Literature DB >> 34934856

Outcomes in Patients With 4 to 10 Brain Metastases Treated With Dose-Adapted Single-Isocenter Multitarget Stereotactic Radiosurgery: A Prospective Study.

Grace J Kim1, Evan D Buckley2, James E Herndon2, Karen J Allen1, Tyketra S Dale1, Justus D Adamson1, Lam Lay1, William M Giles1, Anna E Rodrigues1, Zhiheng Wang1, Chris R Kelsey1, Jordan A Torok1, Junzo P Chino1, Peter E Fecci3, John H Sampson3, Carey K Anders4, Scott R Floyd1, Fang-Fang Yin1, John P Kirkpatrick1,3.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To examine the effectiveness and safety of single-isocenter multitarget stereotactic radiosurgery using a volume-adapted dosing strategy in patients with 4 to 10 brain metastases. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Adult patients with 4 to 10 brain metastases were eligible for this prospective trial. The primary endpoint was overall survival. Secondary endpoints were local recurrence, distant brain failure, neurologic death, and rate of adverse events. Exploratory objectives were neurocognition, quality of life, dosimetric data, salvage rate, and radionecrosis. Dose was prescribed in a single fraction per RTOG 90-05 or as 5 Gy × 5 fractions for lesions ≥3 cm diameter, lesions involving critical structures, or single-fraction brain V12Gy >20 mL.
RESULTS: Forty patients were treated with median age of 61 years, Karnofsky performance status 90, and 6 brain metastases. Twenty-two patients survived longer than expected from the time of protocol SRS, with 1 living patient who has not reached that milestone. Median overall survival was 8.1 months with a 1-year overall survival of 35.7%. The 1-year local recurrence rate was 5% (10 of 204 of evaluable lesions) in 12.5% (4 of 32) of the patients. Distant brain failure was observed in 19 of 32 patients with a 1-year rate of 35.8%. Grade 1-2 headache was the most common complaint, with no grade 3-5 treatment-related adverse events. Radionecrosis was observed in only 5 lesions, with a 1-year rate of 1.5%. Rate of neurologic death was 20%. Neurocognition and quality of life did not significantly change 3 months after SRS compared with pretreatment.
CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that volume-adapted dosing single-isocenter multitarget stereotactic radiosurgery is an effective and safe treatment for patients with 4 to 10 brain metastases.
© 2021 The Authors.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 34934856      PMCID: PMC8655418          DOI: 10.1016/j.adro.2021.100760

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Adv Radiat Oncol        ISSN: 2452-1094


Introduction

As systemic therapies for solid tumors improve and patients with metastatic cancer survive longer, the number of patients living with brain metastases has increased. Historically, whole-brain radiation therapy (WBRT) has been the primary treatment for multiple brain metastases. Although providing reasonable control of visible and occult lesions for many tumor types, WBRT is associated with cognitive decline1, 2, 3 and can only be delivered safely and efficaciously once at full dose. In contrast to WBRT, stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) provides excellent local control of brain metastases while sparing normal brain, preserving cognitive function and quality of life (QOL). In addition, multiple courses of SRS can be delivered with minimal toxicity, which is particularly useful in the setting of new brain lesions after initial brain treatment. SRS is now widely considered the standard of care for patients with 1 to 3 brain metastases, and many institutions are exploring SRS to treat larger numbers of brain lesions. For example, a prospective observational trial investigating a multicentric, single-fraction SRS technique in patients with 2 to 10 brain metastases revealed no differences in survival, local recurrence, or toxicity in patients treated for 2 to 4 versus 5 to 10 brain metastases. The treatment of multiple brain metastases with SRS has several challenges. The traditional practice of delivering radiosurgery to each lesion with a unique isocenter plan can result in prolonged treatment times for patients with many brain lesions. Conversely, single-isocenter, multitarget (SIMT) techniques, in which all brain lesions are simultaneously treated using a common isocenter,6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13 substantially reduce treatment time. Similarly, single-fraction SRS also is limited to treatment of modest individual and aggregate lesion volumes in noneloquent brain structures, as the prescribed dose must be reduced to prevent toxicity for large lesions or those located in structures such as the brainstem, which in turn may limit local control. Hypofractionated SRS (HF-SRS, SRS delivered in 2-5 fractions) potentially provides a broader therapeutic window than single-fraction SRS, permitting large lesions and aggregate lesion volumes, as well as lesions within critical structures, to be safely and effectively treated., Retrospective studies have shown that SIMT using 1 to 5 fractions is technically feasible and affords reasonable control of treated lesions with minimal toxicity,,,, although additional systematic prospective studies of the indications, efficacy, and toxicities associated with this technique would be beneficial. Combining an SIMT technique with dose adaptation enables safe treatment of a large number and volume of brain metastases in any brain location. In this study, “dose adapted” is defined as selection of either a 5-fraction SRS regimen for large treatment volumes or lesions near critical structures, or a single-fraction regimen with reduced dose prescribed to at least 1 lesion. We hypothesized that dose-adapted SIMT SRS in patients with 4 or more brain metastases is efficacious and can be delivered efficiently with minimal toxicity and no significant effect on quality of life and neurocognition and without adversely affecting survival predicted by the diagnostic-specific graded prognostic assessment (DS-GPA).,

Methods and Materials

Patient population

Patients with 4 to 10 untreated brain metastases were enrolled in this prospective, single-arm trial. Eligibility criteria included age ≥18 years Karnofsky performance status ≥70, and a life expectancy of >3 months. All patients were required to have brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Patients with small cell carcinoma, germ-cell tumors, lymphoma, leukemia, and multiple myeloma or with leptomeningeal disease were excluded from this study. DS-GPA score, calculated using the original formulation of this system,, needed to be 0.5 or greater. The largest metastatic lesion could be no more than 4 cm in maximum dimension, and all lesions were required to be >2 mm from the optic apparatus. Brain stem lesions were permitted. Previous cranial SRS/WBRT was allowed if >3 months before SIMT.

