Surgical Neurology
Volume 69, Issue 2 , Pages 181-186, February 2008

Boost radiosurgery for treatment of brain metastases after surgical resections

Department of Neurosurgery, Osaka City General Hospital, Miyakojima-ku, Osaka 534-0021, Japan

Received 7 April 2007; accepted 3 July 2007.

Abstract 

Background

We evaluated results of resection surgery followed by boost radiosurgery for the treatment of brain metastases.

Methods

We treated 21 patients (13 male, 8 female) with surgical resection (subtotal or total) followed by boost radiosurgery. The mean patient age was 61 years (range, 41-80 years); supratentorial lesions were treated in 12 patients, and posterior fossa lesions were treated in 9 patients. The most common primary cancers were lung (24%) and colon (24%). Fifty-three percent of patients had brain metastases only, whereas 47% had extracranial metastases. The radiosurgery dose plan was designed to radiate the operative cavity; the mean treatment volume (50% isodose) was 10.7 mL (range, 3.4-23.3 mL), and the mean marginal dose was 17 Gy (range, 13-20 Gy).

Results

Local control was achieved in 16 (76%) patients. However, new intracranial lesions developed in 10 patients, and meningeal carcinomatosis occurred in 5 patients. Local tumor recurrence occurred more often for patients treated with lower radiotherapy doses (<18 vs ≥18 Gy, P = .03), and meningeal carcinomatosis occurred more often in patients with posterior fossa lesions (P = 0.05). Gamma knife radiosurgery was performed in 13 patients, and whole-brain radiation was performed in 2 patients. No patients experienced symptomatic radiation injury, and the median survival time was 20 months.

Conclusions

Although boost radiosurgery is less invasive and reduces morbidity, the radiosurgical dose must be higher than 18 Gy for the treatment to be most effective. Treatment of lesions of the posterior fossa must be considered carefully because of the higher frequency of meningeal carcinomatosis. Also, we recommend that the surgeons who operate on the metastatic tumors must try to decrease the resected cavity volume and to prevent cerebrospinal fluid dissemination at the operation for posterior fossa lesions.

Abbreviations: KPS, Karnofsky performance scale, RPA, recursive partitioning analysis, RTOG, radiation therapy oncology group, WBRT, whole-brain radiation therapy

Keywords: Radiosurgery, Brain metastases, Surgical treatment, Meningeal carcinomatosis

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PII: S0090-3019(07)00804-X

doi:10.1016/j.surneu.2007.07.008

Surgical Neurology
Volume 69, Issue 2 , Pages 181-186, February 2008