Frontiers in Oncology (Jul 2020)

Tumor Primary Site and Histology Subtypes Role in Radiotherapeutic Management of Brain Metastases

  • Muhammad Khan,
  • Muhammad Khan,
  • Sumbal Arooj,
  • Sumbal Arooj,
  • Sumbal Arooj,
  • Rong Li,
  • Yunhong Tian,
  • Jian Zhang,
  • Jie Lin,
  • Yingying Liang,
  • Anan Xu,
  • Ronghui Zheng,
  • Mengzhong Liu,
  • Mengzhong Liu,
  • Yawei Yuan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2020.00781
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Randomized controlled trials have failed to report any survival advantage for WBRT combined with SRS in the management of brain metastases, despite the enhanced local and distant control in comparison to each treatment alone. Literature review have revealed important role of primary histology of the tumor when dealing with brain metastases. NSCLC responds better to combined approach even when there was only single brain metastasis present while breast cancer has registered better survival with SRS alone probably due to better response of primary tumor to advancement in surgical and chemotherapeutic agents. Furthermore, mutation status (EGFR/ALK) in lung cancer and receptor status (ER/PR/HER2) in breast cancer also exhibit diversity in their response to radiotherapy. Radioresistant tumors like renal cell carcinoma and melanoma brain metastases have achieved better results when treated with SRS alone. Secondly, single brain metastasis may benefit from local and distant brain control achieved with combined treatment. These diverse outcomes suggest a primary histology-based analysis of the radiotherapy regimens (WBRT, SRS, or their combination) would more ideally establish the role of radiotherapy in the management of brain metastases. Molecularly targeted therapeutic and immunotherapeutic agents have revealed synergism with radiation therapy particularly SRS in treating cancer patients with brain metastases. Clinical updates in this regard have also been reviewed.

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