Study design

The institutional review board–approved study was registered at https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02886572. The primary endpoint was overall survival (OS). Secondary endpoints were local recurrence, distant brain recurrence, time to neurologic death, quality of life, prevalence of adverse events, and steroid use.

Radiation technique and treatment

For treatment planning, patients underwent computed tomography (CT) simulation using a frameless SRS thermoplastic mask (BrainLAB, Munich, Germany). A thin-cut (1-mm) CT scan of the brain was fused with a gadolinium-contrast-enhanced axial 3-dimensional spoiled-gradient MRI scan. Gross tumor volume included all contrast-enhancing lesions. The planning target volume (PTV) was created by adding a 1 mm margin to the gross tumor volume. Doses were prescribed to each lesion based on that lesion's size, location, and volume. All prescription doses were assigned per the protocol algorithm (Fig. E1). PTVs <2 cm in maximum dimension were prescribed 20 Gy, and those between 2.0 and <3.0 cm received 18 Gy. If 2 lesions were within 1 cm of each other, the prescribed dose to both lesions was based on the maximum diameter across these 2 lesions. PTVs >3 cm in maximum diameter received five 5-Gy fractions delivered on consecutive workdays. At the discretion of the treating physician, lesions in eloquent areas of the brain (eg, the motor strip or speech center) could be reduced from 20 Gy to 18 Gy for PTV <2 cm and 18 Gy to 16 Gy for PTV 2 to 2.9 cm. If the V12Gy of normal brain parenchyma (subtracting out the PTV) exceeded 20 mL on single-fraction treatment planning, treatment was replanned and administered with 5 Gy × 5 fractions to all lesions. In addition, if a patient had any lesions in the brain stem, all lesions were also treated with 5 Gy × 5. Patients were deemed to have had a “dose adjustment” if they underwent a 5-fraction regimen or a single-fraction treatment with at least 1 metastasis treated with reduced dose. All patients were contoured using BrainLAB iPlan RT Planning software and planned in ECLIPSE (Varian Medical Systems, Palo Alto, CA) using volumetric modulated arc therapy with a single-isocenter technique detailed previously. All treatments were delivered on a Novalis TX or TrueBeam STx linear accelerator equipped with a micromultileaf collimator (2.5 mm leaf width, Varian Medical Systems) using orthogonal kV and cone beam CT imaging. Translational and rotational position deviations were detected and corrected using 2-dimensional/3-dimensional image matching and a 6 degrees of freedom couch.

Follow-up

One month after SRS, patients returned for physical examination, QOL, and neurocognitive assessment. Subsequently, patients underwent brain MRI with physical examination, QOL/neurocognitive assessment every 3 months during the first year and every 6 months in the second year. After local or distant recurrence, patients no longer continued neurocognitive studies but were followed for survival, local control, and radiation necrosis. Radiation necrosis was identified either histologically when surgical intervention was appropriate or with the treating physician and principle investigator's clinical judgments of the appearance on MRI and rate of radiologic changes. Neurologic death was defined as death from neurologic causes related to tumor and categorized based on chart documentation. If neurologic death was not clearly noted but patients had documented MRI/CT progression of central nervous system disease within 3 months of death with no additional central nervous system treatment, this was also judged as neurologic death.

Neurocognition and quality of life

Neurocognitive and QOL testing was performed at baseline, 1 month after SIMT SRS, and at 3-month intervals from the time of SRS. Testing consisted of Mini-mental state examination (MMSE), Trail Making tests part A and B (TMT-A/B), Hopkins Verbal Learning Test, and the validated Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Brain (FACT-Br). Testing was stopped either because of distant brain failure, patient refusal, or death.

Statistical design and analysis

The goal of this study was to determine that the use of SIMT SRS does not significantly reduce or compromise the outcome of patients with ≥4 brain metastases. The original DS-GPA score developed by Sperduto et al,, dependent on primary histology and baseline characteristics, was used to make this assessment. Note that updated formulations of the DS-GPA provide more refined assessments of OS, but the molecular characteristics necessary to calculate these modified indices were usually not available when the patients were entered into the study. The expected survival calculated from the DS-GPA was used to help assess the efficacy of SIMT SRS. If the survival of patients treated with SIMT SRS is truly comparable to the survival of patients treated with currently available treatment regimens, we would expect that approximately half of the patients would live longer than expected. In designing this study, we planned to accrue 40 patients. If 17 or more lived longer than expected according to their GPA score, SIMT SRS would be considered noninferior to the treatment, given to the historical comparison cohort. Using this decision rule, there was 90% power to detect a noninferiority difference of −0.2 using a one-sided exact test with a target significance level of .10. The inferiority difference of −0.2 is the distance <0.5, the proportion that is expected to live longer than expected per the GPA score, that is considered statistically noninferior. A one-sided test was used because the study has a one-sided hypothesis that SIMT SRS does not significantly reduce or compromise the outcome of patients with ≥4 brain metastases. Kaplan-Meier methods were used to estimate OS, with survival being defined as the time from the start of protocol SRS until death. Patients were censored at death or the time of last follow-up if still alive. When analyzing distant recurrence, the cumulative incidence function was used due to the presence of death before distant recurrence existing as a competing risk. This would have been the preferred analysis method of local recurrence as well, but with only 4 patients having local recurrence, the numbers did not allow for a meaningful cumulative incidence function to be calculated. Categorical variables were described with frequencies and percentages. Continuous variables were described using either means with standard deviations or medians with appropriate percentiles.

