Abstract

A retrospective comparative analysis of the outcomes of gamma knife radiosurgery (GKRS) for brain metastases from uterine cervical carcinoma (CC) and endometrial carcinoma (EC), investigated the efficacy and prognostic factors for survival and local tumor control. Histopathological analysis was also performed. The authors retrospectively reviewed 61 patients with 260 tumors of CC and 73 patients with 302 tumors of EC who had undergone GKRS. The survival times after GKRS had no difference between CC and EC. Uncontrolled primary cancer was significant unfavorable factor. CC resulted in significantly higher neurological death and post-GKRS neurological deterioration. New lesions appeared intracranially after GKRS, with no significant difference between CC and EC. Local tumor control rates at 6, 12, and 24months after GKRS were 90.0%, 86.6%, and 78.0% for CC and 92.2%, 87.9%, and 86.4% for EC. Primary cancer of CC, more than 7cm3 volume, and prescription dose less than 20Gy were significantly correlated in control failure. Local tumor control rates were significantly lower for squamous cell carcinoma in CC. No significant differences were found between histopathological subtypes of EC. This study established a relationship between the efficacy of GKRS for CC and EC brain metastases and the histopathological. Though, survival time after GKRS has no difference between CC and EC, CC was significantly higher neurogenic death and neurological deterioration after GKRS. Squamous cell carcinoma had a significantly lower rate of local tumor control among all CC, thereby resulting in CC having lower local tumor control than EC.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call