Abstract

2033 Background: As systemic therapy improves; the prevalence of brain metastases is increasing. Screening brain MRIs are currently recommended for all stage ≥ II non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and stage IIIB–IV melanoma patients, but only when neurologic symptoms arise in stage IV or recurrent breast cancer (BC) patients. This study assessed the presentation and institutional outcomes treating brain metastases (BM) of BC, NSCLC, and melanoma origin. Methods: Patients with BM treated between 2014 and 2019 with primary melanoma, NSCLC, and BC were identified. Characteristics of initial BM diagnoses were retrieved from clinical chart review. Kruskal-Wallis and Pearson’s chi-square tests were used to test differences between groups. Overall survival (OS) was calculated from dates of initial BM diagnosis using the Kaplan–Meier method. Results: A total of 959 patients were identified (BC 18%, NSCLC 51%, melanoma 31%). BC patients were younger at initial presentation (BC median age: 57, NSCLC 65, melanoma 62, p< 0.0001). At BM diagnosis, BC patients were more likely to have concurrent systemic metastasis (BC 77%, NSCLC 42%, melanoma 69%, p< 0.0001), at least 5 BM (BC 27%, NSCLC 14%, melanoma 13%, p= 0.0004), and leptomeningeal disease (BC 23%, NSCLC 6%, melanoma 6%, p< 0.0001). Patients with BC were significantly more likely to receive whole brain radiation therapy (WBRT) (BC 58%, NSCLC 37%, melanoma 22%, p< 0.0001) and less likely to receive stereotactic radiation (BC 26%, NSCLC 48%, melanoma 58%, p< 0.0001) following initial BM diagnosis. There were no significant differences in surgical resection between cancer types (BC 24%, NSCLC 24%, melanoma 29%, p =0.166). Median OS was shorter for BC (BC 9.9 months, NSCLC 10.3 months, melanoma 13.7 months, p= 0.0006) following BM diagnosis. Conclusions: Our institutional analysis found BC patients were more likely to be younger, present with more advanced brain disease, require WBRT, and have poorer OS than NSCLC and melanoma patients following initial brain metastasis diagnosis. This may be due in part to a lack of brain MRI screening recommendations in BC. Further investigation is needed to determine which BC patients are at sufficient risk to warrant brain MRI screening.

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