Neurosurgery 2013-02
Cavity volume dynamics after resection of brain metastases and timing of postresection cavity stereotactic radiosurgery.
Abstract
Background
An alternative treatment option to whole-brain irradiation after surgical resection of brain metastases is resection cavity stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS).
Objective
To review the dynamics of cavity volume change after surgical resection with the goal of determining the optimal timing for cavity SRS.
Methods
Preresection tumor, postresection/pre-SRS cavity, and post-SRS cavity volumes were measured for 68 cavities in 63 patients treated with surgery and postresection cavity SRS. Percent differences between volumes were calculated and correlation analyses were performed to assess volume changes before and after SRS.
Results
For the majority of tumors, the postresection cavity volume was smaller than the preresection tumor volume by a median percent volume change of -29% (range, -82% to 1258%), with larger preresection tumors resulting in greater cavity shrinkage (P < .001). To determine the optimal timing for cavity SRS, we examined cavity volume dynamics by comparing the early postresection (postoperative days 0-3) and treatment planning magnetic resonance imaging scans (median time to magnetic resonance imaging, 20 days; range, 9-33 days) and found no association between the postresection day number and volume change (P = .75). The volume decrease resulting from tumor resection was offset by the addition of a 2-mm clinical target volume margin, which is our current technique.
Conclusion
The greatest volume change occurs immediately after surgery (postoperative days 0-3) with no statistically significant volume change occurring up to 33 days after surgery for most patients. Therefore, there is no benefit of cavity shrinkage in waiting longer than the first 1 to 2 weeks to perform cavity SRS.
Related Questions
What is your preferred fSRS dose/fractionation for large brain metastases?
For large intact brain metastases, my preferred fSRS dose/fractionation would be 27 Gy in 3 daily fractions. There are retrospective studies showing 1-yr local control rates of 91% using 27 Gy in 3 daily fractions vs 77% using single fraction SRS for large intact brain metastases > 2 cm (Minniti et ...
How long after resection for brain metastasis do you wait to request a radiation planning MRI?
This is a good question, and I agree with the sentiments above. I think there are two competing issues here--1) evolution of the cavity and 2) regrowth of microscopic disease.While intuitively, one might think that waiting longer might allow the brain to normalize and the cavity to shrink, our data ...