Abstract
e14015 Background: Multidisciplinary management of BM of solid cancers integrates different combinations of treatment modalities. The scarcity of SRS centers has prevented widespread adoption of this therapy for appropriately selected patients. Methods: One-hundred eighteen (51.7% female, 48.3% male, median age 59 years) BM patients from a National Health Institute from Mexico (INCMNSZ) were included and analyzed. Results: The most common primary tumors were lung and breast cancers (25 cases each, representing 21% of the whole cohort), kidney cancer (14%), male germ cell tumors (10%), metastatic carcinoma of unknown primary (CUP) (5%), upper- and lower- gastrointestinal cancers (5%), thyroid differentiated cancers (5%), followed by melanoma, prostate, ovarian, hepatobiliary cancers and sarcoma (3% each of them) and urothelial carcinoma (2%) being the least common. No biopsy was reported for only one case. The most common histomolecular tumors were adenocarcinoma of the lung (17 cases), renal cell carcinoma (17), triple negative (TN) breast cancer (BC) (9), HER-2+ BC (7), Nonseminomatous germ cell tumor (7), CUP (6), ER+/HER-2+ BC (5), Germ cell tumor with choriocarcinoma (5), small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) (5), melanoma (5), prostate adenocarcinoma (5), thyroid differentiated cancer not otherwise specified (NOS) (5). Rectal adenocarcinoma, high-grade serous ovarian cancer, ER+/PR+ BC, sarcomas and NSCLC (3 cases, each) and urothelial carcinoma (2). Rare tumor subtypes, with one case, each included hepatocellular carcinoma, PR+/HER2+ BC, follicular thyroid cancer, esophageal, gastric and colonic adenocarcinomas, neuroendocrine prostate, neuroendocrine gallbladder, endometrial, large cell neuroendocrine lung carcinomas and cholangiocarcinoma. A solitary BM was present in 44 patients (37.3%), 2-3 BM in 30 (25.4%) and >3 BM in 44 patients (37.3%). 18 patients (15.2%) were not symptomatic at the time of diagnosis. 79 patients were treated with Whole-Brain Radiotherapy (WBRT), ten with a combination of surgery and adjuvant WBRT, seven with surgical resection without radiotherapy, only five included SRS as part of their treatment and seventeen received only supportive care. There was no difference in overall survival (OS) between treatment modalities excluding supportive care (p=0.05). Conclusions: Our experience from a LMIC with Hispanic population highlights that more than 50% of BM metastasize from solid tumors different from lung and breast cancers. Even though SRS has been included in recent guidelines from ASCO and ESMO, WBRT is the option most commonly included in multimodality treatments.
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