Kristjansen P E, Soelberg Sørensen P, Skov Hansen M, Hansen H H
Dept. on Oncology, Finsen Institute, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Ann Oncol. 1993 Aug;4(7):579-83. doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.annonc.a058592.
During the 1980s reports describing the effect of systemic chemotherapy on brain metastases from chemosensitive tumours emerged, including a few retrospective reports on small cell lung cancer (SCLC) patients.
Previously untreated SCLC patients with no other malignancy, but in some cases with mixed histological subtype, who had symptomatic brain metastases verified by contrast enhanced CT-scan, were treated with a multidrug combination chemotherapy regimen and no cranial irradiation. Radiotherapy was optional at cranial relapse or progression at the discretion of the physician in charge. The intracranial effect was evaluated by 4-weekly CT-scan and neurological examination, according to a standardized scoring system.
Intracranial response, duration of response, neurological score, terminal CNS status, and survival.
21 patients were included, corresponding to 8.6% of consecutive SCLC patients at our institution. 8 patients died before follow-up leaving 13 evaluable for response. In the former group, all patients had WHO performance status of 3-4 compared to 6/13 in the latter group. Of the 13 evaluable patients, 1 had early progression in the CNS and 1 had no change. 11 had CT-scan verified response, with a median duration of 135 days. Most patients, including all complete responders, had improvement in their neurological score. 6 out of 11 responders died without active CNS disease. The crude median survival was 111 days, whereas the median survival (early deaths excluded) was 197 days.
Systemic combination chemotherapy was effective for palliation of initial brain involvement in the majority of patients in a small consecutive series. The role of consolidating cranial irradiation in responders should be assessed by a randomized trial.