Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Patients With Five or More Brain Metastases: Retrospective Single-Institution Analysis of Prognostic Factors.
1/5 보강
[PURPOSE] We describe patient outcomes and prognostic factors following linear accelerator-based stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) for five or more brain metastases, without prior or planned whole-brain
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APA
Milano MT, Zheng D, et al. (2025). Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Patients With Five or More Brain Metastases: Retrospective Single-Institution Analysis of Prognostic Factors.. Cureus, 17(12), e99268. https://doi.org/10.7759/cureus.99268
MLA
Milano MT, et al.. "Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Patients With Five or More Brain Metastases: Retrospective Single-Institution Analysis of Prognostic Factors.." Cureus, vol. 17, no. 12, 2025, pp. e99268.
PMID
41541955
Abstract
[PURPOSE] We describe patient outcomes and prognostic factors following linear accelerator-based stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) for five or more brain metastases, without prior or planned whole-brain radiotherapy.
[METHODS] We identified 116 eligible patients treated with SRS from 2019 to 2024 for newly diagnosed brain metastases. We describe clinical factors associated with survival ≤2 months and analyze brain metastasis velocity measured as the number (BMV) or volume (vBMV) of new metastases per year.
[RESULTS] The number of treated brain metastases ranged from 5 to 41 (median 10); net lesion volume ranged from 0.1 to 59.8 (median 5.2) cc. Primary cancers included non-small cell lung (n=65), melanoma (n=20), breast (n=19), kidney (n=6), gastrointestinal (n=4), and other (n=4) cancers. The 6-, 12-, and 24-month overall survival (OS) was 60.3%, 40.5%, and 28.0%, respectively. A progressive extracranial disease at the time of brain metastases and lower predicted survival from graded prognostic assessments (GPAs) were significantly adverse factors for OS on multivariable Cox regression and were associated with 'poor survivors' who died ≤2 months from SRS (n=21) or at >2 months but opting against post-SRS cancer care and follow-up imaging (n=6; OS=2.1-5.8 months). Forty-two patients developed new brain metastases after SRS, while 28 (after ≥6-month follow-up) did not. Among these patients, OS was significantly associated with BMV and vBMV, though vBMV was not significant on multivariable Cox regressions that included BMV.
[CONCLUSIONS] For patients with five or more brain metastases, clinical factors, including the status of extracranial disease and GPA, can potentially aid in selecting patients best-suited for SRS for multiple brain metastases, versus potentially deferring SRS in favor of supportive care. While vBMV is associated with OS, BMV appears more prognostic.
[METHODS] We identified 116 eligible patients treated with SRS from 2019 to 2024 for newly diagnosed brain metastases. We describe clinical factors associated with survival ≤2 months and analyze brain metastasis velocity measured as the number (BMV) or volume (vBMV) of new metastases per year.
[RESULTS] The number of treated brain metastases ranged from 5 to 41 (median 10); net lesion volume ranged from 0.1 to 59.8 (median 5.2) cc. Primary cancers included non-small cell lung (n=65), melanoma (n=20), breast (n=19), kidney (n=6), gastrointestinal (n=4), and other (n=4) cancers. The 6-, 12-, and 24-month overall survival (OS) was 60.3%, 40.5%, and 28.0%, respectively. A progressive extracranial disease at the time of brain metastases and lower predicted survival from graded prognostic assessments (GPAs) were significantly adverse factors for OS on multivariable Cox regression and were associated with 'poor survivors' who died ≤2 months from SRS (n=21) or at >2 months but opting against post-SRS cancer care and follow-up imaging (n=6; OS=2.1-5.8 months). Forty-two patients developed new brain metastases after SRS, while 28 (after ≥6-month follow-up) did not. Among these patients, OS was significantly associated with BMV and vBMV, though vBMV was not significant on multivariable Cox regressions that included BMV.
[CONCLUSIONS] For patients with five or more brain metastases, clinical factors, including the status of extracranial disease and GPA, can potentially aid in selecting patients best-suited for SRS for multiple brain metastases, versus potentially deferring SRS in favor of supportive care. While vBMV is associated with OS, BMV appears more prognostic.