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Transient Enlargement in Meningiomas Treated with Stereotactic Radiotherapy

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Accurate assessment of treatment efficacy is a prerequisite for the improvement in therapeutic outcomes in clinical trials. However, it is very challenging to accurately track the size of meningiomas after radiotherapy, because of their complex shapes and often slow growth. Measuring...

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Autores principales: Maksoud, Ziad, Schmidt, Manuel Alexander, Huang, Yixing, Rutzner, Sandra, Mansoorian, Sina, Weissmann, Thomas, Bert, Christoph, Distel, Luitpold, Semrau, Sabine, Lettmaier, Sebastian, Eyüpoglu, Ilker, Fietkau, Rainer, Putz, Florian
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8946188/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35326697
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14061547
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author Maksoud, Ziad
Schmidt, Manuel Alexander
Huang, Yixing
Rutzner, Sandra
Mansoorian, Sina
Weissmann, Thomas
Bert, Christoph
Distel, Luitpold
Semrau, Sabine
Lettmaier, Sebastian
Eyüpoglu, Ilker
Fietkau, Rainer
Putz, Florian
author_facet Maksoud, Ziad
Schmidt, Manuel Alexander
Huang, Yixing
Rutzner, Sandra
Mansoorian, Sina
Weissmann, Thomas
Bert, Christoph
Distel, Luitpold
Semrau, Sabine
Lettmaier, Sebastian
Eyüpoglu, Ilker
Fietkau, Rainer
Putz, Florian
author_sort Maksoud, Ziad
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Accurate assessment of treatment efficacy is a prerequisite for the improvement in therapeutic outcomes in clinical trials. However, it is very challenging to accurately track the size of meningiomas after radiotherapy, because of their complex shapes and often slow growth. Measuring the whole tumor volume as opposed to simple diameter measurements to assess treatment efficacy, therefore, is very promising but little is known on expected volumetric changes of meningiomas following radiotherapy. Therefore, in this study, we meticulously investigated volumetric changes in meningiomas following radiotherapy incorporating volumetric measurements from 468 MRI studies and evaluated newly proposed RANO volumetric criteria in the context of radiotherapy. We found that temporary tumor enlargement after radiotherapy overall was rare but occurred significantly more frequently after high than after low single doses of radiation, represented an important differential diagnosis to tumor progression and would have skewed results in a clinical trial if not accounted for. ABSTRACT: To investigate the occurrence of pseudoprogression/transient enlargement in meningiomas after stereotactic radiotherapy (RT) and to evaluate recently proposed volumetric RANO meningioma criteria for response assessment in the context of RT. Sixty-nine meningiomas (benign: 90%, atypical: 10%) received stereotactic RT from January 2005–May 2018. A total of 468 MRI studies were segmented longitudinally during a median follow-up of 42.3 months. Best response and local control were evaluated according to recently proposed volumetric RANO criteria. Transient enlargement was defined as volumetric increase ≥20% followed by a subsequent regression ≥20%. The mean best volumetric response was −23% change from baseline (range, −86% to +19%). According to RANO, the best volumetric response was SD in 81% (56/69), MR in 13% (9/69) and PR in 6% (4/69). Transient enlargement occurred in only 6% (4/69) post RT but would have represented 60% (3/5) of cases with progressive disease if not accounted for. Transient enlargement was characterized by a mean maximum volumetric increase of +181% (range, +24% to +389 %) with all cases occurring in the first year post-RT (range, 4.1–10.3 months). Transient enlargement was significantly more frequent with SRS or hypofractionation than with conventional fractionation (25% vs. 2%, p = 0.015). Five-year volumetric control was 97.8% if transient enlargement was recognized but 92.9% if not accounted for. Transient enlargement/pseudoprogression in the first year following SRS and hypofractionated RT represents an important differential diagnosis, especially because of the high volumetric control achieved with stereotactic RT. Meningioma enlargement during subsequent post-RT follow-up and after conventional fractionation should raise suspicion for tumor progression.
