Permanent low-activity iodine-125 implants for cerebral metastases |
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Authors: | Michael Schulder Peter McL. Black Dennis C. Shrieve Eben Alexander III Jay S. Loeffler |
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Affiliation: | (1) Departments of Surgery (Neurosurgery) and Radiation Oncology, Harvard Medical School, The Brain Tumor Center, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Children's Hospital, Dana Farber Cancer Institute, and Joint Center for Radiation Therapy, Boston, MA, USA |
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Abstract: | Beginning in 1987, selected patients with metastatic braintumors were treated with permanent implants of low-activityradioactive iodine-125 (125I) seeds. These patients underwent craniotomy,gross total resection of the metastatic lesion, andplacement of the seeds. In general, criteria fortreatment included the presence of a recurrent tumorwith a volume too large to permit radiosurgery,and a Karnofsky Performance Score of 70 orhigher. Thirteen patients underwent 14 implant procedures; allreceived external whole-brain radiotherapy. Implant dose ranged from43 Gy to 132 Gy, with a meanof 83 Gy. Survival after implantation ranged from2 weeks to almost 9 years, with amedian of 9 months. Clinical and radiographic localcontrol was obtained in 9 patients. Two patientsdied of acute, postoperative complications within a monthof implantation, so no information regarding tumor controlis available for them. Late complications included abone flap infection in one patient and aCSF leak in another; both were treated withoutfurther sequelae.These results demonstrate that permanent 125I implants canresult in good survival and quality of life,and occasionally can yield long-term survival. Potentially, itis a cost-effective treatment in that a separateprocedure for stereotactic implantation or radiosurgery is notneeded, as is the case with the useof temporary high-activity seeds. The permanent implantation itselfadds less than 10 minutes to the craniotomy,and the risk of symptomatic radiation necrosis islow. We recommend consideration of this procedure inpatients harboring large, recurrent metastatic tumors that requirefurther surgery. |
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Keywords: | brachytherapy cancer intracranial neoplasms metastatic tumors radiation therapy |
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