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. 2014 Nov;16(Suppl 5):v10. doi: 10.1093/neuonc/nou237.10

AT-10: SURGERY (S) AND PERMANENT INTRAOPERATIVE BRACHYTHERAPY (BT) IMPROVES TIME TO PROGRESSION OF RECURRENT INTRACRANIAL NEOPLASMS: A REPORT OF 27 CASES USING A MODULAR, BIOCOMPATIBLE CARRIER AND REAL-TIME DOSIMETRIC PLANNING

David Brachman 2,4, Peter Nakaji 2,4, Christopher Dardis 2, Stephen Sorensen 1, Theresa Thomas 3,4, Kris Smith 2, Nader Sanai 2, Emad Youssef 2,4, Heyoung McBride 2,4
PMCID: PMC4217787

Abstract

BACKGROUND: We report our experience using surgery (S) and permanent brachytherapy (BT) implants in the treatment of 27 separate recurrent/progressive intracranial neoplasms in 20 adult patients, all of whom had progressed despite prior standard of care treatment. Tumors treated: Grade II meningioma (9), Grade III meningioma (5), metastases (7), high grade glioma (4), craniopharyngioma (1) and dural sarcoma (1). Prior same site surgeries: mean 2, range 0-4. Prior same site RT courses: mean 2, range 1-3. Prior cumulative radiation dose: mean 70.5 Gy, range 50-89 Gy. METHODS: All patients underwent resection and intraoperative BT utilizing a modular-design biocompatible radiation-source carrier and Cs-131 in seed form. The modular geometry of the carrier, with placement under direct visualization, enabled real-time dosimetry with 60 Gy at 5 mm depth utilized for all cases. Cox's proportional-hazards model was used to model the effect of BT, with each tumor serving as its own control. RESULTS: Median progression-free survival (PFS) for prior treatment was 5.8 months (range 1-27 months). Following S + BT, only one patient, with chondrosarcoma, has progressed in the treated area (after 5 months). Thus, median PFS has not been reached for S + BT (follow-up range 0.13-21.5 months; hazard ratio 0.05, p < 0.0001, log-rank test). Time added to surgery averaged 20 min. Mean number of seed sources used was 21 (range 4-41); mean implanted mCi 101 (range 9-228). One tumor bed had clinically silent, biopsy proven radiation necrosis. No other patient has had symptomatic or asymptomatic necrosis. 8 patients have died: 5 of intracranial progression away from the treated area(s), 2 from extracranial causes, and 1 post-op death unrelated to the implant. CONCLUSION: Resection and precise intraoperative BT made possible by the carrier design demonstrate excellent early results in this ongoing, IRB approved trial for patients with recurrent intracranial neoplasms.


Articles from Neuro-Oncology are provided here courtesy of Society for Neuro-Oncology and Oxford University Press

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