Clinical and Translational Radiation Oncology (Jul 2023)

Outcomes and predictors of response to fractionated radiotherapy as primary treatment for intracranial meningiomas

  • Justin Z. Wang,
  • Alexander P. Landry,
  • Farshad Nassiri,
  • Zamir A. Merali,
  • Zeel Patel,
  • Grace Lee,
  • Lauren Rogers,
  • Jeffrey A. Zuccato,
  • Mathew R. Voisin,
  • David Munoz,
  • Derek S. Tsang,
  • Normand Laperriere,
  • Gelareh Zadeh

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 41
p. 100631

Abstract

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Background: Surgery is the primary treatment for most meningiomas. However, primary fractionated radiotherapy (fRT) remains an option for patients with larger meningiomas in challenging anatomic locations or patients at prohibitively high surgical risk. Outcome prediction for these patients is uncertain and cannot be guided by histopathology without available tumor tissue from surgery. Therefore, we aimed to assess the clinical factors that contribute to treatment failure in a large cohort of meningiomas consecutively treated with fRT as primary therapy, with the goal of identifying predictors of response. Methods: Patients treated with primary fRT for intracranial meningiomas from 1998 to 2017 were reviewed. Those who received primary surgical resection, radiosurgery, previous fRT, or had 11.27 cm3 was independently predictive of progression and larger GTV was associated with higher risk of significant (grades 3/4) AE following fRT. Cavernous sinus and optic nerve sheath meningiomas had overall excellent outcomes post-fRT. Conclusions: We present a large cohort of meningiomas treated with primary fRT and find GTV and anatomic location to be key predictors of outcome, adding to the complex treatment considerations for this heterogeneous disease.

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