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spelling pubmed-89461882022-03-25 Transient Enlargement in Meningiomas Treated with Stereotactic Radiotherapy Maksoud, Ziad Schmidt, Manuel Alexander Huang, Yixing Rutzner, Sandra Mansoorian, Sina Weissmann, Thomas Bert, Christoph Distel, Luitpold Semrau, Sabine Lettmaier, Sebastian Eyüpoglu, Ilker Fietkau, Rainer Putz, Florian Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Accurate assessment of treatment efficacy is a prerequisite for the improvement in therapeutic outcomes in clinical trials. However, it is very challenging to accurately track the size of meningiomas after radiotherapy, because of their complex shapes and often slow growth. Measuring the whole tumor volume as opposed to simple diameter measurements to assess treatment efficacy, therefore, is very promising but little is known on expected volumetric changes of meningiomas following radiotherapy. Therefore, in this study, we meticulously investigated volumetric changes in meningiomas following radiotherapy incorporating volumetric measurements from 468 MRI studies and evaluated newly proposed RANO volumetric criteria in the context of radiotherapy. We found that temporary tumor enlargement after radiotherapy overall was rare but occurred significantly more frequently after high than after low single doses of radiation, represented an important differential diagnosis to tumor progression and would have skewed results in a clinical trial if not accounted for. ABSTRACT: To investigate the occurrence of pseudoprogression/transient enlargement in meningiomas after stereotactic radiotherapy (RT) and to evaluate recently proposed volumetric RANO meningioma criteria for response assessment in the context of RT. Sixty-nine meningiomas (benign: 90%, atypical: 10%) received stereotactic RT from January 2005–May 2018. A total of 468 MRI studies were segmented longitudinally during a median follow-up of 42.3 months. Best response and local control were evaluated according to recently proposed volumetric RANO criteria. Transient enlargement was defined as volumetric increase ≥20% followed by a subsequent regression ≥20%. The mean best volumetric response was −23% change from baseline (range, −86% to +19%). According to RANO, the best volumetric response was SD in 81% (56/69), MR in 13% (9/69) and PR in 6% (4/69). Transient enlargement occurred in only 6% (4/69) post RT but would have represented 60% (3/5) of cases with progressive disease if not accounted for. Transient enlargement was characterized by a mean maximum volumetric increase of +181% (range, +24% to +389 %) with all cases occurring in the first year post-RT (range, 4.1–10.3 months). Transient enlargement was significantly more frequent with SRS or hypofractionation than with conventional fractionation (25% vs. 2%, p = 0.015). Five-year volumetric control was 97.8% if transient enlargement was recognized but 92.9% if not accounted for. Transient enlargement/pseudoprogression in the first year following SRS and hypofractionated RT represents an important differential diagnosis, especially because of the high volumetric control achieved with stereotactic RT. Meningioma enlargement during subsequent post-RT follow-up and after conventional fractionation should raise suspicion for tumor progression. MDPI 2022-03-17 /pmc/articles/PMC8946188/ /pubmed/35326697 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14061547 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Maksoud, Ziad
Schmidt, Manuel Alexander
Huang, Yixing
Rutzner, Sandra
Mansoorian, Sina
Weissmann, Thomas
Bert, Christoph
Distel, Luitpold
Semrau, Sabine
Lettmaier, Sebastian
Eyüpoglu, Ilker
Fietkau, Rainer
Putz, Florian
Transient Enlargement in Meningiomas Treated with Stereotactic Radiotherapy
title Transient Enlargement in Meningiomas Treated with Stereotactic Radiotherapy
title_full Transient Enlargement in Meningiomas Treated with Stereotactic Radiotherapy
title_fullStr Transient Enlargement in Meningiomas Treated with Stereotactic Radiotherapy
title_full_unstemmed Transient Enlargement in Meningiomas Treated with Stereotactic Radiotherapy
title_short Transient Enlargement in Meningiomas Treated with Stereotactic Radiotherapy
title_sort transient enlargement in meningiomas treated with stereotactic radiotherapy
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8946188/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35326697
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14061547
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