Suppr超能文献

伽玛刀放射外科治疗转移性黑色素瘤:生存、结局及并发症分析

Gamma knife radiosurgery for metastatic melanoma: an analysis of survival, outcome, and complications.

作者信息

Lavine S D, Petrovich Z, Cohen-Gadol A A, Masri L S, Morton D L, O'Day S J, Essner R, Zelman V, Yu C, Luxton G, Apuzzo M L

机构信息

Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Southern California School of Medicine, Los Angeles 90033, USA.

出版信息

Neurosurgery. 1999 Jan;44(1):59-64; discussion 64-6. doi: 10.1097/00006123-199901000-00031.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

Although the mainstays for treatment of metastatic brain disease have been surgery and/or external beam radiation therapy, an increasing number of patients are being referred for stereotactic radiosurgery as the primary intervention for their intracranial pathological abnormalities. The lack of efficacy and cognitive and behavioral consequences of whole brain irradiation have prompted clinicians to select patients for alternative therapies. This study analyzes the effectiveness of Leksell gamma unit therapy for metastatic melanoma to the brain.

METHODS

We present our experience with 59 Leksell gamma unit treatment sessions in 45 consecutive patients who presented with metastatic melanoma to the brain. Five of these procedures were performed as salvage therapy for patients who needed second radiosurgical treatment for new lesions that were remote from the previous targets and were not included in the overall analyses.

RESULTS

The population included 78% male patients. The mean patient age was 53 years (age range, 24-80 yr). The mean time from diagnosis of primary melanoma to discovery of brain metastasis was 43 months (median, 27.5 mo; range, 1-180 mo). At the time of diagnosis of brain disease, 35.5% of the patients (16 of 45 patients) had neurological symptoms, 77.7% (35 of 45 patients) had known visceral metastases, and 11.1% (5 of 45 patients) had seizure disorders. Eighty-six percent of the lesions (80 of 93 lesions) were cortical, 12% (11 of 93 lesions) were cerebellar, 1% (1 of 93 lesions) were pontine, and 1% (1 of 93 lesions) were thalamic. Fifty-seven percent of the sessions (31 of 54 sessions) were performed for a single lesion, 24.1% (13 of 54 sessions) for two lesions, 9.2% (5 of 54 sessions) for three lesions, 7.4% (4 of 54 sessions) for four lesions, and 1.8% (1 of 54 sessions) for five lesions. The mean treatment volume was 5.6 cc, with a mean prescription of 21.6 Gy to the 56.0% mean isodose line. The median survival time of the patients in our population, using Kaplan-Meier curves, was 43 months from the time of diagnosis of primary melanoma (range, 3-180 mo) and 8 months (range, 1-20 mo) from the time of gamma knife treatment. Complications included seizures within 24 hours of the procedure in four patients, with transient nausea and vomiting in three patients, transient worsening of preprocedure paresis responsive to steroids in three patients, and increased confusion in one patient. All 45 patients were located for follow-up (mean follow-up duration, 1 yr). After gamma knife treatment, 78% of the patients (35 of 45 patients) experienced either improved or stable neurological symptomatology before death or at the time of the latest follow-up examination. There were 26 deaths (58%). The cause of death was determined to be neurological in only 2 of 45 patients (7.7%). Follow-up magnetic resonance images revealed a 97% local tumor control rate of gamma knife-treated lesions, with 28% radiographic disappearance (9 of 32 cases). Six patients developed new lesions remote from radiosurgical targets and underwent second procedures.

CONCLUSION

Although metastatic melanoma to the brain continues to have a foreboding prognosis for long-term survival, gamma knife radiosurgery seems to be a relatively safe, noninvasive, palliative therapy, halting or reversing neurological progression in 77.8% of treated patients (35 of 45 patients). The survival rate matches or exceeds those previously reported for surgery and other forms of radiotherapy. Only 7.7% of the patients in our study population who died as a result of metastatic melanoma (2 of 26 patients) died as a result of neurological disease. The routine use of therapeutic level antiseizure medication is emphasized, considering the findings of our review.

摘要

目的

尽管转移性脑疾病的主要治疗方法一直是手术和/或外照射放疗,但越来越多的患者被转诊接受立体定向放射外科治疗,作为其颅内病理异常的主要干预手段。全脑照射缺乏疗效以及认知和行为后果,促使临床医生选择患者进行替代疗法。本研究分析了Leksell伽马刀治疗脑转移性黑色素瘤的有效性。

方法

我们介绍了连续45例脑转移性黑色素瘤患者接受59次Leksell伽马刀治疗的经验。其中5例手术作为挽救治疗,用于那些因新病灶远离先前靶点而需要第二次放射外科治疗的患者,这些患者未纳入总体分析。

结果

患者群体中男性占78%。患者平均年龄为53岁(年龄范围24 - 80岁)。从原发性黑色素瘤诊断到发现脑转移的平均时间为43个月(中位数27.5个月;范围1 - 180个月)。在诊断脑部疾病时,35.5%的患者(45例中的16例)有神经症状,77.7%(45例中的35例)有已知的内脏转移,11.1%(45例中的5例)有癫痫发作障碍。86%的病灶(93个病灶中的80个)位于皮质,12%(93个病灶中的11个)位于小脑,1%(93个病灶中的1个)位于脑桥,1%(93个病灶中的1个)位于丘脑。57%的治疗(54次治疗中的31次)针对单个病灶,24.1%(54次治疗中的13次)针对两个病灶,9.2%(54次治疗中的5次)针对三个病灶,7.4%(54次治疗中的4次)针对四个病灶,1.8%(54次治疗中的1次)针对五个病灶。平均治疗体积为5.6立方厘米,平均处方剂量为21.6 Gy至56.0%的平均等剂量线。使用Kaplan-Meier曲线,我们患者群体的中位生存时间从原发性黑色素瘤诊断时起为43个月(范围3 - 180个月),从伽马刀治疗时起为8个月(范围1 - 20个月)。并发症包括4例患者在治疗后24小时内出现癫痫发作,3例患者出现短暂恶心和呕吐,3例患者术前轻瘫在使用类固醇后短暂加重,1例患者意识混乱加重。所有45例患者均进行了随访(平均随访时间1年)。伽马刀治疗后,78%的患者(45例中的35例)在死亡前或最近一次随访检查时神经症状改善或稳定。有26例死亡(58%)。45例患者中仅2例(7.7%)的死亡原因被确定为神经源性。随访磁共振成像显示伽马刀治疗病灶的局部肿瘤控制率为97%,28%的病灶影像学消失(32例中的9例)。6例患者出现远离放射外科靶点的新病灶并接受了第二次治疗。

结论

尽管脑转移性黑色素瘤的长期生存预后仍然不祥,但伽马刀放射外科似乎是一种相对安全、无创的姑息性治疗方法,可使77.8%的治疗患者(45例中的35例)的神经进展停止或逆转。生存率与先前报道的手术和其他形式放疗的生存率相当或更高。在我们的研究群体中,因转移性黑色素瘤死亡的患者中只有7.7%(26例中的2例)死于神经疾病。考虑到我们综述的结果,强调常规使用治疗剂量的抗癫痫药物。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验