| Literature DB >> 36038669 |
Denise Bernhardt1,2, Laila König3,4,5,6,7, Anca Grosu8,9, Benedikt Wiestler10, Stefan Rieken11, Wolfgang Wick12,13, Jens Gempt14, Sandro M Krieg14, Friederike Schmidt-Graf15, Felix Sahm16, Bernhard Meyer14, Bernd J Krause17, Cordula Petersen18, Rainer Fietkau19,20, Michael Thomas21,22, Frank Giordano23, Andrea Wittig-Sauerwein24, Jürgen Debus8,3,4,5,6,7, Ghazaleh Tabatabai25,26,27,28, Peter Hau29, Joachim Steinbach30, Stephanie E Combs31,32,8.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The Working Group for Neuro-Oncology of the German Society for Radiation Oncology in cooperation with members of the Neuro-Oncology Working Group of the German Cancer Society aimed to define a practical guideline for the diagnosis and treatment of radiation-induced necrosis (RN) of the central nervous system (CNS).Entities:
Keywords: Bevacizumab; Brain metastases; Glioma; Radioation necrosis; Reirradiation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36038669 PMCID: PMC9515024 DOI: 10.1007/s00066-022-01994-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Strahlenther Onkol ISSN: 0179-7158 Impact factor: 4.033
Fig. 1Pathogenesis of blood–brain barrier disruptions and radionecrosis with the targeting point of bevacizumab as an inhibitor of vascular endothelial growth factor, therefore being a potent effector for disrupting the vicious cycle (adaption of Fig. 1 from Zhuang et al. [15])
Nomenclature with characteristics for differentiating between BBD and RN
| BBD | BBD | BBD along isodoses | Early RN | Typical RN | (Ultra-) late RN | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RT | Primary RT, normofractionated | High-dose primary RT or Re-RT | Single-fraction SRS or hypofractionated SRS, CyberKnife, Gamma Knife | After exceeding the TD5/5 by a large number (Re-RT with photons, SRS or C12) | Possible after all forms of RT | Possible after all forms of RT |
| Dose range | ≤ 60 Gy (54–60 Gy) | > 60 Gy cumulative or high fraction dose | Ablative doses (e.g., 20/18 Gy single dose, Cavity SRS) | Cumulative doses EQD2 > 100 Gy TD5/5 is exceeded widely | Clear dose–volume dependency, TD5/5 can be exceeded | Clear dose–volume dependency, TD5/5 can be exceeded |
| Time after RT | Typically 1–6 months after RT (“pseudogrogression”) Can occur later (6–18 months) | Typically 1–6 months after RT (“pseudoprogression”) Can occur later (6–18 months) | Typically 3–6 months after RT (“pseudoprogression”) Can occur later (6–18 months) | Early, often 1–6 months after RT | 6–18 months | > 18 months–several years |
| Special considerations | CEL in association with ventricular system after protons (distal end of beams, increase of RBE) Frontal or temporal lobe (protons: lateral beam application) | CEL in association with ventricular system after protons (distal end of beams, increase of RBE) Frontal or temporal lobe (protons: lateral beam application) | CEL according to isodoses, clear dose–volume dependency, central necrosis of tumor tissue is the desired treatment effect in tumors, especially brain metastasis. Association with ventricular system possible. Higher risk in patients treated with immunotherapy concomitantly | Often large edema, central necrosis | Usually mixed form of BBD and RN | Often misdiagnosed as progression, often associated with immunotherapy |
| Progression pattern | Slow, fluctuating, usually self-limiting, reversible Progression into RN is rare | Slow, fluctuating, often reversible Progression into RN is possible | Fluctuating, middle, often self-limiting and reversible, Progression into RN is possible | Rapidly, can be tumor like, Irreversible | Often progressive, can be tumor like, Irreversible | All forms of progression, irreversible |
| Symptoms | Typically no/few symptoms, small–medium edema possible | Small–medium edema possible, symptoms usually not severe | Small–medium edema possible, symptoms usually not severe | Small–large edema possible, often associated with large edema, symptoms can be severe | Small–large edema possible, symptoms can range from asymptomatic to severe | Small–large edema possible, symptoms can range from asymptomatic to severe |
RT radiotherapy, CEL contrast-enhancing lesions, RBE relative biologic effectiveness, BBD blood–brain barrier disruptions; Gamma Knife, ELEKTA, Sweden; CyberKnife, Accuray Incorporated, Sunnyvale, CA, USA