Does Time between Imaging Diagnosis and Initiation of Radiotherapy Impact Survival after Whole-Brain Radiotherapy for Brain Metastases?
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/6023Date
2013Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Aims. To evaluate whether reduced waiting time influences survival of patients treated with whole-brain radiotherapy (WBRT) for
brainmetastases. Materials and Methods. Retrospective intention-to-treat study including 110 patients treated with primary WBRT
(typically 10 fractions of 3Gy; no other treatment between diagnosis and WBRT). Uni- and multivariate tests were performed.
Results. Median delay between imaging diagnosis and WBRT was 12 days (range 0–66 days).WBRT started within 1 week in 36%,
during the second week in 28%, and during the third week in 18% of patients. No significant correlation between waiting time
and survival was evident, except for one subgroup of patients. Those without extracranial metastases (potentially more threatened
by worse intracranial disease control) survived for a median of 2.5 months from WBRT if waiting time was 2 weeks or longer
as compared to 5.6 months if waiting time was shorter than 2 weeks (𝑃� = 0.03). The same correlation was seen if survival was
computed from imaging diagnosis. Conclusion. If departmental resources are not sufficient to provide immediate WBRT within 2
weeks to all patients, those without extracranial metastases should be prioritised.This study did not address the impact of waiting
time on quality of life or symptom palliation.
Publisher
Hindawi Publishing CorporationCitation
ISRN Oncology (2013), Article ID 214304Metadata
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