Nature Communications (May 2024)

Response of treatment-naive brain metastases to stereotactic radiosurgery

  • Chibawanye I. Ene,
  • Christina Abi Faraj,
  • Thomas H. Beckham,
  • Jeffrey S. Weinberg,
  • Clark R. Andersen,
  • Ali S. Haider,
  • Ganesh Rao,
  • Sherise D. Ferguson,
  • Christopher A. Alvarez-Brenkenridge,
  • Betty Y. S. Kim,
  • Amy B. Heimberger,
  • Ian E. McCutcheon,
  • Sujit S. Prabhu,
  • Chenyang Michael Wang,
  • Amol J. Ghia,
  • Susan L. McGovern,
  • Caroline Chung,
  • Mary Frances McAleer,
  • Martin C. Tom,
  • Subha Perni,
  • Todd A. Swanson,
  • Debra N. Yeboa,
  • Tina M. Briere,
  • Jason T. Huse,
  • Gregory N. Fuller,
  • Frederick F. Lang,
  • Jing Li,
  • Dima Suki,
  • Raymond E. Sawaya

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-47998-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract With improvements in survival for patients with metastatic cancer, long-term local control of brain metastases has become an increasingly important clinical priority. While consensus guidelines recommend surgery followed by stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) for lesions >3 cm, smaller lesions (≤3 cm) treated with SRS alone elicit variable responses. To determine factors influencing this variable response to SRS, we analyzed outcomes of brain metastases ≤3 cm diameter in patients with no prior systemic therapy treated with frame-based single-fraction SRS. Following SRS, 259 out of 1733 (15%) treated lesions demonstrated MRI findings concerning for local treatment failure (LTF), of which 202 /1733 (12%) demonstrated LTF and 54/1733 (3%) had an adverse radiation effect. Multivariate analysis demonstrated tumor size (>1.5 cm) and melanoma histology were associated with higher LTF rates. Our results demonstrate that brain metastases ≤3 cm are not uniformly responsive to SRS and suggest that prospective studies to evaluate the effect of SRS alone or in combination with surgery on brain metastases ≤3 cm matched by tumor size and histology are warranted. These studies will help establish multi-disciplinary treatment guidelines that improve local control while minimizing radiation necrosis during treatment of brain metastasis ≤3 cm.