Efficacy of laser interstitial thermal therapy for biopsy-proven radiation necrosis in radiographically recurrent brain metastases

Michael D. Chan(Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist), Steven Tatter(Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist), Veronica Chiang(Yale University), Peter E. Fecci(Duke Medical Center), Roy E. Strowd(Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist), Sujit S. Prabhu(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Constantinos G. Hadjipanayis(University of Pittsburgh), John P. Kirkpatrick(Duke Medical Center), David Sun(Norton Healthcare), Kaylyn Sinicrope(Norton Healthcare), Alireza M. Mohammadi(Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine), Parag Sevak(Norton Healthcare), Steven R. Abram(Saint Thomas Health), Albert H. Kim(Washington University in St. Louis), Eric Leuthardt(Washington University in St. Louis), Samuel T. Chao(Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine), John G. Phillips(Saint Thomas Health), Michel Lacroix(Geisinger Medical Center), Brian J. Williams(University of Louisville), Dimitris G. Placantonakis(New York University), Joshua S. Silverman(New York University), James Baumgartner(Florida Hospital Medical Group), David Piccioni(University of California San Diego), Adrian W. Laxton(Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist)
Neuro-Oncology Advances
January 1, 2023
Cited by 31Open Access
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Abstract

Background: Laser interstitial thermal therapy (LITT) in the setting of post-SRS radiation necrosis (RN) for patients with brain metastases has growing evidence for efficacy. However, questions remain regarding hospitalization, local control, symptom control, and concurrent use of therapies. Methods: Demographics, intraprocedural data, safety, Karnofsky performance status (KPS), and survival data were prospectively collected and then analyzed on patients who consented between 2016-2020 and who were undergoing LITT for biopsy-proven RN at one of 14 US centers. Data were monitored for accuracy. Statistical analysis included individual variable summaries, multivariable Fine and Gray analysis, and Kaplan-Meier estimated survival. Results: Ninety patients met the inclusion criteria. Four patients underwent 2 ablations on the same day. Median hospitalization time was 32.5 hours. The median time to corticosteroid cessation after LITT was 13.0 days (0.0, 1229.0) and cumulative incidence of lesional progression was 19% at 1 year. Median post-procedure overall survival was 2.55 years [1.66, infinity] and 77.1% at one year as estimated by KaplanMeier. Median KPS remained at 80 through 2-year follow-up. Seizure prevalence was 12% within 1-month post-LITT and 7.9% at 3 months; down from 34.4% within 60-day prior to procedure. Conclusions: LITT for RN was not only again found to be safe with low patient morbidity but was also a highly effective treatment for RN for both local control and symptom management (including seizures). In addition to averting expected neurological death, LITT facilitates ongoing systemic therapy (in particular immunotherapy) by enabling the rapid cessation of steroids, thereby facilitating maximal possible survival for these patients.


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