What is the optimal therapy of brain metastases?
Autor: | C. Lindquist, C. Adams, S. Retsas, Y. Marcou, Piers N. Plowman |
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Rok vydání: | 2001 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
Performance status business.industry Brain Neoplasms medicine.medical_treatment Cancer Stereotactic radiation therapy medicine.disease Medical Oncology Radiosurgery Metastasis Surgery Radiation therapy Breast cancer Oncology Surveys and Questionnaires medicine Humans Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging Radiology business Brain metastasis |
Zdroj: | Clinical oncology (Royal College of Radiologists (Great Britain)). 13(2) |
ISSN: | 0936-6555 |
Popis: | The conclusions of a symposium held in London in October 1999 and devoted to the optimal management of brain metastatic disease were: 1. Prognostic factors are: size and number of metastases (and the presence of mass effect); the status of the systemic cancer outside the central nervous system; performance/neurological status; the age of the patient; and the type of cancer. 2. Surgical management of the single, superficially located brain metastasis with symptomatic mass effect is recommended in good performance status patients. Many would follow this routinely by whole brain radiotherapy. 3. Whole brain radiotherapy is often not followed by durable control of the disease and carries morbidity; better management plans are required. In poor prognosis patients the delivery of radiotherapy may not always be indicated. 4. The current literature demonstrates that stereotactic radiosurgery can enhance the likelihood of sterilizing individual brain metastases compared with whole brain radiotherapy alone. 5. The results of questionnaire showed that the histological diagnosis and latency to onset made little difference to the opinion of neuroscience clinicians, who generally favoured stereotactic radiation therapy over whole brain radiotherapy (with or without a conventionally delivered boost) for all patients with less than four metastases. The opinions of oncologists differed. For bronchial and breast cancer patients, whole brain radiotherapy, with or without a boost, was favoured by the majority, particularly in oat cell cancer. However, with a long latency to 'isolated' brain metastasis, oncologists favoured focal radiation therapy. There was a strong preference amongst oncology experts to reserve stereotactic radiation therapy for apparently isolated brain metastasis; this opinion applied to bronchus and breast cancer, and also to melanoma. 6. Whole brain radiotherapy followed by positron emission tomography scanning to determine what viable metastatic disease remained (and potentially treatable by stereotactic/focal technology) was favoured by most of delegates who answered this question. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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