Brain Tumors Research - Symptoms, Benign and Malignant Tumors, Gliomas, Screening, Treatment

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RPA classification has prognostic significance for surgically resected single brain metastasis.

Tendulkar RD, Liu SW, Barnett GH, Vogelbaum MA, Toms SA, Jin T, Suh JH

Department of Radiation Oncology, Brain Tumor Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH 44195, USA.

PURPOSE: To retrospectively evaluate prognostic factors that correlate with overall survival among patients with a surgically resected single brain metastasis. METHODS AND MATERIALS: An Institutional Review Board-approved database of the Cleveland Clinic Brain Tumor Institute was queried for patients with a single brain metastasis treated by surgical resection between February 1984 and January 2004. The primary endpoint was overall survival from the date of surgery by the Kaplan-Meier method. RESULTS: A total of 271 patients were included. Statistically significant variables for improved survival on multivariate analysis included age <65 years, lack of extracranial metastases, control of primary tumor, histology (non-small-cell lung carcinoma), and use of stereotactic radiosurgery. The median survival for all patients was 10.2 months. Survival of patients in recursive partitioning analysis (RPA) class 1 was better (21.4 months) than those in RPA class 2 (9.0 months, p < 0.001), RPA class 3 (8.9 months, p = 0.15), or the combined group of RPA classes 2 and 3 (9.0 months, p < 0.001). Patients had a median survival of 10.6 months after documented gross total resection and 8.7 months after subtotal resection, which approached statistical significance (p = 0.07). Those who were treated with stereotactic radiosurgery had a median survival of 17.1 months, which was greater than patients who were not treated with stereotactic radiosurgery (8.9 months, p = 0.006). CONCLUSIONS: This analysis supports the prognostic significance of the RPA classification in patients with a single brain metastasis who undergo surgical resection and adjuvant therapy. RPA class 1 patients have a very favorable prognosis with a median survival of 21.4 months.

Published 2 October 2006 in Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys, 66(3): 810-7.
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