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Salvage brachytherapy for multiply recurrent metastatic brain tumors: A matched case analysis

Authors :
Kyle C Wu
Jonathan M Cantalino
Edward C Dee
Liangge Hsu
Thomas C Harris
Bhupendra Rawal
Parikshit R Juvekar
Michael A Mooney
Ian F Dunn
Ayal A Aizer
Phillip M Devlin
Wenya Linda Bi
Source :
Neuro-Oncology Advances. 4
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2022.

Abstract

Background Patients with recurrent brain metastases who have exhausted external radiation options pose a treatment challenge in the setting of advances in systemic disease control which have improved quality of life and survival. Brachytherapy holds promise as salvage therapy given its ability to enforce surgical cytoreduction and minimize regional toxicity. This study investigates the role of salvage brachytherapy in maintaining local control for recurrent metastatic lesions. Methods We retrospectively reviewed our institution’s experience with brachytherapy in patients with multiply recurrent cerebral metastases who have exhausted external radiation treatment options (14 cases). The primary outcome of the study was freedom from local recurrence (FFLR). To capture the nuances of tumor biology, we compared FFLR achieved by brachytherapy to the preceding treatment for each patient. We further compared the response to brachytherapy in patients with lung cancer (8 cases) against a matched cohort of maximally radiated lung brain metastases (10 cases). Results Brachytherapy treatment conferred significantly longer FFLR compared to prior treatments (median 7.39 vs 5.51 months, P = .011) for multiply recurrent brain metastases. Compared to an independent matched cohort, brachytherapy demonstrated superior FFLR (median 8.49 vs 1.61 months, P = .004) and longer median overall survival (11.07 vs 5.93 months, P = .055), with comparable side effects. Conclusion Brachytherapy used as salvage treatment for select patients with a multiply recurrent oligometastatic brain metastasis in the setting of well-controlled systemic disease holds promise for improving local control in this challenging patient population.

Subjects

Subjects :
General Medicine

Details

ISSN :
26322498
Volume :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neuro-Oncology Advances
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dbb260b2f691dd61ee12871a98644699