Association Between Radiation Necrosis and Tumor Biology After Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Brain Metastasis

Background The primary dose-limiting toxicity of stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) is radiation necrosis (RN), which occurs after approximately 5% to 10% of treatments. This adverse event may worsen neurologic deficits, increase the frequency and cost of imaging, and necessitate prolonged treatment wi...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of radiation oncology, biology, physics biology, physics, 2016-12, Vol.96 (5), p.1060-1069
Hauptverfasser: Miller, Jacob A., BS, Bennett, Elizabeth E., MD, Xiao, Roy, BS, Kotecha, Rupesh, MD, Chao, Samuel T., MD, Vogelbaum, Michael A., MD, PhD, Barnett, Gene H., MD, MBA, Angelov, Lilyana, MD, Murphy, Erin S., MD, Yu, Jennifer S., MD, PhD, Ahluwalia, Manmeet S., MD, Suh, John H., MD, Mohammadi, Alireza M., MD
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background The primary dose-limiting toxicity of stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) is radiation necrosis (RN), which occurs after approximately 5% to 10% of treatments. This adverse event may worsen neurologic deficits, increase the frequency and cost of imaging, and necessitate prolonged treatment with steroids or antiangiogenic agents. Previous investigations have primarily identified lesion size and dosimetric constraints as risk factors for RN in small populations. We hypothesized that disease histology, receptor status, and mutational status are associated with RN. Methods and Materials All patients presenting with brain metastasis between 1997 and 2015 who underwent SRS and subsequent radiographic follow-up at a single tertiary-care institution were eligible for inclusion. The primary outcome was the cumulative incidence of radiographic RN. Multivariate competing risks regression was used to identify biological risk factors for RN. Results 1939 patients (5747 lesions) were eligible for inclusion; 285 patients (15%) experienced radiographic RN after the treatment of 427 (7%) lesions. After SRS, the median time to RN was 7.6 months. After multivariate analysis, graded prognostic assessment, renal pathology, lesion diameter, and the heterogeneity index remained independently predictive of RN in the pooled cohort. In subset analyses of individual pathologies, HER2 -amplified status (hazard ratio [HR] 2.05, P =.02), BRAF V600+ mutational status (HR 0.33, P =.04), lung adenocarcinoma histology (HR 1.89, P =.04), and ALK rearrangement (HR 6.36, P
ISSN:0360-3016
1879-355X
DOI:10.1016/j.ijrobp.2016.08.039