Abstract

Historically, survival for even highly select cohorts of brain metastasis patients selected for SRS alone is <2 yr; thus, limited literature on risks of recurrence exists beyond 2 yr. To investigate the possibility that for subsets of patients the risk of intracranial failure beyond 2 yr is less than the commonly quoted 50% to 60%, wherein less frequent screening may be appropriate. As a part of our institutional radiosurgery database, we identified 132 patients treated initially with stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) alone (± pre-SRS surgical resection) with at least 2yr of survival and follow-up from SRS. Primary study endpoints were rates of actuarial intracranial progression beyond 2 yr, calculated using the Kaplan-Meier and Cox regression methods. The median follow-up from the first course of SRS was 3.5 yr. Significant predictors of intracranial failure beyond 2 yr included intracranial failure before 2 yr (52% vs 25%, P < .01) and total SRS tumor volume ≥5 cc (51% vs 25%, P < .01). On parsimonious multivariate analysis, failure before 2 yr (HR = 2.2, 95% CI: 1.2-4.3, P = .01) and total SRS tumor volume ≥5 cc (HR = 2.3, 95% CI: 1.2-4.3, P = .01) remained significant predictors of intracranial relapse beyond 2 yr. Relapse rates beyond 2 yr following SRS alone for brain metastases are low in patients who do not suffer intracranial relapse within the first 2 yr and with low-volume brain metastases, supporting a practice of less frequent screening beyond 2 yr. For remaining patients, frequent (every 3-4 mo) screening remains prudent, as the risk of intracranial failure after 2 yr remains high.

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