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Brief Title: Cavity Boost Radiation Therapy vs. Observation in Cerebral Metastases After Complete Surgical Resection
Official Title: Cavity Boost Radiation Therapy vs. Observation in Cerebral Metastases After Complete Surgical Resection
Study ID: NCT02887651
Brief Summary: The purpose of this study is to determine whether a local fractionated radiation therapy achieves a better local tumor control after complete surgical metastases resection at 6 month as compared to observation alone. Further it should be evaluated if cognitive functioning and quality of life is similar in both groups.
Detailed Description: The surgical resection of cerebral metastases as a key element in a multimodal therapeutic concept of brain metastatic patients is included in the common recommendations and international guidelines (level I evidence). These recommendations are based on a series of prospective, randomized and controlled studies which addressed the impact of the surgical metastases resection combined with a whole-brain radiation therapy (WBRT) in comparison to WBRT alone. Achieving local tumor control is the major goal of surgery and local tumor control rate after surgery alone has been addressed in few studies: A prospective, randomized American multicenter study revealed a local recurrence rate of 46% by median follow-up of 43 weeks for patients who underwent surgery alone without an adjuvant radiation therapy. Similarly, the 2-year local recurrence rate after metastases resection alone was 53.1% in a retrospective Korean study and 59% in the prospective, randomized and controlled EORTC 22952-26001 study. In conclusion, standard surgery alone is not sufficient to achieve local control in about 50% of patients (evidence level I). Therefore, surgery of cerebral metastases is often followed by an adjuvant radiation therapy, which is an important part of a multi-modal therapy. Evidence for an additional adjuvant whole-brain radiation therapy (WBRT) after surgical resection was gained from a first prospective, randomized study in 1998: Patients treated by surgery followed by adjuvant WBRT had a significant lower local in-brain progression rate as compared to patients randomized to surgery alone (46% with a median follow-up of 48 weeks in the observation group vs. 10% with a median follow-up of 43 weeks). This result was recently confirmed by the EORTC 22952-26001 study: The 2-year local in-brain progression rate after surgical resection was reduced by a WBRT from 59% to 27%. But despite the lower local and also lower distant in-brain progression rate, the WBRT had no significant influence on the overall survival. The additional analysis of the quality of life data of the EORTC 22952-26001 study showed, that a WBRT negatively impacts the health-related quality of life with a statistically relevant and clinically significant impairment of the physical functioning (at 8 weeks), cognitive functioning and of the global health status. In conclusion, WBRT after surgery of cerebral metastases significantly reduces the incidence of local recurrences but has no impact on the overall survival and has a significant negative impact on the patient´s quality of life and cognitive function. Therefore, WBRT is not mandatory as adjuvant concept after surgical metastases resection and does not have an additional oncological impact in comparison to observation. A local fractionated radiation therapy in analogy to the WBRT might achieve a similar local tumor control than observation alone but might be associated with an improved cognitive functioning as compared to WBRT. The purpose of this study is to determine whether a local fractionated radiation therapy achieves a better local tumor control after complete surgical metastases resection at 6 month as compared to observation alone. Further it should be evaluated if cognitive functioning and quality of life is similar in both groups.
Minimum Age: 18 Years
Eligible Ages: ADULT, OLDER_ADULT
Sex: ALL
Healthy Volunteers: No
Heinrich-Heine-University, Düsseldorf, NRW, Germany
Name: Michael Sabel, Prof. Dr.
Affiliation: Department of Neurosurgery
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Name: Wilfried Budach, Prof. Dr.
Affiliation: department of radiation oncology
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR