Abstract

Optimal doses for single-fraction stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) in the treatment of brain metastases are not well established. Our institution utilized conservative dosing compared to maximum-tolerated doses from the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group 90-05 Phase I study. To report individual lesion control (LC) from conservative single-fraction doses and determine factors affecting LC. From 2003 to 2015, patients who underwent linear accelerator-based single-fraction SRS for cerebral/cerebellar metastases and receiving at least 1 follow-up magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were identified. Lesion response was assessed by a size-based rating system and modified "Response Assessment in Neuro-Oncology Brain Metastases" (RANO-BM) criteria. Among 188 patients with 519 lesions, median survival was 13.1 mo; median follow-up time with MRI was 9.6 mo per course. Median tumor-periphery dose was 15 Gy (range: 7.5-20.7). Median lesion volume was 0.5 cc and diameter was 9 mm (range: 2-45). Concordance between RANO-BM and size-based system was 93%. Crude 1-yr LC was 80%, 73%, 56%, and 38% for lesions 1 to 10, 11 to 20, 21 to 30, >31 mm, respectively. On multivariate analysis, increased size, melanoma and colorectal histology, and progression after whole brain radiation therapy predicted worse LC. When excluding lesions treated as a boost, dose was a significant predictor of LC in multivariate models (hazard ratio 0.89, P = .01). Symptomatic radiation necrosis occurred in 10 lesions in 10 patients. Histology predicts LC after conservative SRS doses with evidence of a dose-response relationship. Conservative single-fraction SRS doses confer minimal toxicity and acceptable control in certain subgroups (breast cancer, <5 mm), with suboptimal control in larger lesions and in combination with whole brain radiation therapy.

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