1. Evaluation of the impact of pre-operative stereotactic radiotherapy on the acute changes in histopathologic and immune marker profiles of brain metastases
- Author
-
Kotecha, Rupesh, Tonse, Raees, Menendez, Miguel A Ramirez, Williams, Andre, Diaz, Zuanel, Tom, Martin C, Hall, Matthew D, Mehta, Minesh P, Alvarez, Reinier, Siomin, Vitaly, Odia, Yazmin, Ahluwalia, Manmeet S, and McDermott, Michael W
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Immunology ,Brain Disorders ,Cancer ,Brain Cancer ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Rare Diseases ,Biomarkers ,Brain Neoplasms ,Humans ,Necrosis ,Radiosurgery ,Retrospective Studies ,Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A - Abstract
The unique acute effects of the large fractional doses that characterize stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) or radiotherapy (SRT), specifically in terms of antitumor immune cellular processes, vascular damage, tumor necrosis, and apoptosis on brain metastasis have yet to be empirically demonstrated. The objective of this study is to provide the first in-human evaluation of the acute biological effects of SRS/SRT in resected brain metastasis. Tumor samples from patients who underwent dose-escalated preoperative SRT followed by resection with available non-irradiated primary tumor tissues were retrieved from our institutional biorepository. All primary tumors and irradiated metastases were evaluated for the following parameters: tumor necrosis, T-cells, natural killer cells, vessel density, vascular endothelial growth factor, and apoptotic factors. Twenty-two patients with irradiated and resected brain metastases and paired non-irradiated primary tumor samples met inclusion criteria. Patients underwent a median preoperative SRT dose of 18 Gy (Range: 15-20 Gy) in 1 fraction, with 3 patients receiving 27-30 Gy in 3-5 fractions, followed by resection within median interval of 67.8 h (R: 18.25-160.61 h). The rate of necrosis was significantly higher in irradiated brain metastases than non-irradiated primary tumors (p
- Published
- 2022