Conference Coverage

Less cognitive decline with stereotactic radiosurgery after brain metastases resection


 

AT ASTRO ANNUAL MEETING 2016

References

“While the MD Anderson trial clearly demonstrated that radiosurgery reduces the risk of surgical bed relapse, the N107C trial demonstrated a 44% risk of surgical bed relapse, a rate that is arguably too high in regards to the long survival of resected brain metastasis patients, and it also challenges and risks the resection of surgical bed relapse following radiosurgery,” he said.

The N107C trial was sponsored by the National Cancer Institute and the Alliance for Clinical Trials in Oncology. The MD Anderson trial was funded by a Cancer Center Grant. Dr. Brown, Dr. Mahajan, and Dr. Rodrigues reported no conflicts of interest.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Proton radiotherapy effective for childhood medulloblastoma
MDedge Neurology
Danish study finds increased glioma risk in a rosacea population
MDedge Neurology
Intranasal Drug Delivery Bypasses the Blood–Brain Barrier
MDedge Neurology
Temsirolimus results in good but short-duration responses in primary CNS lymphoma
MDedge Neurology
New CDC opioid guideline targets overprescribing for chronic pain
MDedge Neurology
Adding chemo to radiation boosts survival from low-grade gliomas
MDedge Neurology
Proactive endocrine screening urged for pediatric brain tumor survivors
MDedge Neurology
Early results positive for treating high-grade gliomas with virus-based therapy
MDedge Neurology
IL-2 adds only toxicity to neuroblastoma antibody tx
MDedge Neurology
Heat shock protein peptide vaccine appears safe, effective for glioblastoma patients
MDedge Neurology