AI Article Synopsis

  • * Traditional treatments have focused on surgery and radiation therapy, but recent developments of systemic agents such as alectinib and lorlatinib are transforming management by allowing early treatment of brain lesions.
  • * Novel therapies can potentially delay or replace traditional approaches while reducing side effects, but careful patient selection and further research are necessary for optimal treatment outcomes.

Article Abstract

Background And Objective: Lung cancer is commonly associated with brain metastasis formation, and certain subtypes, such as anaplastic lymphoma kinase () rearranged disease, have an especially high propensity for early and frequent central nervous system (CNS) involvement for which treatment can be challenging. Historical management has centered on surgery and radiation therapy (RT), which persist as mainstays of treatment for large, symptomatic lesions and widespread CNS disease. To date, sustained disease control remains elusive, and the role for effective systemic adjunctive therapies is clear. Here we discuss the epidemiology, genomics, pathophysiology, identification, and management of lung cancer brain metastases with a particular emphasis on systemic treatment of -positive disease according to the best available evidence.

Methods: Review of PubMed and Google Scholar databases as well as ClinicalTrials.gov provided background and seminal trials for the local and systemic management of rearranged lung cancer brain metastases.

Key Content And Findings: The development of effective, CNS-penetrant systemic agents-including alectinib, brigatinib, ceritinib, and lorlatinib-has dramatically changed the management and prevention of rearranged brain metastases. Most notably, there is a burgeoning role for upfront systemic therapy for both symptomatic and incidentally discovered lesions.

Conclusions: Novel targeted therapies offer patients a pathway to delay, obviate, or supplement traditional local therapies while minimizing neurologic sequelae of treatment and may reduce the risk of brain metastasis formation. However, the selection of patients to whom local and targeted treatments is offered is not trivial, and the risks and benefits of both must be weighed carefully. More work is needed to establish treatment regimens that yield durable intra- and extracranial disease control.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9989815PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/tlcr-22-638DOI Listing

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