Results

Patient characteristics

From February 2017 to August 2019, a total of 40 patients were enrolled in this study. Patient characteristics are summarized in Table 1. Non-small cell lung cancer was the predominant histology (50%), followed by breast (27.5%), renal cell (7.5%), and melanoma (7.5%). Median age was 61 years (range, 30-80); 62.5% of participants were female. Median Karnofsky performance status was 90 (range, 70-100), median number of metastases 6, and total volume of brain metastases per patient ranged from 0.06 to 32.2 mL with a mean of 4.28 mL. In addition, 21 of 40 patients presented in their initial diagnosis of metastatic cancer. Eleven patients had previous brain SRS (9), whole brain (2), or both (1) before enrolling in this trial. Five of these patients had 2 or 3 previous courses of SRS.
Table 1

Patient characteristics

All patients
N%
Total40100.00
Sex
 Female2562.50
 Male1537.50
Primary disease site
 Lung2050.00
 Breast1127.50
 Renal37.50
 Melanoma37.50
 Other37.50
Were brain metastasis present at initial cancer diagnosis?
 No2870.00
 Yes1230.00
Immunotherapy at baseline?
 No3280.00
 Yes820.00
Race
 White3382.50
 Black or African-American717.50
Ethnicity
 Hispanic or Latino12.50
 Not Hispanic or Latino3895.00
 Unknown/not reported12.50
Karnofsky Performance Score
 10037.50
 902152.50
 801127.50
 70512.50
No. brain metastasis
 4820.00
 5922.50
 6512.50
 7717.50
 8410.00
 9615.00
 1012.50
Metastatic involvement
 Brain only1127.50
 Extracranial2972.50
Prior brain surgery for metastasis
 No3690.00
 Yes410.00
SRS technique
 VMAT3997.50
 Static conformal12.50
Received prior SRS/WBRT
 No2977.50
 Yes1122.50

Abbreviations: SRS = stereotactic radiosurgery; VMAT = volumetric modulated arc therapy; WBRT = whole-brain radiation therapy.

Patient characteristics Abbreviations: SRS = stereotactic radiosurgery; VMAT = volumetric modulated arc therapy; WBRT = whole-brain radiation therapy. Twenty-four patients were treated in 1 fraction (total of 125 lesions), and 16 patients were treated in 5 fractions (total of 79 lesions). Of the patients who had single-fraction treatment, 4 received reduced dose because of proximity to critical structures such as optic nerve and brain stem; thus, a total of 20 patients had dose adjustment. Thirty-two patients had at least 1 follow-up MRI, and only those patients were included in the analyses for all calculations and data points. The other 8 patients died before their first MRI. All 40 patients were included for survival analysis.

Dosimetric data

Twenty-four patients were treated in 1 fraction and 16 in 5 fractions. Median maximum dose was 22.7 Gy (19.8-25.2 Gy) for single-fraction cases and 29.0 Gy (26.7-32.4 Gy) for 5-fraction cases. Mean prescribed dose was 19.9 Gy (18-20 Gy) for single fraction and 25 Gy for 5 fractions. For those treated in 1 or 5 fractions, median V12Gy (brain – PTV) was 11.7 mL (3.0-21.20 mL) and V24Gy was 3.5 mL (0.93-10.97 mL), respectively. Of the patients who underwent single-fraction SRS, 4 had reduced dose because of proximity to critical structures such as optic nerve and brain stem. Median longest distance between metastases was 12.0 cm (6.7-15.1 cm) with a median distance from the isocenter to the most distant metastasis of 7.0 cm (4.2-9.6 cm), mean overall conformity index 1.44 (1.1-2.0), and median number of arcs 4 (3-6). Largest PTV lesion diameter for each patient had a mean of 1.62 cm (0.50-3.80 cm). Mean integral whole brain dose was 3.27 Gy (1.02-14.15 Gy). Median total hippocampal dose was 2.4 Gy with right and left hippocampal doses of 2.20 Gy and 2.76 Gy, respectively. The median maximal hippocampal doses were 4.27 Gy and 4.93 Gy for the right and left hippocampi, respectively.

Delivery time

Median total time on the treatment table was 31.5 min/d (13-70 minutes), including a median beam-on time of 8 minutes (3-13 minutes).

