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SURG-10. The evolving role of neurosurgery for central nervous system metastases in the era of personalized medicine

BACKGROUND: Novel therapies translating into improved survival of patients with advanced cancer have emerged. The number of metastases in the central nervous system is therefore seen to increase. Neurosurgery assumes an expanding role within multi-disciplinary care structures for such patients. METH...

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Autores principales: Karschnia, Philipp, Rhun, Emilie Le, Grau, Stefan J, Preusser, Matthias, Soffietti, Riccardo, van den Bent, Martin, Vogelbaum, Michael, von Baumgarten, Louisa, Westphal, Manfred, Weller, Michael, Tonn, Joerg-Christian
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8351175/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/noajnl/vdab071.103
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author Karschnia, Philipp
Rhun, Emilie Le
Grau, Stefan J
Preusser, Matthias
Soffietti, Riccardo
van den Bent, Martin
Vogelbaum, Michael
von Baumgarten, Louisa
Westphal, Manfred
Weller, Michael
Tonn, Joerg-Christian
author_facet Karschnia, Philipp
Rhun, Emilie Le
Grau, Stefan J
Preusser, Matthias
Soffietti, Riccardo
van den Bent, Martin
Vogelbaum, Michael
von Baumgarten, Louisa
Westphal, Manfred
Weller, Michael
Tonn, Joerg-Christian
author_sort Karschnia, Philipp
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Novel therapies translating into improved survival of patients with advanced cancer have emerged. The number of metastases in the central nervous system is therefore seen to increase. Neurosurgery assumes an expanding role within multi-disciplinary care structures for such patients. METHODS: We performed a comprehensive literature review on the current status of neurosurgery for brain metastases patients. Based on the extracted data, we developed a review from experts in the field on the role of brain metastasis surgery in the era of personalized medicine. RESULTS: Traditionally, three metastases were considered the cutoff to offer surgical resection. With respect to the clinical status, the resection of a symptomatic mass may nowadays be considered even in presence of multiple tumors in a multimodal setting: surgical resection of brain metastasis provides immediate relief from mass effect-related symptoms and histology in case of unknown primary tumor; surgery may help stabilizing the disease, thus enabling further therapy; and in situations where immunotherapy is considered and non-surgical management would require long-term steroid administration, surgery may also provide expeditious relief of edema and reduction of needs for steroids. In patients with multiple brain metastasis and mixed response to non-surgical therapy, tumor resampling may allow tissue analysis for expression of molecular tumor targets. In patients with leptomeningeal dissemination and consecutive hydrocephalus, ventriculo-peritoneal shunting improves quality of life but also allows for time to administer more therapy thus prolonging survival. Addressing the limited efficacy of many oncological drugs for brain metastases, clinical trial protocols in which surgical specimens are analyzed for pre-surgically administered agents may offer pharmacodynamic insights. CONCLUSION: Comprehensive neurosurgical care will have to be an integral element of multi-disciplinary oncological centres providing care to patients with brain metastases to improve on therapy and tumour biology research.
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spelling pubmed-83511752021-08-09 SURG-10. The evolving role of neurosurgery for central nervous system metastases in the era of personalized medicine Karschnia, Philipp Rhun, Emilie Le Grau, Stefan J Preusser, Matthias Soffietti, Riccardo van den Bent, Martin Vogelbaum, Michael von Baumgarten, Louisa Westphal, Manfred Weller, Michael Tonn, Joerg-Christian Neurooncol Adv Supplement Abstracts BACKGROUND: Novel therapies translating into improved survival of patients with advanced cancer have emerged. The number of metastases in the central nervous system is therefore seen to increase. Neurosurgery assumes an expanding role within multi-disciplinary care structures for such patients. METHODS: We performed a comprehensive literature review on the current status of neurosurgery for brain metastases patients. Based on the extracted data, we developed a review from experts in the field on the role of brain metastasis surgery in the era of personalized medicine. RESULTS: Traditionally, three metastases were considered the cutoff to offer surgical resection. With respect to the clinical status, the resection of a symptomatic mass may nowadays be considered even in presence of multiple tumors in a multimodal setting: surgical resection of brain metastasis provides immediate relief from mass effect-related symptoms and histology in case of unknown primary tumor; surgery may help stabilizing the disease, thus enabling further therapy; and in situations where immunotherapy is considered and non-surgical management would require long-term steroid administration, surgery may also provide expeditious relief of edema and reduction of needs for steroids. In patients with multiple brain metastasis and mixed response to non-surgical therapy, tumor resampling may allow tissue analysis for expression of molecular tumor targets. In patients with leptomeningeal dissemination and consecutive hydrocephalus, ventriculo-peritoneal shunting improves quality of life but also allows for time to administer more therapy thus prolonging survival. Addressing the limited efficacy of many oncological drugs for brain metastases, clinical trial protocols in which surgical specimens are analyzed for pre-surgically administered agents may offer pharmacodynamic insights. CONCLUSION: Comprehensive neurosurgical care will have to be an integral element of multi-disciplinary oncological centres providing care to patients with brain metastases to improve on therapy and tumour biology research. Oxford University Press 2021-08-09 /pmc/articles/PMC8351175/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/noajnl/vdab071.103 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press, the Society for Neuro-Oncology and the European Association of Neuro-Oncology. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) ), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Supplement Abstracts
Karschnia, Philipp
Rhun, Emilie Le
Grau, Stefan J
Preusser, Matthias
Soffietti, Riccardo
van den Bent, Martin
Vogelbaum, Michael
von Baumgarten, Louisa
Westphal, Manfred
Weller, Michael
Tonn, Joerg-Christian
SURG-10. The evolving role of neurosurgery for central nervous system metastases in the era of personalized medicine
title SURG-10. The evolving role of neurosurgery for central nervous system metastases in the era of personalized medicine
title_full SURG-10. The evolving role of neurosurgery for central nervous system metastases in the era of personalized medicine
title_fullStr SURG-10. The evolving role of neurosurgery for central nervous system metastases in the era of personalized medicine
title_full_unstemmed SURG-10. The evolving role of neurosurgery for central nervous system metastases in the era of personalized medicine
title_short SURG-10. The evolving role of neurosurgery for central nervous system metastases in the era of personalized medicine
title_sort surg-10. the evolving role of neurosurgery for central nervous system metastases in the era of personalized medicine
topic Supplement Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8351175/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/noajnl/vdab071.103
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