Marcrom Samuel R, McDonald Andrew M, Thompson Jonathan W, Popple Richard A, Riley Kristen O, Markert James M, Willey Christopher D, Bredel Markus, Fiveash John B
Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama.
Department of Neurosurgery, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama.
Adv Radiat Oncol. 2017 Jul 19;2(4):564-571. doi: 10.1016/j.adro.2017.07.006. eCollection 2017 Oct-Dec.
Limited data exist on fractionated stereotactic radiation therapy (FSRT) for brain metastases. We sought to evaluate the safety and efficacy of FSRT and further define its role in brain metastasis management.
A total of 72 patients were treated with linear accelerator-based FSRT to 182 previously untreated, intact brain metastases. Targets received 25 or 30 Gy in 5 fractions. All targets within the same course received the same prescription regardless of size. Toxicity was recorded per Radiation Therapy Oncology Group central nervous system toxicity criteria.
The median follow-up was 5 months (range, 1-71 months). The Kaplan-Meier estimate of 12-month local control was 86%. Tumors <3 cm in diameter demonstrated improved 12-month local control of 95% compared with 61% in tumors ≥3 cm ( < .001). The Kaplan-Meier estimate of 12-month local control was 91% in tumors treated with 30 Gy and only 75% in tumors treated with 25 Gy ( = .015). Tumor diameter ≥3 cm resulted in increased local failure, and a 30 Gy prescription resulted in decreased local failure on multivariate analysis (hazard ratio [HR], 8.11 [range, 2.09-31.50; = .003] and HR, 0.26 [range, 0.07-0.93; = .038]). Grade 4 central nervous system toxicity occurred in 4 patients (6%) requiring surgery, and no patient experienced irreversible grade 3 or 5 toxicity. Increasing tumor diameter was associated with increased toxicity risk (HR, 2.45 [range, 1.04-5.742; = .04]).
FSRT for brain metastases appears to demonstrate a high rate of local control with minimal risk of severe toxicity. Local control appears to be associated with smaller tumor sizeand a higher prescription dose. FSRT is a viable option for those who are poor single-fraction candidates.
关于脑转移瘤的分次立体定向放射治疗(FSRT)的数据有限。我们试图评估FSRT的安全性和有效性,并进一步明确其在脑转移瘤治疗中的作用。
共有72例患者接受了基于直线加速器的FSRT治疗,共182个既往未治疗的完整脑转移瘤。靶区接受25或30 Gy分5次照射。同一疗程内的所有靶区无论大小均接受相同的处方剂量。根据放射肿瘤学组中枢神经系统毒性标准记录毒性反应。
中位随访时间为5个月(范围1 - 71个月)。12个月局部控制的Kaplan - Meier估计值为86%。直径<3 cm的肿瘤12个月局部控制率为95%,而直径≥3 cm的肿瘤为61%(P <.001)。接受30 Gy治疗的肿瘤12个月局部控制的Kaplan - Meier估计值为91%,而接受25 Gy治疗的肿瘤仅为75%(P = .015)。多因素分析显示,肿瘤直径≥3 cm导致局部失败增加,30 Gy的处方剂量导致局部失败减少(风险比[HR],8.11[范围,2.09 - 31.50;P = .003]和HR,0.26[范围,0.07 - 0.93;P = .038])。4例患者(6%)发生4级中枢神经系统毒性,需要手术治疗,无患者出现不可逆的3级或5级毒性。肿瘤直径增加与毒性风险增加相关(HR,2.45[范围,1.04 - 5.742;P = .04])。
脑转移瘤的FSRT似乎显示出较高的局部控制率,严重毒性风险最小。局部控制似乎与较小的肿瘤大小和较高的处方剂量相关。对于单次分割治疗不佳的患者,FSRT是一种可行的选择。