Survival and local and distant control

From the time of protocol SRS, median follow-up time was 15.2 months. Median OS was 8.1 months with a 6-month OS of 57.3% and a 1-year OS 35.7% (Fig. 1). OS by histology is presented in Table 2. For comparison, based on the DS-GPA, the median OS for our cohort was calculated to be 5.5 months with a 1-year survival rate of 20% (see Tables E1-E3 for stratification by histology). From the time of protocol SRS, 22 patients survived longer than predicted by DS-GPA, surpassing the minimum of 17 patients needed for non-inferiority (Table E2). In addition, 65% of lung patients and 18% of breast patients lived longer than predicted. From the time of any initial brain metastases–directed radiation therapy (including those treated for brain metastases before the SRS delivered in this SIMT SRS study), 29 patients survived longer than predicted by DS-GPA, with 80% of lung and 55% breast patients living longer than predicted (Table E3). From any brain radiation treatment including those before this study, median OS was 11.8 months with a 1-year OS of 49.5% (33.2%-63.9%).
Figure 1

Overall survival from start of protocol stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) treatment. Kaplan-Meier methods were used to estimate overall survival, with survival being defined as the time from the start of protocol SRS until death. Follow-up time was 2 years.

Table 2

Overall survival from protocol SRS by histology

Primary disease siteTotalNo. deadMedian survival (95% CI), mo6-mo survival (95% CI)9-mo survival (95% CI)12-mo survival (95% CI)
Overall40308.1 (5-12.1)57.3% (40.6%-70.9%)41.7% (26.3%-56.4%)35.7% (21%-50.7%)
Lung20158.4 (3.7-17.8)60% (35.7%-77.6%)45% (23.1%-64.7%)39.4% (18.6%-59.7%)
Breast1198.3 (2.9-12.6)54.5% (22.9%-78%)45.5% (16.7%-70.7%)36.4% (11.2%-62.7%)
Renal325.9 (5,.)33.3% (0.9%-77.4%)33.3% (0.9%-77.4%)33.3% (0.9%-77.4%)
Melanoma335.1 (2.1-8.1)33.3% (0.9%-77.4%)--
Other31-100% (100%-100%)50% (0.6%-91%)-

Abbreviations: CI = confidence interval; SRS = stereotactic radiosurgery.

Overall survival from start of protocol stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) treatment. Kaplan-Meier methods were used to estimate overall survival, with survival being defined as the time from the start of protocol SRS until death. Follow-up time was 2 years. Overall survival from protocol SRS by histology Abbreviations: CI = confidence interval; SRS = stereotactic radiosurgery. To date, local recurrence has been observed in 4 patients, involving 10 of 204 treated lesions for a 1-year local failure rate of 5% (2.6%, 8.7%) in 4 of 32 patients. One patient with NSCLC exhibited recurrence in 5 lesions. Eight of the 10 recurrent lesions had been treated as prescribed by RTOG 90-05, with no dose adjustment. The other 2 lesions had been treated with 5 fractions. Thus, for lesions where there was no dose adjustment and treatment with a single fraction, local failure occurred in 8 of 119, for 93% local control. For those lesions treated in a 5-fraction regimen, 2 of 79 lesions failed, for 98% local control. Of the 40 patients, 19 experienced distant brain failure and 16 died without documentation of distant failure. The 6- and 12-month cumulative incidence for distant recurrence was 20% (95% CI, 9.3%-33.7%), and 35.8% (95% CI, 20.9%-50.9%), respectively (Fig. 2). Five patients recurred with >10 metastases, although only 1 had diffuse leptomeningeal disease. The remaining 14 patients had 1 to 8 metastases at recurrence with a median of 4 lesions.
Figure 2

Time from protocol single-isocenter, multitarget to distant recurrence within the brain. Magnetic resonance imaging was obtained every 3 months. Cumulative incidence function was used due to the presence of death before distant recurrence existing as a competing risk.

Time from protocol single-isocenter, multitarget to distant recurrence within the brain. Magnetic resonance imaging was obtained every 3 months. Cumulative incidence function was used due to the presence of death before distant recurrence existing as a competing risk. Of the 15 patients who received salvage therapy after the protocol SRS, 11 received SRS and 4 whole-brain radiation therapy, with a median OS of 5.8 months and a 9-month survival of 37% (95% CI, 13.8%-60.8%) after salvage therapy. OS did not significantly differ between those who had 4 to 5 metastases versus 6 to 10 metastases. Similarly, there were no differences in OS between patients who received 1 versus 5 fractions. Among the 31 patients who died, 6 experienced a neurologic death (20%) with 1 unknown cause of death. Nine patients were alive at the time this article was submitted.

Toxicity

Adverse events that were possibly, probably, or definitely related to SIMT were reported in 73% of patients, all grade 1 or 2. The most common were headache (50%), fatigue (45%), nausea (25%), and alopecia (20%). No grade 3-5 treatment-related adverse events attributable to SIMT were observed (Table 3.) Additionally, when comparing patients who had no dose adjustment versus those that had dose adjustment, there were no significant differences in the relevant side effect profiles.
Table 3

