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Resection with intraoperative cesium-131 brachytherapy as salvage therapy for recurrent brain tumors

Authors :
William C, Chen
Matthieu, Lafreniere
Christina, Phuong
S John, Liu
Joe D, Baal
Michael, Lometti
Olivier, Morin
Benjamin, Ziemer
Harish N, Vasudevan
Calixto-Hope G, Lucas
Shawn L, Hervey-Jumper
Philip V, Theodosopoulos
Stephen T, Magill
Shannon, Fogh
Jean L, Nakamura
Lauren, Boreta
Penny K, Sneed
Michael W, McDermott
David R, Raleigh
Steve E, Braunstein
Source :
Journal of Neurosurgery. 137:924-930
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG), 2022.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE The authors’ objective was to examine the safety and efficacy of salvage intracranial cesium-131 brachytherapy in combination with resection of recurrent brain tumors. METHODS The authors conducted a retrospective chart review of consecutive patients treated with intraoperative intracranial cesium-131 brachytherapy at a single institution. Permanent suture-stranded cesium-131 seeds were implanted in the resection cavity after maximal safe tumor resection. The primary outcomes of interest were local, locoregional (within 1 cm), and intracranial control, as well as rates of overall survival (OS), neurological death, symptomatic adverse radiation effects (AREs), and surgical complication rate graded according to Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events version 5.0. RESULTS Between 2016 and 2020, 36 patients received 40 consecutive cesium-131 implants for 42 recurrent brain tumors and received imaging follow-up for a median (interquartile range [IQR]) of 17.0 (12.7–25.9) months. Twenty patients (55.6%) with 22 implants were treated for recurrent brain metastasis, 12 patients (33.3%) with 16 implants were treated for recurrent atypical (n = 7) or anaplastic (n = 5) meningioma, and 4 patients (11.1%) were treated for other recurrent primary brain neoplasms. All except 1 tumor (97.6%) had received prior radiotherapy, including 20 (47.6%) that underwent 2 or more prior radiotherapy treatments and 23 (54.8%) that underwent prior resection. The median (IQR) tumor size was 3.0 (2.3–3.7) cm, and 17 lesions (40.5%) had radiographic evidence of ARE prior to salvage therapy. Actuarial 1-year local/locoregional/intracranial control rates for the whole cohort and patients with metastases and meningiomas were 91.6%/83.4%/47.9%, 88.8%/84.4%/45.4%, and 100%/83.9%/46.4%, respectively. No cases of local recurrence of any histology (0 of 27) occurred after gross-total resection (p = 0.012, log-rank test). The 1-year OS rates for the whole cohort and patients with metastases and meningiomas were 82.7%, 79.1%, and 91.7%, respectively, and the median (IQR) survival of all patients was 26.7 (15.6–36.4) months. Seven patients (19.4%) experienced neurological death from progressive intracranial disease (7 of 14 total deaths [50%]), 5 (13.9%) of whom died of leptomeningeal disease. Symptomatic AREs were observed in 9.5% of resection cavities (n = 4), of which 1 (2.4%) was grade 3 in severity. The surgical complication rate was 16.7% (n = 7); 4 (9.5%) of these patients had grade 3 or higher complications, including 1 patient (2.4%) who died perioperatively. CONCLUSIONS Cesium-131 brachytherapy resulted in good local control and acceptable rates of symptomatic AREs and surgical complications in this heavily pretreated cohort, and it may be a reasonable salvage adjuvant treatment for this patient population.

Subjects

Subjects :
General Medicine

Details

ISSN :
19330693 and 00223085
Volume :
137
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Neurosurgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....02e44689b63bbd440d340b4c9ac2b291
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3171/2021.10.jns211886