Cargando…

Survival was Significantly Better with Surgical/Medical/Radiation Co-interventions in a Single-Institution Practice Audit of Frameless Stereotactic Radiosurgery

PURPOSE: To audit outcomes after introducing frameless stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) for brain metastases, including co-interventions: neurosurgery, systemic therapy, and whole brain radiotherapy (WBRT). We report median overall survival (MS), local failure, and distant brain failure. We hypothesi...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Taggar, Amandeep, MacKenzie, Joanna, Li, Haocheng, Lau, Harold, Lim, Gerald, Nordal, Robert, Hudson, Alana, Khan, Rao, Spencer, David, Voroney, Jon-Paul
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4914063/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27335717
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.612
_version_ 1782438501724192768
author Taggar, Amandeep
MacKenzie, Joanna
Li, Haocheng
Lau, Harold
Lim, Gerald
Nordal, Robert
Hudson, Alana
Khan, Rao
Spencer, David
Voroney, Jon-Paul
author_facet Taggar, Amandeep
MacKenzie, Joanna
Li, Haocheng
Lau, Harold
Lim, Gerald
Nordal, Robert
Hudson, Alana
Khan, Rao
Spencer, David
Voroney, Jon-Paul
author_sort Taggar, Amandeep
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: To audit outcomes after introducing frameless stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) for brain metastases, including co-interventions: neurosurgery, systemic therapy, and whole brain radiotherapy (WBRT). We report median overall survival (MS), local failure, and distant brain failure. We hypothesized patients treated with SRS would have clinically meaningful improved MS compared with historic institutional values. We further hypothesized that patients treated with co-interventions would have clinically meaningful improved MS compared with patients treated with SRS alone. METHODS: One hundred twenty patients (N = 120) with limited intracranial disease underwent 130 frameless SRS sessions from April 2010 to May 2013. Median follow-up was 11 months. MS was measured from brain metastases diagnosis, local failure, and distant brain failure from the time of first SRS. RESULTS: Practice pattern during the first year of the study favored upfront WBRT (79%) over SRS (21%) while upfront SRS (45%) was almost as common as upfront WBRT (55%) in the last year of the study. MS was 18 months; 37% received SRS alone as initial radiotherapy (MS 12 months); 63% received WBRT prior to SRS (MS 19 months); 50% received systemic therapy post-SRS (MS 21 months); and 26% had tumor resection then SRS to the surgical cavity (MS 42 months). Local failure occurred in 10% of lesions and radio-necrosis occurred in 4%. Differences in distant brain failure among patients treated with upfront SRS (40% rate), WBRT followed by SRS (33% rate) or systemic therapy post-SRS (37% rate) were not statistically significant. CONCLUSION: Frameless SRS effectively treats surgical cavities, persistent tumors post-WBRT, and can be used as an upfront treatment of brain metastases. Surgery, systemic therapy, and WBRT are associated with longer MS. Patients can live for years while receiving multiple therapies. Systemic therapy for patients with brain metastases is increasingly common, palliative care occurs earlier and improves survival, and WBRT use is not routine. Modern series sometimes produce unexpectedly good results. Classification and treatment protocols are evolving. This practice audit is note-worthy for (i) high median overall survival, (ii) systemic therapy after radiosurgery for patients with tumors treated by radiosurgery, (iii) distant brain failure not significantly related to WBRT, and (iv) neurosurgery, systemic therapy, and WBRT are independently associated with improved MS.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4914063
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2016
publisher Cureus
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-49140632016-06-22 Survival was Significantly Better with Surgical/Medical/Radiation Co-interventions in a Single-Institution Practice Audit of Frameless Stereotactic Radiosurgery Taggar, Amandeep MacKenzie, Joanna Li, Haocheng Lau, Harold Lim, Gerald Nordal, Robert Hudson, Alana Khan, Rao Spencer, David Voroney, Jon-Paul Cureus Radiation Oncology PURPOSE: To audit outcomes after introducing frameless stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) for brain metastases, including co-interventions: neurosurgery, systemic therapy, and whole brain radiotherapy (WBRT). We report median overall survival (MS), local failure, and distant brain failure. We hypothesized patients treated with SRS would have clinically meaningful improved MS compared with historic institutional values. We further hypothesized that patients treated with co-interventions would have clinically meaningful improved MS compared with patients treated with SRS alone. METHODS: One hundred twenty patients (N = 120) with limited intracranial disease underwent 130 frameless SRS sessions from April 2010 to May 2013. Median