Toxicities possibly, probably, or definitely related to SIMT SRS treatment

Grade of adverse event
1: Mild
2: Moderate
3: Severe
4: Life Threatening
5: Lethal
Total
n(%)n(%)n(%)n(%)n(%)N
Nonhematologic adverse events
Eye disorders
 Eye disorders: other, specify (decrease visual acuity)2(5%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
Gastrointestinal disorders
 Nausea9(23%)1(3%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
 Vomiting0(0%)2(5%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
General disorders and administration site conditions
 Fatigue16(40%)2(5%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
 Gait disturbance3(8%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
 General disorders and administration site conditions: other, specify (unsteadiness without vertigo)1(3%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
 Irritability1(3%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
 Localized edema1(3%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
Musculoskeletal and connective tissue disorders
 Generalized muscle weakness0(0%)2(5%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
Nervous system disorders
 Dizziness2(5%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
 Dysgeusia1(3%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
 Dysphasia0(0%)1(3%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
 Headache16(40%)4(10%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
 Memory impairment3(8%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
 Nervous system disorders: other, specify (minor nuisance discomfort in her head)1(3%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
 Nervous system disorders: other, specify (odd sensation in head behind eyes)1(3%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
 Nervous system disorders: other, specify (right mandibular numbness)1(3%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
 Nervous system disorders: other, specify (syncope with seizure like activity and loss of consciousness)0(0%)1(3%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
 Paresthesia1(3%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
 Peripheral sensory neuropathy1(3%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
 Tremor1(3%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
Psychiatric disorders
 Confusion0(0%)1(3%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
 Personality change1(3%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
 Psychiatric disorders: other, specify (decrease concentration)1(3%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
 Psychiatric disorders: other, specify (mental fogginess)1(3%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
 Restlessness1(3%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
Skin and subcutaneous tissue disorders
 Alopecia7(18%)1(3%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
 Scalp pain3(8%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
Nonhematologic adverse events
Summary
 Maximum nonhematologic AE18(45%)11(28%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40
All adverse events
Summary
 Maximum overall AE18(45%)11(28%)0(0%)0(0%)0(0%)40

Abbreviations: AE = adverse events; CI = confidence interval; SIMT = single-isocenter, multi-target; SRS = stereotactic radiosurgery.

Toxicities possibly, probably, or definitely related to SIMT SRS treatment Abbreviations: AE = adverse events; CI = confidence interval; SIMT = single-isocenter, multi-target; SRS = stereotactic radiosurgery. Among 204 lesions treated, radionecrosis was observed in 5 lesions in 4 patients, and the 1-year local recurrence rate was 1.5% (0.4%, 4%). Four lesions had been treated with standard (unaltered) single-fraction dosing and one with 5 fractions. PTV diameters ranged from 0.9 to 1.78 cm with a median of 1.3 cm. Mean maximum doses did not exceed 113.9% for the metastases treated with single fraction. Total V12Gy values were 11.4 mL, 18.7 mL, and 14 mL for these single-fraction SRS cases. Mean maximum dose for the 5-fraction treatment was 124% with a total V24Gy of 4 mL.

Steroid use

Twelve patients were receiving steroids immediately before SIMT. All patients were able to discontinue steroids after SIMT at a mean time of 1.55 months. Immediately after SRS treatment, 3 patients not previously on steroids began receiving steroids. One patient received 0.5 mg daily for 5 days; another 4 mg 4 times a day followed by a slow taper for 2 months; and the last 1 mg QD to 4 mg twice daily for 3 weeks. The median duration of steroid therapy for these patients was 1.3 months. All 4 patients with radiation necrosis were placed on steroids when they developed new neurologic symptoms at a median time of 12.3 months after SRS; none had received steroids at brain metastasis diagnosis or immediately after SRS. Two patients (total of 3 lesions) with radiation necrosis required surgical intervention. One patient received surgery for one lesion and laser interstitial thermal therapy for another. Another patient received surgery alone, after which steroids were discontinued. Pathology showed necrosis alone in each of those 3 procedures. Both patients are still alive at the time of the article; the first survived 15.3 months after surgery and 9.1 months after lesion and laser interstitial thermal therapy, and the other lived 7.8 months after surgery.

Neurocognition

As shown in Tables E4 to E7 and Figures E2 to E5, scores on the MMSE, Trail Making, and Hopkins Verbal Learning tests did not change significantly from baseline with a mean follow-up time of 4.2 months. A 3 months post-SRS, the following scores were observed: MMSE, 29 pre-SRS and 30 post-SRS, with a mean change of 0.1; Trail Making A, 37.04 pre-SRS and 33.88 post-SRS, with a mean change of −1.17; Trail Making B, 75 pre-SRS to 75.50 post-SRS, with a mean change of −4.41; and HVLT, 23.5 pre-SRS and 25 post-SRS, with a mean change of 0.76. FACT-BR revealed no statistically significant changes in QOL after treatment, with scores of 142.50 (pre-SRS) and 136 (post-SRS), exhibiting a mean change of −2.25.

