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SURG-02. Stereotactic Laser Ablation (SLA) followed by consolidation stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) as a treatment strategy for brain metastasis that recurred locally after initial radiosurgery (BMRS): a collaborative institutional experience

INTRODUCTION: In independent clinical trials, ~30% of brain metastases recur locally after radiosurgery (BMRS). For these lesions, treatment with stereotactic laser ablation (SLA, also known as laser interstitial thermal therapy (LITT)) alone achieves a 12-month local control (LC(12)) of 54–85% whil...

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Autores principales: Pena-Pino, Isabela, Ma, Jun, Hori, Yusuki, Fomchenko, Elena, Dusenbery, Kathryn, Reynolds, Margaret, Wilke, Christopher, Yuan, Jianling, Barnett, Gene, Chiang, Veronica, Mohammadi, Alireza, Chen, Clark
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8351296/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/noajnl/vdab071.095
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author Pena-Pino, Isabela
Ma, Jun
Hori, Yusuki
Fomchenko, Elena
Dusenbery, Kathryn
Reynolds, Margaret
Wilke, Christopher
Yuan, Jianling
Barnett, Gene
Chiang, Veronica
Mohammadi, Alireza
Chen, Clark
author_facet Pena-Pino, Isabela
Ma, Jun
Hori, Yusuki
Fomchenko, Elena
Dusenbery, Kathryn
Reynolds, Margaret
Wilke, Christopher
Yuan, Jianling
Barnett, Gene
Chiang, Veronica
Mohammadi, Alireza
Chen, Clark
author_sort Pena-Pino, Isabela
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: In independent clinical trials, ~30% of brain metastases recur locally after radiosurgery (BMRS). For these lesions, treatment with stereotactic laser ablation (SLA, also known as laser interstitial thermal therapy (LITT)) alone achieves a 12-month local control (LC(12)) of 54–85% while repeat SRS achieved LC(12) of 54–79%. Here, we report favorable outcomes for BMRS treated with SLA followed by consolidation radiosurgery (SLA/cSRS). METHODS: Clinical outcome of 18 patients with 19 histologically confirmed BMRS treated with SLA followed by consolidation SRS and >3 months follow-up were collected retrospectively across three institutions. Local control was defined as stability or decrease in contrast-enhancing (CE) and FLAIR volume. RESULTS: SLA achieved ablation of 73–100% of the BMRS CE volumes. Consolidation hypo-fractionated radiosurgery (5 Gy x 5 or 6 Gy x 5) was carried out 16–40 days post-SLA (median of 26 days). With a median follow-up of 185 days (range: 93–1367 days) and median overall survival (OS) of 185 days (range: 99–1367 days), 100% LC(12) was achieved. 13/18 (72%) patients that required steroid therapy prior to SLA/cSRS were successfully weaned off steroid by three months post-SLA/cSRS. Post-SLA, KPS declined for 3/19 (16%) patients and improved for 1/19 (5%) patients. No KPS changes occurred subsequent to consolidation SRS. There were no 30-day mortalities or wound complications. Two patients required re-admission within 30 days of SRS (severe headache that resolved with steroid therapy (n=1) and new-onset seizure (n=1)). Except for two patients who suffered histologically confirmed, local failure at 649 and 899 days, all other patients are either alive (n=5) or died from systemic disease progression (n=11). None of the treated patients developed symptomatic radiation necrosis. CONCLUSIONS: This collaborative institutional experience support efficacy and safety of SLA followed by consolidation SRS as a treatment for BMRS. The treatment strategy warrants further investigations.
