Blood-tumor barrier opening changes in brain metastases from pre to one-month post radiation therapy

2017 
Abstract Purpose Blood–tumor barrier is a limiting factor for effectiveness of systemic therapy to brain metastases. This study aimed to assess the extent and time course of BTB opening in BM following whole-brain radiotherapy (WBRT) or stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) to determine optimal timing for systemic therapy. Materials and method 30 patients received WBRT or SRS and a total of 64 metastatic lesions were analyzed. Dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI were acquired, to quantify a transfer constant (K trans ), pre-RT, 1–2 weeks after starting RT (Wk1-2), and 1-month post-RT (1 M post-RT). Lesions were categorized as either low or high permeability based upon the pre-RT percentage volume of a lesion with K trans  > 0.005 min −1 (%V all ) less or greater than 50%. Time-course changes of %V all after RT were analyzed. Results Fifty-seven lesions had high-permeability and seven had low-permeability at baseline. Intra-patient and inter-lesion heterogeneity was observed in six patients who had both low- ( n  = 7) and high-permeability lesions ( n  = 10). Also, lesion permeability showed a significant size-effect at baseline. For high-permeability lesions, either received WBRT ( n  = 43) or SRS ( n  = 14), %V all decreased non-significantly following RT (from 85.4% pre-RT to 76.9% 1 M post-RT). For low-permeability lesions ( n  = 7, all received WBRT), %V all increased from 5.6% pre-RT to 30.2% at Wk1-2 and to 52.6% 1 M−post ( p  = 0.01). Conclusion Our preliminary results suggest that 2–4 weeks after RT, when BTB opening is high for both low- and high-permeability brain metastatic lesions, could be optimal time to start systemic therapy.
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