Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9872151 | International Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics | 2005 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Conclusions: Based on Level I-III evidence, for selected patients with small (up to 4 cm) brain metastases (up to three in number and four in one randomized trial), the addition of radiosurgery boost to whole-brain radiotherapy improves brain control as compared with whole-brain radiotherapy alone. In patients with a single brain metastasis, radiosurgery boost with whole-brain radiotherapy improves survival. There is a small risk of toxicity associated with radiosurgery boost as compared with whole-brain radiotherapy alone. In selected patients treated with radiosurgery alone for newly diagnosed brain metastases, overall survival is not altered. However, local and distant brain control is significantly poorer with omission of upfront whole-brain radiotherapy (Level I-III evidence). Whether neurocognition or quality of life outcomes are different between initial radiosurgery alone vs. whole-brain radiotherapy (with or without radiosurgery boost) is unknown, because this has not been adequately tested. There was no statistically significant difference in overall toxicity between those treated with radiosurgery alone vs. whole-brain radiotherapy and radiosurgery boost based on an interim report from one randomized study. There is insufficient evidence as to the clinical benefit/risks radiosurgery used in the setting of recurrent or progressive brain metastases, although radiographic responses are well-documented.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Physics and Astronomy
Radiation
Authors
Minesh P. M.D., May N. M.D., Timothy J. M.D., David E. M.D., James A. M.D., John C. M.D., Michael Ph.D., C. Leland M.D., Luis M.D.,