Astrid Telhaug Karlsson1,2, Marianne Jensen Hjermstad1,2, Therese Omdahl3, Nina Aass2,3,4, Eva Skovlund5, Taran P Hellebust6,7, Safora Johansen3,8, Stein Kaasa2,3,4, Olav Erich Yri3. 1. Regional Advisory Unit for Palliative Care, Department of Oncology, Oslo University Hospital (OUH), Oslo, Norway. 2. European Palliative Care Research Centre (PRC), Dept. of Oncology, OUH, Norway and Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway. 3. Department of Oncology, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway. 4. Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway. 5. Department of Public Health and Nursing, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, NTNU, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway. 6. Department of Medical Physics, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway. 7. Department of Physics, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway. 8. Faculty of Health Sciences, Oslo Metropolitan University, Oslo, Norway.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Brain metastases (BM) occur in about 30% of all patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). BM treatment guidelines recommend more frequent use of stereotactic radiotherapy (SRT). Overall, studies report no difference in overall survival (OS) comparing SRT to whole-brain radiotherapy (WBRT). We examined survival after radiotherapy for BM in a population-based sample from the South-Eastern Norway Regional Health Authority treated 2006-2018. METHODS: We reviewed electronic medical records of 2140 NSCLC patients treated with SRT or WBRT for BM from 2006-2018. Overall survival (OS) was compared to predicted survival according to the prognostic systems DS-GPA and Lung-molGPA. RESULTS: Use of SRT increased during the period, from 19% (2006-2014) to 45% (2015-2018). Median OS for all patients was 3.0 months, increasing from 2.0 (2006) to 4.0 (2018). Median OS after SRT was 7.0 months (n = 435) and 3.0 months after WBRT (n = 1705). Twenty-seven percent of SRT patients and 50% of WBRT patients died within 90 days after start of RT. Age ≥70, male sex, KPS ≤70, non-adenocarcinoma histology, ECM present, multiple BM, and WBRT were associated with shorter survival (p < .001). Actual mOS corresponded best with predicted mOS by DS-GPA and Lung-molGPA for the SRT group. CONCLUSION: Overall survival after radiotherapy (RT) for BM improved during the study period, but only for patients treated with SRT. Survival after WBRT remains poor; its use should be questioned. DS-GPA and Lung-molGPA seem most useful in predicting prognosis considered for SRT.
BACKGROUND: Brain metastases (BM) occur in about 30% of all patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). BM treatment guidelines recommend more frequent use of stereotactic radiotherapy (SRT). Overall, studies report no difference in overall survival (OS) comparing SRT to whole-brain radiotherapy (WBRT). We examined survival after radiotherapy for BM in a population-based sample from the South-Eastern Norway Regional Health Authority treated 2006-2018. METHODS: We reviewed electronic medical records of 2140 NSCLC patients treated with SRT or WBRT for BM from 2006-2018. Overall survival (OS) was compared to predicted survival according to the prognostic systems DS-GPA and Lung-molGPA. RESULTS: Use of SRT increased during the period, from 19% (2006-2014) to 45% (2015-2018). Median OS for all patients was 3.0 months, increasing from 2.0 (2006) to 4.0 (2018). Median OS after SRT was 7.0 months (n = 435) and 3.0 months after WBRT (n = 1705). Twenty-seven percent of SRT patients and 50% of WBRT patients died within 90 days after start of RT. Age ≥70, male sex, KPS ≤70, non-adenocarcinoma histology, ECM present, multiple BM, and WBRT were associated with shorter survival (p < .001). Actual mOS corresponded best with predicted mOS by DS-GPA and Lung-molGPA for the SRT group. CONCLUSION: Overall survival after radiotherapy (RT) for BM improved during the study period, but only for patients treated with SRT. Survival after WBRT remains poor; its use should be questioned. DS-GPA and Lung-molGPA seem most useful in predicting prognosis considered for SRT.
Authors: Zhengting Chen; Lingli Zhou; Min Zhao; Ke Cao; Yanqing Li; Xiaoling Liu; Yu Hou; Lan Li; Li Wang; Li Chang; Mei Yang; Wenhui Li; Yaoxiong Xia Journal: BMC Cancer Date: 2022-09-24 Impact factor: 4.638