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. 2022 Sep 5;24(Suppl 2):ii65. doi: 10.1093/neuonc/noac174.224

P11.35.B The clinical course of long-term survivors after the diagnosis of brain metastasis

S T Jünger 1, A Meissner 2, M I Ruge 3, D Rueß 4, R Goldbrunner 5, S Grau 6
PMCID: PMC9443358

Abstract

Background

To asses demographic and clinical parameters, treatment, and course of disease in patients surviving longer ≥ 5 years after the diagnosis of brain metastasis (BM).

Material and Methods

We retrospectively identified patients who were treated for BM and survived ≥ 5 years after initial BM diagnosis. We analysed and described clinical and treatment related parameters with respect to histology, time to occurrence and systemic/ BM-specific treatment.

Results

We included 48 patients with a mean age of 55 years (range 33-81, SD 12) at diagnosis of primary tumor and 58 (range 41-84, SD 20) at initial BM diagnosis. Histology was non-small-cell lung cancer in 18 (37.5%), melanoma in 14 (29.2%), breast cancer in 11 (22.9%), renal carcinoma in 2 (4.2%), and small-cell lung cancer, cancer of unknown primary and gastrointestinal cancer in one case each (2.1%). Treatment for primary tumor included resection (83.3%), chemotherapy (43.8%), radiation (33.3%), interferon therapy (18.8%), and immuno-/targeted therapy (25%). Most patients received a combination of latter. The mean interval between primary tumor and BM diagnosis was 36 months (range -2 to 277; SD 57). At the time of BM diagnosis, 50% of patients presented with systemically stable disease, 66.7% showed BM related symptoms, 92% showed a KPS ≥70. Most patients had 1 BM (72.9%), while 20.9% had 2-3 and 6.3% >3. Initial treatment for BM comprised resection (60.4%), stereotactic radiosurgery (27.2%), whole-brain-radiation therapy (8.4%), and interstitial brachytherapy (4.2%). Approximately half of the patients (52.1%) suffered from ≥1 BM relapse at initial treatment site. At the time of the analysis, 13 (27.1%) patients had died; cause of death was mostly unknown, in two patients each, systemic/cerebral cause was confirmed. The mean overall survival (OS) was 131 months (range 64-344, SD 68) and 95 (range 60-246, SD 36) after diagnosis of primary tumor and BM, respectively. All patients suffering from melanoma who had received interferon therapy (n=8) survived. Neither systemic status at BM diagnosis nor the administration of novel treatment agents or chemotherapy after BM diagnosis showed an impact on OS (p=0.642, p=0.177 and p=0.628, respectively). Further survival analysis was omitted due to subgroup sizes.

Conclusion

Despite the usually fatal course after BM development, some patients show long-term survival. Whether specific genetic parameters have a particular impact in this subgroup of patients, warrants further investigation.


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

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