follow-up was 11 months. MS was measured from brain metastases diagnosis, local failure, and distant brain failure from the time of first SRS. RESULTS: Practice pattern during the first year of the study favored upfront WBRT (79%) over SRS (21%) while upfront SRS (45%) was almost as common as upfront WBRT (55%) in the last year of the study. MS was 18 months; 37% received SRS alone as initial radiotherapy (MS 12 months); 63% received WBRT prior to SRS (MS 19 months); 50% received systemic therapy post-SRS (MS 21 months); and 26% had tumor resection then SRS to the surgical cavity (MS 42 months). Local failure occurred in 10% of lesions and radio-necrosis occurred in 4%. Differences in distant brain failure among patients treated with upfront SRS (40% rate), WBRT followed by SRS (33% rate) or systemic therapy post-SRS (37% rate) were not statistically significant. CONCLUSION: Frameless SRS effectively treats surgical cavities, persistent tumors post-WBRT, and can be used as an upfront treatment of brain metastases. Surgery, systemic therapy, and WBRT are associated with longer MS. Patients can live for years while receiving multiple therapies. Systemic therapy for patients with brain metastases is increasingly common, palliative care occurs earlier and improves survival, and WBRT use is not routine. Modern series sometimes produce unexpectedly good results. Classification and treatment protocols are evolving. This practice audit is note-worthy for (i) high median overall survival, (ii) systemic therapy after radiosurgery for patients with tumors treated by radiosurgery, (iii) distant brain failure not significantly related to WBRT, and (iv) neurosurgery, systemic therapy, and WBRT are independently associated with improved MS. Cureus 2016-05-17 /pmc/articles/PMC4914063/ /pubmed/27335717 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.612 Text en Copyright © 2016, Taggar et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Radiation Oncology
Taggar, Amandeep
MacKenzie, Joanna
Li, Haocheng
Lau, Harold
Lim, Gerald
Nordal, Robert
Hudson, Alana
Khan, Rao
Spencer, David
Voroney, Jon-Paul
Survival was Significantly Better with Surgical/Medical/Radiation Co-interventions in a Single-Institution Practice Audit of Frameless Stereotactic Radiosurgery
title Survival was Significantly Better with Surgical/Medical/Radiation Co-interventions in a Single-Institution Practice Audit of Frameless Stereotactic Radiosurgery
title_full Survival was Significantly Better with Surgical/Medical/Radiation Co-interventions in a Single-Institution Practice Audit of Frameless Stereotactic Radiosurgery
title_fullStr Survival was Significantly Better with Surgical/Medical/Radiation Co-interventions in a Single-Institution Practice Audit of Frameless Stereotactic Radiosurgery
title_full_unstemmed Survival was Significantly Better with Surgical/Medical/Radiation Co-interventions in a Single-Institution Practice Audit of Frameless Stereotactic Radiosurgery
title_short Survival was Significantly Better with Surgical/Medical/Radiation Co-interventions in a Single-Institution Practice Audit of Frameless Stereotactic Radiosurgery
title_sort survival was significantly better with surgical/medical/radiation co-interventions in a single-institution practice audit of frameless stereotactic radiosurgery
topic Radiation Oncology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4914063/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27335717
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.612
work_keys_str_mv AT taggaramandeep survivalwassignificantlybetterwithsurgicalmedicalradiationcointerventionsinasingleinstitutionpracticeauditofframelessstereotacticradiosurgery
AT mackenziejoanna survivalwassignificantlybetterwithsurgicalmedicalradiationcointerventionsinasingleinstitutionpracticeauditofframelessstereotacticradiosurgery
AT lihaocheng survivalwassignificantlybetterwithsurgicalmedicalradiationcointerventionsinasingleinstitutionpracticeauditofframelessstereotacticradiosurgery
AT lauharold survivalwassignificantlybetterwithsurgicalmedicalradiationcointerventionsinasingleinstitutionpracticeauditofframelessstereotacticradiosurgery
AT limgerald survivalwassignificantlybetterwithsurgicalmedicalradiationcointerventionsinasingleinstitutionpracticeauditofframelessstereotacticradiosurgery
AT nordalrobert survivalwassignificantlybetterwithsurgicalmedicalradiationcointerventionsinasingleinstitutionpracticeauditofframelessstereotacticradiosurgery
AT hudsonalana survivalwassignificantlybetterwithsurgicalmedicalradiationcointerventionsinasingleinstitutionpracticeauditofframelessstereotacticradiosurgery
AT khanrao survivalwassignificantlybetterwithsurgicalmedicalradiationcointerventionsinasingleinstitutionpracticeauditofframelessstereotacticradiosurgery
AT spencerdavid survivalwassignificantlybetterwithsurgicalmedicalradiationcointerventionsinasingleinstitutionpracticeauditofframelessstereotacticradiosurgery
AT voroneyjonpaul survivalwassignificantlybetterwithsurgicalmedicalradiationcointerventionsinasingleinstitutionpracticeauditofframelessstereotacticradiosurgery