articleJAMAJun 6, 2006Closed access

Stereotactic Radiosurgery Plus Whole-Brain Radiation Therapy vs Stereotactic Radiosurgery Alone for Treatment of Brain Metastases

Hokkaido University · The University of Tokyo · +9 more institutions

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Abstract

Objective

To determine if WBRT combined with SRS results in improvements in survival, brain tumor control, functional preservation rate, and frequency of neurologic death. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PATIENTS: Randomized controlled trial of 132 patients with 1 to 4 brain metastases, each less than 3 cm in diameter, enrolled at 11 hospitals in Japan between October 1999 and December 2003. INTERVENTIONS: Patients were randomly assigned to receive WBRT plus SRS (65 patients) or SRS alone (67 patients). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The primary end point was overall survival; secondary end points were brain tumor recurrence, salvage brain treatment, functional preservation, toxic effects of radiation, and cause of death.

Results

The median survival time and the 1-year actuarial survival rate were 7.5 months and 38.5% (95% confidence interval, 26.7%-50.3%) in the WBRT + SRS group and 8.0 months and 28.4% (95% confidence interval, 17.6%-39.2%) for SRS alone (P = .42). The 12-month brain tumor recurrence rate was 46.8% in the WBRT + SRS group and 76.4% for SRS alone group (P

Citation impact

2,210
total citations
FWCI
48.15
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100%
References
23
Citations per year

Authors

15

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Radiosurgery
  • Confidence interval
  • Radiation therapy
  • Surgery
  • Clinical endpoint
  • Randomized controlled trial
  • Nuclear medicine
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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