (53) |
| Radiotherapy before salvage surgery | |
| STI | 46 (85) |
| SRS | 24 (44.5) |
| SRT | 17 (31.5) |
| Repeated STI | 5 (9) |
| WBRT+STI | 8 (15) |
| Surgical method | |
| Minimum resection | 26 (48) |
| with radiotherapy | 12 (22) |
| without radiotherapy | 14 (26) |
| Resection with free margine | 28 (52) |
| Pathological diagnosis | |
| Tumor recurrence + Necrosis | 47 (87) |
| Radiation necrosis alone | 7 (13) |
| Extent of resection | |
| Gross total removal | 48 (89) |
| Subtotal removal | 6 (11) |
| KPS before surgery | |
| 90–100 | 18 (33) |
| 70–80 | 5 (9) |
| 50–60 | 20 (37) |
| 30–40 | 11 (20) |
| 0–20 | 0 (0) |
| KPS after surgery | |
| 90–100 | 24 (44) |
| 70–80 | 16 (30) |
| 50–60 | 10 (18.5) |
| 30–40 | 3 (5.5) |
| 0–20 | 1 (2) |
| Radiotherapy after salvage surgery | |
| Yes | 20 (38) |
| WBRT | 10 (18.5) |
| STI | 10 (18.5) |
| No | 34 (62) |
| Treatment period | |
| 2002–2010 | 19 (40) |
| 2011–2019 | 29 (60) |
Fig. 2Median OS was 20.2 months from salvage surgery a. RPA classes b and primary cancer histology c showed a significant correlation with OS on univariate analysis. Patients showed a trend towards longer survival in recent years d
Univariate and multivariate analysis of patient and treatment factors for survival
| Tested Variable | Number (%) | Univariate | Multivariate | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| median OS (M) | Tested Variable | HR | 95%CI | ||||
| Age at surgery (median; 63.5) | |||||||
| < 63-years | 21 (43.8) | 29.2 | 0.4 | ||||
| ≥ 63-years | 27 (56.2) | 16.8 | |||||
| Median time from STI to surgery (12mo) | |||||||
| ≥ 12 months | 22 (45.8) | 32.9 | 0.13 | ||||
| < 12 months | 26 (54.2) | 13.1 | |||||
| Pathological diagnosis | |||||||
| Radiation necrosis alone | 6 (12.5) | 22.8 | 0.76 | ||||
| Tumor recurrence + Necrosis | 42 (87.5) | 20.2 | |||||
| Gender | |||||||
| Female | 16 (33.3) | 29 | 0.11 | ||||
| Male | 32 (66.7) | 16.8 | |||||
| Supratentrial | 42 (87.5) | 25.5 | Supra- vs Infratentrial | 0.5 | 0.18–1.52 | 0.2 | |
| Infratentrial | 6 (12.5) | 9.1 | |||||
| Breast | 9 (18.8) | 43 | |||||
| Lung | 31 (64.6) | 16.8 | |||||
| Others | 8 (16.6) | 9.4 | Lung vs Others | 0.5 | 0.2–1.2 | 0.12 | |
| Neurological deficit | |||||||
| No | 15 (31.3) | 21.9 | 0.56 | ||||
| Yes | 33 (68.7) | 16.8 | |||||
| Class 1 | 6 (12.5) | NR | |||||
| Class 2 | 18 (37.5) | 21.9 | |||||
| Class 3 | 24 (50) | 11.2 | Class 1 vs 2 | 0.3 | 0.05–0-1.35 | 0.13 | |
| Surgical technique | |||||||
| Minimum resection | 23 (48) | 25.5 | 0.7 | ||||
| Resection with free margine | 25 (52) | 17.9 | |||||
| Extent of resection | |||||||
| Subtotal removal | 6 (12.5) | 28.2 | 0.98 | ||||
| Gross total removal | 42 (87.5) | 20.2 | |||||
| Radiotherapy after salvage surgery | |||||||
| Yes | 15 (31.3) | 20.2 | 0.38 | ||||
| No | 33 (68.7) | 16.8 | |||||
*NR not reached
Surgical technique and outcome
| All lesions | Minimum resection +/− SRT | Resection with free margin | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of lesions | 54 | 26 | 28 | |
| Local recurrence | 13 /54 (24%) | 9 /26 (34.6%) | 4 /28 (14.3%) | 0.07 |
| Leptomeningeal Dissemination | 3 /54 (5.6%) | 3 /26 (11.5%) | 0 /28 (0%) | 0.105 |
*Fisher’s exact test
Fig. 3NLR was evaluated by Receiver Operating Characteristic curves, showing a maximum area under the curve of 0.635 a. Kaplan-Meier survival curves of patients with low preoperative NLR (≤ 3.65) were compared with those with a high NLR (> 3.65). The median OS was significantly longer in patients with a low NLR (25.5 months) than those with a high NLR (8 months) b
Fig. 4Changes of KPS in individual cases. Among 36 cases having lower KPS due to neurological deficits before surgery, 27 (75%) cases showed improved KPS, seven (19.4%) showed no change, and two (5.6%) deteriorated
Reports of surgical resection for recurrent/ progressive brain metastases after STI
| First Author, Year [ref] | Number of patients | Surgical lesion | RPA class population I/2/3 (%) | Previous treatment | Median tumor volume or maximum diameter | Rates of radiation necrosis alone (%) | Median survival (months) | # Pts with local recurrence after surgery (%) | # Pts with dissemination after surgery (%) | Surgical mortality (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vecil, 2005 [ | 61 | 74 | 13/72/15 | SRS | NR | 6/74 (8) | 11.1 | 13/ 74 (17.6) | NR | 3.0 |
| Truong, 2006 [ | 32 | 32 | 13/87/0 | SRS | 1.5 cc | 4/32 (12.5) | 8.9 | 9/ 32 (28) | NR | 3.0 |
| Kano, 2009 [ | 58 | 58 | 38/52/10 | SRS | 15.5 cc | 0 (0) | 7.6 | 18/ 58 (31) | NR | 1.7 |
| Jagannathan, 2010 [ | 15 | 15 | NR | SRS | 7.5 cc | 5/15 (33.3) | 11.3 | 0/ 15 (0) | NR | NR |
| Schackert, 2013 [ | 67 | 67 | 24/46/30 | SRS | NR | NR | 7.5 | 21/ 67 (31.3) | NR | NR |
| Telera, 2013 [ | 15 | 16 | 50/25/25 | SRS | 3 cm (1.5–4.5) | 7/16 (50) | 19.0 | 0/16 (0) | NR | 0.0 |
| Present study, 2019 | 48 | 54 | 13/31/56 | SRS or SRT | 3.5 cm | 7/54 (13) | 20.2 | 14/54 (25.6) | 3/54 (5.6) | 0.0 |
*NR Not reported,
# Pts patients