Abstract

Background:This report focuses on the overall survival and complications associated with treatment of cerebral metastases with surgical resection followed by stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS). Management and complications of corticosteroid therapy are underreported in the literature but represent an important source of morbidity for patients.Methods:Fifty-nine consecutive patients underwent surgical resection of a cerebral metastasis followed by SRS to the cavity. Patient charts were reviewed retrospectively to ascertain overall survival, local control, surgical complications, SRS complications, and corticosteroid complications.Results:Our mean follow-up was 14.4 months (median 12.0 months, range 0.9-62.9 months). Median overall survival in this series was 15.25 months and local control was 98.3%. There was a statistically significant survival benefit conferred by Radiation Therapy Oncology Group recursive partitioning analysis Classes 1 and 2. The surgical complication rate was 6.8% while the SRS complication rate was 2.4%. Corticosteroid complications are reported and dependence at 1 month was 20.3%, at 3 months 6.8%, at 6 months 1.7%, and at 12 months no patients remained on corticosteroid therapy.Conclusions:Overall survival and local control with this treatment paradigm compare well to the other published literature. Complications associated with this patient population are low. A corticosteroid tapering protocol is proposed and demonstrated lower rates of steroid-related complications and dependence than previously reported.

Highlights

  • MethodsFifty-nine consecutive patients underwent surgical resection of a cerebral metastasis followed by stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) to the cavity

  • This report focuses on the overall survival and complications associated with treatment of cerebral metastases with surgical resection followed by stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS)

  • SNI: Stereotactic 2013,Vol 4, Suppl 6 - A Supplement to Surgical Neurology International combined with enhanced detection capabilities and cancer therapies that extend overall life expectancy, makes the treatment of cerebral metastases an important consideration in modern cancer therapy.[28]

Read more

Summary

Methods

Fifty-nine consecutive patients underwent surgical resection of a cerebral metastasis followed by SRS to the cavity. During a 2-year period from 2010 to 2012, 59 consecutive patients who underwent surgical resection of a cerebral metastasis followed by SRS to the resection cavity were identified. This time period was selected because it represents the initiation of this protocol to the start of the study period. The patient records were reviewed retrospectively and data regarding the following variables were recorded: age, sex, primary pathology, extent of extracranial disease (based on preoperative staging enhanced computed tomography scan (CT) of the chest, abdomen, and pelvis), the number and size of cerebral metastases, extent of resection (gross vs subtotal as evidenced by 24-hour postoperative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan), post operative complications, duration of corticosteroid use, corticosteroid-related complications, and SRS dose and treatment volume. All patients were classified according to the Radiation Oncology Therapy Group (RTOG) Recursive Partioning Analysis (RPA).[9]

Results
Discussion
Conclusion
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