Discussion

As advances in systemic therapies allow patients with advanced cancer to live longer, brain metastases appear to be a growing problem with rising prevalence., There is increasing need for local control of brain disease that preserves long-term QOL and neurocognition. SRS has been demonstrated to better preserve neurocognition than WBRT and is the preferred treatment for patients with limited numbers of brain metastases. Larger numbers of brain lesions (>4) can present several logistical and technical hurdles when treating multiple isocenters with traditional SRS techniques. Likewise, increased toxicity can be associated with single-fraction SRS of large lesions or those in or near critical structures. The volume-adapted dosing strategy described and used in this prospective study addresses many of these concerns. This dose-adapted SIMT strategy effectively controlled the local growth of brain metastases. Local control rates were comparable with our previous prospective study examining SRS margin, which showed 93% LC at 1 year. In the present study, even with a 12 cm median maximum distant between targets (maximum 15 cm), excellent local control was observed, highlighting the accuracy of SIMT delivery, as Kraft et al have also shown. In addition, local control rates per lesion with hypofractionated SRS were similar to that for single-fraction treatment (98% vs 93%, P = NS), in line with results from previous studies.30, 31, 32 Thus, hypofractionated SRS techniques appear appropriate for larger lesions and those near critical structures without compromise of local tumor control. Although there is growing acceptance of SRS for multiple metastases, the risk of distant brain failure from occult metastatic brain disease not visualized on MRI has raised concerns about the appropriate therapeutic space for SRS alone. However, note that the number of brain metastases appears to be one of many factors in predicting distant brain failure. Other factors must be considered, including histology, control of systemic disease, existing systemic therapy options, and predicted survival., For example, Barrett et al analyzed outcomes of SRS in patients with 5 or more brain metastases and demonstrated that neither tumor volume nor tumor number were predictive of distant failure in multivariate analysis. Risk of distant brain failure in 6 months in our study was 58%, which is comparable with historical controls, where risk of distant brain failure in patients after SRS alone was similar and ranged from 35% to 64%,, In addition, Nam et al demonstrated no differences in distant brain failure between those who had 1 to 3 versus 4 to 10 brain metastases. More than half of our patients did not experience a distant recurrence (21 of 40), and the cumulative incidence at 1 year for distant recurrence was 35.8%. Of the 19 patients who failed after protocol SRS, 15 patients received salvage therapy (11 with SRS and 4 with WBRT), exhibiting a median OS of 5.8 months after salvage therapy with a 9-month survival of 37% (95% CI, 13.8%-60.8%). Salvage SRS appeared well tolerated and effective, recognizing that regular post-SRS imaging and follow-up are necessary. Consequently, SRS provided reasonable overall disease control in the majority of patients, most of whom would have otherwise received WBRT. In SRS trials treating multiple brain metastases, median survival after SRS has ranged from 6.2 to 8.6 months (Table 4). In our study, survival was comparable at 8.1 months. When patients were stratified by number of brain metastases, OS did not significantly differ between those who had 4 to 5 metastases versus 6 to 10 metastases. Also, there were there no differences in OS between the group of patients who received single-fraction SRS and those who received hypofractionated treatment, despite the fact that HF-SRS was associated much higher treatment volumes, a characteristic that should adversely affect local control and brain-specific survival.,
Table 4

Summary of studies of radiosurgery in the simultaneous treatment of ≥4 brain metastases

Study published, yNo. of patientsNature of studyLesions/patient median (range)Max lesion diameter (cm)/ aggregate lesion vol (mL)Karnofsky performance status median (range)Median overall survival (mo)
Yamamoto et al5,49 2014, 20171194Prospective3 (1-10)3/<15(<70->70)13.9
Nichol et al11 201660Retrospective(1-10)3/<159010.1
Limon et al37 201759Retrospective5 (4-23)No maximum≥70 (93.2%)5.8
Palmer et al12 2019173Retrospective4 (1-30)No maximum80 (70-90)13.2
Minniti et al47 202040Retrospective13 (10-21)3/< 15(>60)14.1
Alongi et al6 2021172Retrospective4 (2-22)3/50-12
Present study40Prospective6 (4-10)4/no maximum90 (70 - 100)8.1
Summary of studies of radiosurgery in the simultaneous treatment of ≥4 brain metastases OS in this study was also similar to published reports when adjusted for known risk factors for SRS patients. Using the DS-GPA as a benchmark, our trial design required that 17 patients surpass the DS-GPA expected survival to demonstrate noninferiority of the SIMT approach. From the time of protocol SIMT, 22 patients exceeded their expected survival time with 1 patient still alive with the potential to exceed their expected survival, meeting this noninferiority mark. When comparing histologies of primary tumors, 65% of lung and 18% of patients with breast cancer lived longer than expected. The benchmark used in this study is imperfect, as Sperduto et al calculated survival time based on time of initial brain metastases.16, 17 Eleven of the patients enrolled in this study had prior SRS/WBRT. If we calculated survival from first presentation of brain metastases, median survival was 11.8 months with a 1-year survival of 49.5% (95% CI, 33.2%-63.9%), and 29 patients living longer than predicted by the DS-GPA. Based on our results, we conclude that SIMT does not significantly compromise the survival of patients with 4 to 10 brain metastases. Moreover, this SRS strategy also appears to preserve neurocognition and QOL in at least the subset of patients who elected to return for detailed testing after SRS. SRS potentially offers benefits compared with WBRT with regard to integrated treatment logistics and preservation of QOL and neurocognition. In this study, 77.4% of patients died of systemic failure or nonneurocognitive death. SRS can positively affect this by enabling more rapid initiation or a shorter break from systemic therapy. This could allow better extracranial tumor control, especially as systemic therapies continue to improve. In addition, as many patients have worsening performance statuses on systemic therapy, this study is consistent with the observation that patients undergoing SRS experience smaller declines in QOL compared with those receiving WBRT. Toxicity was extremely low in this study. In the literature, radiation necrosis rates have ranged from 2% to 24%.39, 40, 41, 42 The rate of radiation necrosis per lesion was 2.5%, which is similar to a retrospective experience involving SIMT to multiple metastases delivered in both single and hypofractionated radiation schemes. In this study, rates were 3.4% among lesions treated with a single fraction (4 of 119 lesions) and 1.3% among lesions treated with hypofractionation (1 of 79 lesions). Using this hypofractionated regimen, no serious adverse effects and excellent local control were observed, even though the aggregate PTV was up to 32 mL. Finally, no treatment-related grade 3 or 4 toxicities were observed in any patient. Rates of grade 1 and 2 toxicities also did not appear to differ between hypofractionated and single-fraction schemes. In this trial, hypofractionation was an effective and safe method to treat a large number of brain metastases. Regarding neurocognitive function, in a prospective study of low-grade gliomas treated with conventional fractionation, 7.3 Gy to at least 40% of hippocampal volume was associated with long-term delayed recall. In addition, a higher integral brain dose has been associated with leukoencephalopathy and neurocognitive dysfunction. In our study, integral brain and hippocampal doses were low, and there were no clear changes in neurocognition from baseline, as measured by the HVLT, MMSE, and Trail Making Tests. In addition, QOL was well preserved after SRS in patients who underwent testing. The results in this study are consistent with other studies which have found no significant changes in neurocognition or QOL a few months after SRS.,45, 46, 47, 48, 49

