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Leukoencephalopathy after whole‐brain radiation therapy plus radiosurgery versus radiosurgery alone for metastatic lung cancer
Author(s) -
Monaco Edward A.,
Faraji Amir H.,
Berkowitz Oren,
Parry Phillip V.,
Hadelsberg Uri,
Kano Hideyuki,
Niranjan Ajay,
Kondziolka Douglas,
Lunsford L. Dade
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
cancer
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.052
H-Index - 304
eISSN - 1097-0142
pISSN - 0008-543X
DOI - 10.1002/cncr.27504
Subject(s) - medicine , leukoencephalopathy , radiosurgery , hyperintensity , white matter , lung cancer , magnetic resonance imaging , neurocognitive , fluid attenuated inversion recovery , radiology , radiation therapy , nuclear medicine , cognition , psychiatry
BACKGROUND: As systemic therapies improve and patients live longer, concerns mount about the toxicity of whole‐brain radiation therapy (WBRT) for treatment of brain metastases. Development of delayed white matter abnormalities indicative of leukoencephalopathy have been correlated with cognitive dysfunction. This study assesses the risk of imaging‐defined leukoencephalopathy in patients whose management included WBRT in addition to stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS). This risk is compared to patients who only underwent SRS. METHODS: We retrospectively compared 37 patients with non–small cell lung cancer who underwent WBRT plus SRS to 31 patients who underwent only SRS. All patients survived at least 1 year after treatment. We graded the development of delayed white matter changes on magnetic resonance imaging using a scale to evaluate T 2 /FLAIR (fluid attenuated image recovery) images: grade 1 = little or no white matter hyperintensity; grade 2 = limited periventricular hyperintensity; and grade 3 = diffuse white matter hyperintensity. RESULTS: Patients treated with WBRT and SRS had a significantly greater incidence of delayed white matter leukoencephalopathy compared to patients who underwent SRS alone ( P < .001). On final imaging, 36 of 37 patients (97.3%) treated by WBRT developed leukoencephalopathy (25% with grade 2; 70.8% with grade 3). Only 1 patient treated with SRS alone developed leukoencephalopathy. CONCLUSIONS: Risk of leukoencephalopathy in patients treated with SRS alone for brain metastases was significantly lower than that for patients treated with WBRT plus SRS. A prospective study is necessary to correlate these findings with neurocognition and quality of life. These data supplement existing reports regarding the differential effects of WBRT and SRS on normal brain structure and function. Cancer 2013. © 2012 American Cancer Society.