Abstract

Background: Postoperative irradiation for brain tumor in pregnant women is a matter of concern. Aim: We aimed to assess the safety of radiotherapy for brain tumors in pregnancy. We here report a successful treatment for anaplastic astrocytoma during pregnancy: surgery + postoperative irradiation. We wish to emphasize how we devised irradiation procedure to achieve both therapeutic effectiveness and safety to the fetus/infant. Case Presentation: A 34-year-old pregnant woman suffered with brain anaplastic astrocytoma. Tumor resection under craniotomy was performed with success. We decided to conduct postoperative radiotherapy at 25 weeks of gestation to reduce the risk of recurrence. We used a flattening filter-free volumetric arc therapy (FFF-VMAT) technique, which can achieve lower out-of-field dose than VMAT with a flattening filter or helical tomotherapy. We prescribed 60 Gy over 30 fractions. During actual beam delivery, surface and rectal dose to the patient (mother) were measured. The total fetal dose was estimated at 0.006 - 0.018 Gy, which is under the threshold set by the ICRP. A male healthy infant was born vaginally at the 37th week of pregnancy. The patient (mother) and the infant are healthy at the time of writing. Conclusion: FFF-VMAT is a good choice for brain tumors during pregnancy.

Highlights

  • Aim: We aimed to assess the safety of radiotherapy for brain tumors in pregnancy

  • We here report a successful treatment for anaplastic astrocytoma during pregnancy: surgery + postoperative irradiation

  • The total fetal dose was estimated at 0.006 0.018 Gy, which is under the threshold set by the ICRP

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Summary

Introduction

Anaplastic astrocytoma (AA; World Health Organization [WHO] grade III) is a diffusely infiltrative astrocytic brain tumor with anaplasia and represents 3.3% of primary brain tumors, with a 5-year overall survival rate of 44.3% when treated with surgery and chemoradiotherapy [1]. Resection and adjuvant radiotherapy are recommended for nongravid patients with AA [2]. Radiotherapy for pregnant patients is generally avoided. There are cases where delayed treatment would increase the risk of morbidity and mortality, necessitating treatment during pregnancy. We report a case of AA treated with postoperative FFF-VMAT during pregnancy

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