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Is it acceptable to treat patients with limited, asymptomatic brain metastases and EGFR-mutant NSCLC with upfront TKI?

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Radiation Oncology · St. Francis Radiation Oncology

Though some clinicians have been exploring the idea of targeted therapy for EGFR mutant brain metastases, this has been done in the absence of strong evidence. Reasons for pushing this idea are that sometimes the lesions seem to respond, and this has been seen in some single arm studies and anecdota...

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Radiation Oncology · University of Colorado School of Medicine

In the era of newer generation TKIs with increased CNS activity (e.g., osimertinib for EGFR+; alectinib, lortlatinib, brigatinib for ALK+ NSCLC), the short answer is “yes”, it is acceptable to treat carefully selected patients with limited brain metastases with upfront CNS-active TKIs and close MRI ...

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Radiation Oncology · Alaska Cyberknife Center

I would treat patients with limited, asymptomatic brain metastases with SRS followed by EGFR-TKI based upon the studies (particularly the recently published Journal of Clinical Oncology study) cited by @Dr. First Last above.

In full disclosure, I am obviously the first author on both of the manuscrip...

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Radiation Oncology · Levine Cancer Institute

I think the answers to this question above make some great points. However, old data on this topic are now a bit outdated with the recent results of the FLAURA trial which moved the third-generation TKI osimertinib to first-line therapy for EGFR-mutants.

Most of the first and second-line EGFR agents ...

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Radiation Oncology · Fox Chase Cancer Center

I often hold off on RT if lesions small and asymptomatic. But I never stop close surveillance.

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Radiation Oncology · Columbia University Irving Medical Center

I would likely proceed with SRS upfront for limited small metastasis and asymptomatic and consider holding off if patient is comfortable with close surveillance.

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Radiation Oncology · University of New Mexico School of Medicine

In my opinion, patients with asymptomatic brain mets from EGFR-mutated NSCLC can initially be treated with erlotinib. I have had a few such cases, and initially the brain mets respond to erlotinib. However, they appear to universally progress in the brain necessitating radiotherapy or SRS. Studies i...

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Radiation Oncology · Penn State Milton S Hershey Medical Center

I would treat if the patient wishes to be on close surveillance with repeat MRI. Most of my patients prefer treatment than getting frequent MRI studies.

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Medical Oncology · Siouxland Hem Onc Assoc

I would treat with SRS now to prevent problems in future. Besides, I think patients with known brain mets will really worry if not treated.

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