Stereotactic radiosurgery in combination with up-front high-dose methotrexate as a first-line treatment for newly diagnosed primary central nervous system lymphoma

2015 
The efficacy of stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) instead of whole brain radiotherapy (WBRT) following high-dose methotrexate (HD-MTX) for primary central nervous system lymphoma (PCNSL) is unclear. To clarify whether SRS in combination with up-front HD-MTX supplements the effect of HD-MTX in remaining or refractory lesions after initial HD-MTX treatment. The authors conducted a retrospective review for newly diagnosed PCNSL patients who underwent SRS after HD-MTX as a first-line treatment. The local control (LC), the progression-free survival (PFS), the recurrence patterns, the salvage treatments, the overall survival (OS), the Karnofsky Performance Status (KPS), the activities of daily living (ADL) were analyzed as well as radiosurgical parameters. Twenty patients underwent SRS for 51 lesions with the median volume of 0.45 cm3. The median age at SRS was 67 (range 37–82). The median KPS at SRS was 90. The LC rate at 2 years was 86.0 %, the median PFS after SRS was 17 months, necessitating additional SRS and chemotherapy. The median OS was 52 months. No significant side effects related to SRS were observed. During follow-up period, the good ADL preservation was achieved for 13 months from SRS. Patients with KPS ≥ 90 at SRS demonstrated longer ADL preservation (32 months from SRS). SRS following up-front HD-MTX without WBRT provided excellent LC, acceptable OS and the long ADL preservation period. These benefits may be more emphasized especially in patients with good KPS, but should be validated in a large patient population.
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