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Radiation necrosis in renal cell carcinoma brain metastases treated with checkpoint inhibitors and radiosurgery: An international multicenter study

Authors :
Eric J. Lehrer
Jason Gurewitz
Kenneth Bernstein
Dev Patel
Douglas Kondziolka
Ajay Niranjan
Zhishuo Wei
L. Dade Lunsford
Timothy D. Malouff
Henry Ruiz‐Garcia
Samir Patel
Phillip A. Bonney
Lindsay Hwang
Cheng Yu
Gabriel Zada
David Mathieu
Claire Trudel
Rahul N. Prasad
Joshua D. Palmer
Brianna M. Jones
Sonam Sharma
Kareem R. Fakhoury
Chad G. Rusthoven
Christopher P. Deibert
Piero Picozzi
Andrea Franzini
Luca Attuati
Cheng‐Chia Lee
Huai‐Che Yang
Manmeet S. Ahluwalia
Jason P. Sheehan
Daniel M. Trifiletti
Source :
Cancer. 128:1429-1438
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Wiley, 2022.

Abstract

Patients with renal cell carcinoma (RCC) brain metastases are frequently treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) and stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS). However, data reporting on the risk of developing radiation necrosis (RN) are limited.RN rates were compared for concurrent therapy (ICI/SRS administration within 4 weeks of one another) and nonconcurrent therapy with the χFifty patients (23 concurrent and 27 nonconcurrent) with 395 brain metastases were analyzed. The median follow-up was 12.1 months; the median age was 65 years. The median margin dose was 20 Gy, and 4% underwent prior whole-brain radiation therapy (WBRT). The median treated tumor volume was 3.32 cmSymptomatic RN occurs in a minority of patients with RCC brain metastases treated with ICI/SRS. The majority of events were grade 1 to 3 and were managed medically. Concurrent ICI/SRS does not appear to increase this risk. Attempts to improve dose conformality (reduce V12) may be the most successful mitigation strategy in single-fraction SRS.

Details

ISSN :
10970142 and 0008543X
Volume :
128
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e28de84cc2c64b069875d12985aab918
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/cncr.34087