Stereotactic radiosurgery with and without whole-brain radiotherapy for newly diagnosed brain metastases
- PMID: 16026232
- DOI: 10.1586/14737175.5.4.487
Stereotactic radiosurgery with and without whole-brain radiotherapy for newly diagnosed brain metastases
Abstract
Brain metastases develop in 20-40% of cancer patients and can cause significant morbidity. In selected patients with one to three lesions, stereotactic radiosurgery may be used to improve local control. However, it is unclear whether whole-brain radiotherapy is necessary for all patients who are candidates for stereotactic radiosurgery. While whole-brain radiotherapy may improve the locoregional control of brain metastases, it may cause long-term side effects and may not improve overall survival in some patients. Its benefits should be evaluated in the context of risks of neurocognitive deterioration, either from whole-brain radiotherapy or from uncontrolled brain metastases, and the possible need for salvage treatments with the omission of initial whole-brain radiotherapy. For certain radioresistant brain metastases, the benefit of whole-brain radiotherapy to patients who have stereotactic radiosurgery is uncertain.
Comment in
-
A neuro-oncologist's perspective on adjuvant radiosurgery for patients with newly diagnosed brain metastases.Expert Rev Neurother. 2005 Jul;5(4):429-31. doi: 10.1586/14737175.5.4.429. Expert Rev Neurother. 2005. PMID: 16026224 No abstract available.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical