Current and emerging treatments for brain metastases
- PMID: 25952487
Current and emerging treatments for brain metastases
Abstract
Brain metastasis in patients with cancer can be indicative of multisystem spread or lead to neurological demise if not locally controlled, and is associated with poor survival and high morbidity. Compared with metastasis to other areas of the body, brain metastasis possesses a unique biology that confers high resistance to systemic therapies. This phenomenon has been historically attributed to the inability of chemotherapeutic agents to pass through the blood-brain barrier. Recent studies challenge this premise, revealing other potentially targetable mechanism(s). Therapies that exploit recent advances in the understanding of brain metastasis are still in early stages of development. Encouragingly, and discovered by happenstance, some molecularly targeted drugs already appear to have efficacy against certain tumors and accompanying cerebral edema. In the meantime, conventional treatment modalities such as surgery and radiation have iteratively reached new levels of refinement. However, these achievements are somewhat muted by the emergence of magnetic resonance (MR)-guided laser interstitial thermal therapy, a minimally invasive neuroablative technique. On the horizon, MR-guided focused ultrasound surgery is similarly intriguing. Even in the absence of further advances, local control is frequently achieved with state-of-the-art therapies. Dramatic improvements will likely require sophisticated approaches that account for the particular effects of the microenvironment of the central nervous system on metastasis.
Comment in
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Brain metastases: the changing landscape.Oncology (Williston Park). 2015 Apr;29(4):257-60. Oncology (Williston Park). 2015. PMID: 25952488 No abstract available.
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Management of brain metastases in the era of targeted and immunomodulatory therapies.Oncology (Williston Park). 2015 Apr;29(4):261-3. Oncology (Williston Park). 2015. PMID: 25952489 No abstract available.
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