Limitations of the study

The study's number of patients and population heterogeneity prevented multivariate analysis of survival. There also were not enough events to calculate a statistically relevant time to neurologic death, local failure, or radiation necrosis. In addition, an analysis of metastases volume effect on survival was not feasible given the number of patients on study. Finally, compliance with neurocognitive and QOL testing dropped off quickly after 6 months. Many patients had died (18 before the 6-month mark and another 7 patients in the following 3 months) or did not undergo the planned neurocognitive testing. However, in the 0- to 6-month timeframe, there were no obvious changes from baseline. Lastly, 11 patients had prior radiation, primarily SRS. Patients were chosen sequentially for consideration as they came into our clinic, whether or not they had previous radiation. Enrolling patients who have had previous brain radiation could be a confounding factor.

Conclusions

This study demonstrates that a dose-adapted SIMT SRS strategy including hypofractionation can be used to effectively and efficiently treat 4 to 10 brain metastases for a broad range of lesion sizes and locations. In this setting, it appears to be an attractive treatment option compared with WBRT, as outlined. Nonetheless, validation of these findings in a larger trial is merited. In particular, randomized trials evaluating SRS versus WBRT for patients with multiple metastases are currently being conducted: NCT03550391 (5-15 metastases; hippocampal-avoiding WBRT), NCT03075072 (5-20 metastases), and NCT01592968 (4-15 metastases). We strongly encourage enrollment in these trials. It would also be worthwhile to determine the potential benefits of hypofractionated versus single-fraction SRS in the large aggregate volume, multiple brain metastasis space, similar to the Alliance trial in resected brain metastases (NCT04114981) in which single-fraction versus hypofractionated SRS is being tested.
  45 in total

Review 1.  The Evolving Landscape of Brain Metastasis.

Authors:  Manuel Valiente; Manmeet S Ahluwalia; Adrienne Boire; Priscilla K Brastianos; Sarah B Goldberg; Eudocia Q Lee; Emilie Le Rhun; Matthias Preusser; Frank Winkler; Riccardo Soffietti
Journal:  Trends Cancer       Date:  2018-02-21

2.  Postoperative stereotactic radiosurgery compared with whole brain radiotherapy for resected metastatic brain disease (NCCTG N107C/CEC·3): a multicentre, randomised, controlled, phase 3 trial.

Authors:  Paul D Brown; Karla V Ballman; Jane H Cerhan; S Keith Anderson; Xiomara W Carrero; Anthony C Whitton; Jeffrey Greenspoon; Ian F Parney; Nadia N I Laack; Jonathan B Ashman; Jean-Paul Bahary; Costas G Hadjipanayis; James J Urbanic; Fred G Barker; Elana Farace; Deepak Khuntia; Caterina Giannini; Jan C Buckner; Evanthia Galanis; David Roberge
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2017-07-04       Impact factor: 41.316

3.  The radiosurgery fractionation quandary: single fraction or hypofractionation?

Authors:  John P Kirkpatrick; Scott G Soltys; Simon S Lo; Kathryn Beal; Dennis C Shrieve; Paul D Brown
Journal:  Neuro Oncol       Date:  2017-04-01       Impact factor: 12.300

4.  Survival in Patients With Brain Metastases: Summary Report on the Updated Diagnosis-Specific Graded Prognostic Assessment and Definition of the Eligibility Quotient.

Authors:  Paul W Sperduto; Shane Mesko; Jing Li; Daniel Cagney; Ayal Aizer; Nancy U Lin; Eric Nesbit; Tim J Kruser; Jason Chan; Steve Braunstein; Jessica Lee; John P Kirkpatrick; Will Breen; Paul D Brown; Diana Shi; Helen A Shih; Hany Soliman; Arjun Sahgal; Ryan Shanley; William A Sperduto; Emil Lou; Ashlyn Everett; Drexell H Boggs; Laura Masucci; David Roberge; Jill Remick; Kristin Plichta; John M Buatti; Supriya Jain; Laurie E Gaspar; Cheng-Chia Wu; Tony J C Wang; John Bryant; Michael Chuong; Yi An; Veronica Chiang; Toshimichi Nakano; Hidefumi Aoyama; Minesh P Mehta
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2020-09-15       Impact factor: 44.544

5.  A European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer phase III trial of adjuvant whole-brain radiotherapy versus observation in patients with one to three brain metastases from solid tumors after surgical resection or radiosurgery: quality-of-life results.

