Clinical Neurological Sciences, London Health Sciences Centre, University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada.
Institute of Health Policy, Management, and Evaluation, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Lancet Oncol. 2019 Jan;20(1):159-164. doi: 10.1016/S1470-2045(18)30659-4. Epub 2018 Nov 22.
A major concern of patients who have stereotactic radiosurgery is the long-term risk of having a secondary intracranial malignancy or, in the case of patients with benign tumours treated with the technique, the risk of malignant transformation. The incidence of stereotactic radiosurgery-associated intracranial malignancy remains unknown; therefore, our aim was to estimate it in a population-based study to assess the long-term safety of this technique.
We did a population-based, multicentre, cohort study at five international radiosurgery centres (Na Homolce Hospital, Prague, Czech Republic [n=2655 patients]; Ruber International Hospital, Madrid, Spain [n=1080], University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, PA, USA [n=1027]; University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, USA [n=80]; and NYU Langone Health System, New York, NY, USA [n=63]). Eligible patients were of any age, and had Gamma Knife radiosurgery for arteriovenous malformation, trigeminal neuralgia, or benign intracranial tumours, which included vestibular or other benign schwannomas, WHO grade 1 meningiomas, pituitary adenomas, and haemangioblastoma. Patients were excluded if they had previously had radiotherapy or did not have a minimum follow-up time of 5 years. The primary objective of the study was to estimate the incidence of stereotactic radiosurgery-associated intracranial malignancy, including malignant transformation of a benign lesion or development of radiation-associated secondary intracranial cancer, defined as within the 2 Gy isodose line. Estimates of age-adjusted incidence of primary CNS malignancies in the USA and European countries were retrieved from the Central Brain Tumor Registry of the United States (CBTRUS) and the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) Global Cancer statistics.
Of 14 168 patients who had Gamma Knife stereotactic radiosurgery between Aug 14, 1987, and Dec 31, 2011, in the five contributing centres, 4905 patients were eligible for the analysis (had a minimum follow-up of 5 years and no history of previous radiation therapy). Diagnostic entities included vestibular schwannomas (1011 [20·6%] of 4905 patients), meningiomas (1490 [30·4%]), arteriovenous malformations (1089 [22·2%]), trigeminal neuralgia (565 [11·5%]), pituitary adenomas (641 [13·1%]), haemangioblastoma (29 [0·6%]), and other schwannomas (80 [1·6%]). With a median follow-up of 8·1 years (IQR 6·0-10·6), two (0·0006%) of 3251 patients with benign tumours were diagnosed with suspected malignant transformation and one (0·0002%) of 4905 patients was considered a case of radiosurgery-associated intracranial malignancy, resulting in an incidence of 6·87 per 100 000 patient-years (95% CI 1·15-22·71) for malignant transformation and 2·26 per 100 000 patient-years (0·11-11·17) for radiosurgery-associated intracranial malignancy. Two (0·0004%) of 4905 patients developed intracranial malignancies, which were judged unrelated to the radiation field. Overall incidence of radiosurgery-associated malignancy was 6·80 per 100 000 patients-years (95% CI 1·73-18·50), or a cumulative incidence of 0·00045% over 10 years (95% CI 0·00-0·0034). The overall incidence of 6·8 per 100 000, which includes institutions from Europe and the USA, after stereotactic radiosurgery was found to be similar to the risk of developing a malignant CNS tumour in the general population of the USA and some European countries as estimated by the CBTRUS and IARC data, respectively.
These data show that the estimated risk of an intracranial secondary malignancy or malignant transformation of a benign tumour in patients treated with stereotactic radiosurgery remains low at long-term follow-up, and is similar to the risk of the general population to have a primary CNS tumour. Although prospective cohort studies with longer follow-up are warranted to support the results of this study, the available evidence suggests the long-term safety of stereotactic radiosurgery and could support physicians counselling patients on Gamma Knife stereotactic radiosurgery.
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接受立体定向放射外科治疗的患者主要关注的是长期罹患颅内继发性恶性肿瘤的风险,或者对于接受该技术治疗的良性肿瘤患者,担心肿瘤发生恶性转化的风险。立体定向放射外科相关颅内恶性肿瘤的发病率尚不清楚;因此,我们的目的是在一项基于人群的研究中评估其发病率,以评估该技术的长期安全性。
我们在五个国际放射外科中心(捷克布拉格的 Na Homolce 医院[纳入 2655 例患者]、西班牙马德里的 Ruber 国际医院[纳入 1080 例患者]、美国匹兹堡大学医学中心[纳入 1027 例患者]、美国弗吉尼亚大学[纳入 80 例患者]和美国纽约大学朗格尼健康系统[纳入 63 例患者])进行了一项基于人群的、多中心、队列研究。符合条件的患者年龄不限,接受伽玛刀放射外科治疗的疾病包括动静脉畸形、三叉神经痛或良性颅内肿瘤,包括前庭神经鞘瘤或其他良性神经鞘瘤、WHO 1 级脑膜瘤、垂体腺瘤和血管母细胞瘤。如果患者之前接受过放疗或随访时间不足 5 年,则排除在外。该研究的主要目的是评估立体定向放射外科相关颅内恶性肿瘤的发病率,包括良性病变的恶性转化或放射相关的继发性颅内癌症的发生,定义为在 2 Gy 等剂量线内。从美国中央脑肿瘤登记处(CBTRUS)和国际癌症研究机构(IARC)全球癌症统计数据中检索到美国和欧洲国家原发性中枢神经系统恶性肿瘤的年龄调整发病率估计值。
在五个参与中心,自 1987 年 8 月 14 日至 2011 年 12 月 31 日期间,共 14168 例患者接受伽玛刀立体定向放射外科治疗,其中 4905 例患者符合分析条件(随访时间至少 5 年,且无既往放疗史)。诊断实体瘤包括前庭神经鞘瘤(4905 例患者中的 1011 例[20.6%])、脑膜瘤(1490 例[30.4%])、动静脉畸形(1089 例[22.2%])、三叉神经痛(565 例[11.5%])、垂体腺瘤(641 例[13.1%])、血管母细胞瘤(29 例[0.6%])和其他神经鞘瘤(80 例[1.6%])。中位随访时间为 8.1 年(IQR 6.0-10.6),在 3251 例接受良性肿瘤治疗的患者中,有 2 例(0.0006%)被诊断为疑似恶性转化,1 例(0.0002%)被认为是放射外科相关颅内恶性肿瘤,发病率为 6.87/100000 患者年(95%CI 1.15-22.71),恶性转化为 2.26/100000 患者年(0.11-11.17)。在 4905 例患者中,有 2 例(0.0004%)发生颅内恶性肿瘤,被判断与放射野无关。放射外科相关恶性肿瘤的总发病率为 6.80/100000 患者年(95%CI 1.73-18.50),或 10 年内累积发病率为 0.00045%(95%CI 0.00-0.0034)。本研究包含了来自欧洲和美国的机构数据,总体发病率为 6.8%,与美国和一些欧洲国家一般人群中发生原发性中枢神经系统肿瘤的风险相似。
这些数据表明,接受立体定向放射外科治疗的患者颅内继发性恶性肿瘤或良性肿瘤恶性转化的估计风险在长期随访中仍然较低,与一般人群发生原发性中枢神经系统肿瘤的风险相似。尽管需要前瞻性队列研究进行更长时间的随访以支持本研究的结果,但现有证据表明立体定向放射外科的长期安全性,并可为伽玛刀立体定向放射外科治疗的患者提供支持。
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