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spelling pubmed-83512962021-08-09 SURG-02. Stereotactic Laser Ablation (SLA) followed by consolidation stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) as a treatment strategy for brain metastasis that recurred locally after initial radiosurgery (BMRS): a collaborative institutional experience Pena-Pino, Isabela Ma, Jun Hori, Yusuki Fomchenko, Elena Dusenbery, Kathryn Reynolds, Margaret Wilke, Christopher Yuan, Jianling Barnett, Gene Chiang, Veronica Mohammadi, Alireza Chen, Clark Neurooncol Adv Supplement Abstracts INTRODUCTION: In independent clinical trials, ~30% of brain metastases recur locally after radiosurgery (BMRS). For these lesions, treatment with stereotactic laser ablation (SLA, also known as laser interstitial thermal therapy (LITT)) alone achieves a 12-month local control (LC(12)) of 54–85% while repeat SRS achieved LC(12) of 54–79%. Here, we report favorable outcomes for BMRS treated with SLA followed by consolidation radiosurgery (SLA/cSRS). METHODS: Clinical outcome of 18 patients with 19 histologically confirmed BMRS treated with SLA followed by consolidation SRS and >3 months follow-up were collected retrospectively across three institutions. Local control was defined as stability or decrease in contrast-enhancing (CE) and FLAIR volume. RESULTS: SLA achieved ablation of 73–100% of the BMRS CE volumes. Consolidation hypo-fractionated radiosurgery (5 Gy x 5 or 6 Gy x 5) was carried out 16–40 days post-SLA (median of 26 days). With a median follow-up of 185 days (range: 93–1367 days) and median overall survival (OS) of 185 days (range: 99–1367 days), 100% LC(12) was achieved. 13/18 (72%) patients that required steroid therapy prior to SLA/cSRS were successfully weaned off steroid by three months post-SLA/cSRS. Post-SLA, KPS declined for 3/19 (16%) patients and improved for 1/19 (5%) patients. No KPS changes occurred subsequent to consolidation SRS. There were no 30-day mortalities or wound complications. Two patients required re-admission within 30 days of SRS (severe headache that resolved with steroid therapy (n=1) and new-onset seizure (n=1)). Except for two patients who suffered histologically confirmed, local failure at 649 and 899 days, all other patients are either alive (n=5) or died from systemic disease progression (n=11). None of the treated patients developed symptomatic radiation necrosis. CONCLUSIONS: This collaborative institutional experience support efficacy and safety of SLA followed by consolidation SRS as a treatment for BMRS. The treatment strategy warrants further investigations. Oxford University Press 2021-08-09 /pmc/articles/PMC8351296/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/noajnl/vdab071.095 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
Pena-Pino, Isabela
Ma, Jun
Hori, Yusuki
Fomchenko, Elena
Dusenbery, Kathryn
Reynolds, Margaret
Wilke, Christopher
Yuan, Jianling
Barnett, Gene
Chiang, Veronica
Mohammadi, Alireza
Chen, Clark
SURG-02. Stereotactic Laser Ablation (SLA) followed by consolidation stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) as a treatment strategy for brain metastasis that recurred locally after initial radiosurgery (BMRS): a collaborative institutional experience
title SURG-02. Stereotactic Laser Ablation (SLA) followed by consolidation stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) as a treatment strategy for brain metastasis that recurred locally after initial radiosurgery (BMRS): a collaborative institutional experience
title_full SURG-02. Stereotactic Laser Ablation (SLA) followed by consolidation stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) as a treatment strategy for brain metastasis that recurred locally after initial radiosurgery (BMRS): a collaborative institutional experience
title_fullStr SURG-02. Stereotactic Laser Ablation (SLA) followed by consolidation stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) as a treatment strategy for brain metastasis that recurred locally after initial radiosurgery (BMRS): a collaborative institutional experience
title_full_unstemmed SURG-02. Stereotactic Laser Ablation (SLA) followed by consolidation stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) as a treatment strategy for brain metastasis that recurred locally after initial radiosurgery (BMRS): a collaborative institutional experience
title_short SURG-02. Stereotactic Laser Ablation (SLA) followed by consolidation stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) as a treatment strategy for brain metastasis that recurred locally after initial radiosurgery (BMRS): a collaborative institutional experience
title_sort surg-02. stereotactic laser ablation (sla) followed by consolidation stereotactic radiosurgery (srs) as a treatment strategy for brain metastasis that recurred locally after initial radiosurgery (bmrs): a collaborative institutional experience
topic Supplement Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8351296/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/noajnl/vdab071.095
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