Authors:  Riccardo Soffietti; Martin Kocher; Ufuk M Abacioglu; Salvador Villa; François Fauchon; Brigitta G Baumert; Laura Fariselli; Tzahala Tzuk-Shina; Rolf-Dieter Kortmann; Christian Carrie; Mohamed Ben Hassel; Mauri Kouri; Egils Valeinis; Dirk van den Berge; Rolf-Peter Mueller; Gloria Tridello; Laurence Collette; Andrew Bottomley
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2012-12-03       Impact factor: 44.544

6.  Repeated stereotactic radiosurgery for patients with progressive brain metastases.

Authors:  Giuseppe Minniti; Claudia Scaringi; Sergio Paolini; Enrico Clarke; Francesco Cicone; Vincenzo Esposito; Andrea Romano; Mattia Osti; Riccardo Maurizi Enrici
Journal:  J Neurooncol       Date:  2015-09-14       Impact factor: 4.130

7.  Stereotactic radiosurgery for patients with multiple brain metastases (JLGK0901): a multi-institutional prospective observational study.

Authors:  Masaaki Yamamoto; Toru Serizawa; Takashi Shuto; Atsuya Akabane; Yoshinori Higuchi; Jun Kawagishi; Kazuhiro Yamanaka; Yasunori Sato; Hidefumi Jokura; Shoji Yomo; Osamu Nagano; Hiroyuki Kenai; Akihito Moriki; Satoshi Suzuki; Yoshihisa Kida; Yoshiyasu Iwai; Motohiro Hayashi; Hiroaki Onishi; Masazumi Gondo; Mitsuya Sato; Tomohide Akimitsu; Kenji Kubo; Yasuhiro Kikuchi; Toru Shibasaki; Tomoaki Goto; Masami Takanashi; Yoshimasa Mori; Kintomo Takakura; Naokatsu Saeki; Etsuo Kunieda; Hidefumi Aoyama; Suketaka Momoshima; Kazuhiro Tsuchiya
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2014-03-10       Impact factor: 41.316

8.  Analysis of tumor control and toxicity in patients who have survived at least one year after radiosurgery for brain metastases.

Authors:  John M Varlotto; John C Flickinger; Ajay Niranjan; Ajay K Bhatnagar; Douglas Kondziolka; L Dale Lunsford
Journal:  Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys       Date:  2003-10-01       Impact factor: 7.038

9.  Single fraction stereotactic radiosurgery for multiple brain metastases.

Authors:  Dror Limon; Frances McSherry; James Herndon; John Sampson; Peter Fecci; Justus Adamson; Zhiheng Wang; Fang-Fang Yin; Scott Floyd; John Kirkpatrick; Grace J Kim
Journal:  Adv Radiat Oncol       Date:  2017-09-11

10.  A multi-center analysis of single-fraction versus hypofractionated stereotactic radiosurgery for the treatment of brain metastasis.

Authors:  Jill S Remick; Emily Kowalski; Rahul Khairnar; Kai Sun; Emily Morse; Hua-Ren R Cherng; Yannick Poirier; Narottam Lamichhane; Stewart J Becker; Shifeng Chen; Akshar N Patel; Young Kwok; Elizabeth Nichols; Pranshu Mohindra; Graeme F Woodworth; William F Regine; Mark V Mishra
Journal:  Radiat Oncol       Date:  2020-05-28       Impact factor: 3.481

View more
  5 in total

Review 1.  Health related quality of life trajectories after stereotactic radiosurgery for brain metastases: a systematic review.

Authors:  Adomas Bunevicius; Laura Donovan; Jason Sheehan
Journal:  J Neurooncol       Date:  2022-07-04       Impact factor: 4.506

2.  Single-isocenter multiple-target stereotactic radiosurgery for multiple brain metastases: dosimetric evaluation of two automated treatment planning systems.

Authors:  Giorgio Hamid Raza; Luca Capone; Paolo Tini; Martina Giraffa; Piercarlo Gentile; Giuseppe Minniti
Journal:  Radiat Oncol       Date:  2022-07-01       Impact factor: 4.309

Review 3.  Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy in Patients with Oligometastatic Disease: Clinical State of the Art and Perspectives.

Authors:  Rémy Kinj; Emilien Muggeo; Luis Schiappacasse; Jean Bourhis; Fernanda G Herrera
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-02-23       Impact factor: 6.639

Review 4.  Single isocenter stereotactic irradiation for multiple brain metastases: current situation and prospects.

Authors:  Megumi Uto; Daichi Torizuka; Takashi Mizowaki
Journal:  Jpn J Radiol       Date:  2022-09-03       Impact factor: 2.701

5.  Answering the Big Clinical Questions in Brain Metastasis Management.

Authors:  John P Kirkpatrick
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2022-01-18       Impact factor: 6.244

  5 in total

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