Abstract
Considering the rising detection of asymptomatic brain metastases (BM) during screening and staging procedures over the last decades, we aimed to evaluate the incidence, clinical characteristics and the prognostic value of neurological symptoms in BM from breast cancer. Patients with newly diagnosed BM from breast cancer (BC) were identified from the Vienna Brain Metastasis Registry. Patients were grouped into the three main subtypes: hormone receptor-positive/HER2 (human epidermal growth factor receptor 2)-negative breast cancer (HR BC), HER2 overexpressing BC (HER2 BC) and triple-negative BC (TN BC). A retrospective chart review and statistical outcome analyses were performed. 968 patients with BM from breast cancer (34.4% HR BC; 28.9% HER2 BC; 21.8% TN BC; 14.9% unknown receptor status) were included in the analysis. 81.6% (790/968) of the patients presented with neurological symptoms at BM diagnosis including focal deficits (695/790;88.0%), signs of increased intracranial pressure (388/790;49.1%), epileptic seizures (126/790;15.9%) and neuropsychological symptoms (133/790;16.8%). Patients with HER2 BC (66/280;23.6%) were significantly more often diagnosed with BM in absence of neurological symptoms during screening procedures compared to HR BC (62/333;18.6%) and TN BC (31/211;14.7%; chi-square test; p=0.043). Among all BC subtypes, asymptomatic patients presented with a significant longer median overall survival (OS) from diagnosis of BM compared to symptomatic patients (p<0.05; log-rank test; HR BC 20 vs. 9 months; HER2 BC 20 vs. 11 months; TN 11 vs. 5 months). In multivariate analysis, the breast cancer-specific Graded Prognostic Assessment (Breast-GPA: HR:1.4; 95% CI, 1.27-1.49; p<0.001) and the presence of neurological symptoms (HR:1.6; 95% CI, 1.35-1.95; p<0.001) presented as independently associated with survival prognosis from time of BM diagnosis respectively. Neurological symptoms are independently associated with overall survival in patients with BM from breast cancer. Our results highlight the need to incorporate neurological symptoms into the prognostic assessment of patients with BM from breast cancer.
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