The tumour is not enough or is it? Problems and new concepts in the surgery of cerebral metastases.

Ecancermedicalscience

Department for Neurosurgery, Medical Faculty, Heinrich Heine University, Moorenstraße 5, 40225 Düsseldorf, Germany ; Institute for Neurophysiology, University of Cologne, Germany ; Contributed equally.

Published: May 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cerebral metastases are the most common tumors in the brain, and surgery is an important part of treating them, but it often doesn’t fully control the problem.
  • When doctors remove these tumors with standard methods, they have a high chance of coming back, especially if they don't use a type of radiation therapy afterward.
  • New surgical techniques, like special imaging to better target the tumors and different surgery methods, show promise in reducing the chances of the tumors returning and helping patients live longer.

Article Abstract

Cerebral metastases are the most frequent cerebral tumours. Surgery of cerebral metastases plays an indispensible role in a multimodal therapy concept. Conventional white-light, microscopy assisted microsurgical and circumferential stripping of cerebral metastases is neurosurgical standard therapy, but is associated with an extraordinarily high recurrence rate of more than 50% without subsequent whole-brain radiotherapy. Therefore, neurosurgical standard therapy fails to achieve local tumour control in many patients. The present conceptual paper focuses on this issue and discusses the possible causes of the high recurrence rates such as intraoperative dissemination of tumour cells or the lack of sharp delimitation of metastases from the surrounding brain tissue resulting in incomplete resections. Adjuvant whole-brain radiotherapy reduces the risk of local and distant recurrences, but is associated with a well-documented impairment of neurocognitive function. New surgical strategies, such as supramarginal or fluorescence-guided resection, address the possibility of infiltrating tumour parts to achieve more complete resection of cerebral metastases. Supramarginal resection was shown to significantly reduce the risk of a local recurrence and prolongs two-year survival rates. Furthermore, radiosurgery in combination with surgery represents a promising approach.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3640550PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3332/ecancer.2013.306DOI Listing

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