1. Recurrence patterns and impact of brain metastases in synchronous single organ oligometastatic lung cancer following local ablative treatment - A multicenter analysis.
- Author
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Frost N, Roeper J, Velthaus JL, Raspe M, Olive E, Schmittel A, Schmidt B, Wasilewski D, Onken J, Lüders H, Witzenrath M, Senger C, Böhmer D, Loges S, Griesinger F, Modest DP, and Grohé C
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Humans, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local, Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Brain Neoplasms secondary, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung pathology, Lung Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Introduction: Local ablative therapy (LAT) improves survival in oligometastatic lung cancer (OMD), but there is limited information on recurrence patterns, re-treatments and in particular the role of brain metastases during the course of disease. We therefore conducted a retrospective multicenter analysis to evaluate course of disease, sequence of therapies and predictors for long-term disease-control in the brain and survival endpoints., Patients and Methods: Clinical data of patients with synchronous, single organ OMD with ≤4 metastases were collected from 5 certified German lung cancer centers. All patients underwent thorough initial staging including a
18 FDG-PET/CT scan, brain imaging and mediastinal staging, if necessary, and received LAT to all sites of disease., Results: In total, 164 patients were included (median age 62 years [range 41-84], non-squamous histology 80%, N0-1 64%, single metastasis 84%), 103 had brain (cohort A), 61 extracranial metastases (cohort B). With a median follow-up of 66 months, 115 patients (70%) experienced recurrent disease with a different distribution of sites: In cohort A vs. B, brain relapses occurred in 56% vs. 18% and new distant metastases in 5% vs. 40%. In total, LAT for every relapse was possible for 25% (29/115) of the patients. Patients with initial and secondary onset brain metastases experienced long-term disease-control in the brain and subsequently favorable survival with the application of repeated LAT (disease in the brain controlled vs. not-controlled, HR 0.21, p < 0.001). Comparable long-term overall survival was observed in patients with no or isolated brain relapses (5-years OS 74% and 92%) in contrast to patients with extracranial relapses (5-years OS 19.6%, p < 0.001)., Conclusions: Repeated LAT for recurrent synchronous single organ OMD results in a long-term favorable outcome. Disease control in the brain appears crucial and likely determines survival., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2022
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