Stereotactic radiosurgery for cerebral metastatic melanoma

Abstract
To determine local tumor control rates and survival of patients with melanoma metastases to the brain, the authors reviewed the results of 23 consecutive patients with a total of 32 tumors (19 patients had a solitary tumor and four had multiple tumors) who underwent adjuvant stereotactic radiosurgery. Tumor locations included the cerebral hemisphere (24 cases), brain stem (four cases), basal ganglia (two cases), and cerebellum (two cases). Fifteen patients had associated cranial symptomatology and eight had incidental metastases. All patients had tumors of 3 cm or less in diameter (mean tumor volume 2.5 cu cm), and all received fractionated whole-brain radiation therapy (30 Gy) in addition to radiosurgery (mean tumor margin dose 16 Gy). Nineteen patients were managed with both modalities at the time of diagnosis; four underwent radiosurgery 3 to 12 months after fractionated whole-brain radiotherapy. The mean patient follow-up period was 12 months (range 3 to 38 months). After radiosurgery, eight patients improved, 13 remained stable, and two deteriorated. One patient subsequently required craniotomy because of intratumoral hemorrhage; this patient and three others are living 13 to 38 months after radiosurgery. Nineteen patients died, 18 from progression of their systemic disease and one from another hemorrhage into a new brain metastasis. The local tumor control rate was 97%. Only two patients subsequently developed new intracranial metastases. The median survival period after diagnosis was 9 months (range 3 to 38 months). The authors believe that stereotactic radiosurgery coupled with fractionated whole-brain irradiation is an effective management strategy for cerebral metastases from a melanoma. Multi-institutional trials are warranted to confirm that stereotactic radiosurgery results equal or surpass the outcome achieved with craniotomy and tumor resection.