Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11864-021-00854-z
Title: Radiation Necrosis from Stereotactic Radiosurgery-How Do We Mitigate?
Authors: Vellayappan, Balamurugan A
McGranahan, Tresa
Graber, Jerome
Taylor, Lynne
Venur, Vyshak
Ellenbogen, Richard
Sloan, Andrew E
Redmond, Kristin J
Foote, Matthew
Chao, Samuel T
Suh, John H
Chang, Eric L
Sahgal, Arjun
Lo, Simon S 
Keywords: Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Oncology
Stereotactic radiosurgery
Radiation necrosis
Brain metastases
Hypofractionated stereotactic radiotherapy
Mitigation strategies
GAMMA-KNIFE RADIOSURGERY
BRAIN METASTASIS RECURRENCE
THERAPY ONCOLOGY GROUP
IRRADIATED VOLUME
TUMOR RECURRENCE
CYBERKNIFE RADIOTHERAPY
DIFFERENTIAL-DIAGNOSIS
SURGICAL-MANAGEMENT
GLIOMA RECURRENCE
AMERICAN SOCIETY
Issue Date: 1-Jul-2021
Publisher: SPRINGER
Citation: Vellayappan, Balamurugan A, McGranahan, Tresa, Graber, Jerome, Taylor, Lynne, Venur, Vyshak, Ellenbogen, Richard, Sloan, Andrew E, Redmond, Kristin J, Foote, Matthew, Chao, Samuel T, Suh, John H, Chang, Eric L, Sahgal, Arjun, Lo, Simon S (2021-07-01). Radiation Necrosis from Stereotactic Radiosurgery-How Do We Mitigate?. CURRENT TREATMENT OPTIONS IN ONCOLOGY 22 (7). ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11864-021-00854-z
Abstract: Intracranial stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) is an effective and convenient treatment for many brain conditions. Data regarding safety come mostly from retrospective single institutional studies and a small number of prospective studies. Variations in target delineation, treatment delivery, imaging follow-up protocols and dose prescription limit the interpretation of this data. There has been much clinical focus on radiation necrosis (RN) in particular, as it is being increasingly recognized on follow-up imaging. Symptomatic RN may be treated with medical therapy (such as corticosteroids and bevacizumab) with surgical resection being reserved for refractory patients. Nevertheless, RN remains a challenging condition to manage, and therefore upfront patient selection for SRS remains critical to provide complication-free control. Mitigation strategies need to be considered in situations where the baseline risk of RN is expected to be high—such as large target volume or re-irradiation. These may involve reduction in the prescribed dose or hypofractionated stereotactic radiation therapy (HSRT). Recently published guidelines and international meta-analysis report the benefit of HSRT in larger lesions, without compromising control rates. However, careful attention to planning parameters and SRS techniques still need to be adhered, even with HSRT. In cases where the risk is deemed to be high despite mitigation, a combination approach of surgery with or without post-operative radiation should be considered.
Source Title: CURRENT TREATMENT OPTIONS IN ONCOLOGY
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/206187
ISSN: 15272729
15346277
DOI: 10.1007/s11864-021-00854-z
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