AI Article Synopsis

  • Stroke is a significant risk for brain tumor patients, particularly those receiving radiotherapy, but this study reveals that radiotherapy does not increase stroke-related deaths.
  • The analysis of 85,284 patients showed a low overall 5-year stroke-specific mortality rate, with patients receiving no treatment having the highest rates shortly after diagnosis, while those treated with radiotherapy had lower rates and delayed stroke deaths.
  • Findings suggest that although there is a slight risk for stroke mortality, it peaks around 3.5-4 years post-diagnosis in patients receiving radiotherapy, indicating the treatment's relative safety regarding stroke-related complications.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Stroke is an established complication in cancer patients, amongst whom brain tumour patients have the highest risk of fatal stroke. Radiotherapy is an important treatment for brain tumours and is associated with increased risk of cerebrovascular disease. However, the impact of brain irradiation on stroke-related deaths in brain tumour patients is unknown, and the timing of any effect uncertain. This study investigates the relationship between radiotherapy and stroke-specific mortality (SSM) in patients with primary brain tumours.

Methods: Patients of any age diagnosed with histologically confirmed primary brain tumours between 1992 and 2015 were abstracted from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database. Primary outcome was impact of radiotherapy on 5-year SSM. Cumulative SSM rates under competing risk assumptions were estimated and stratified by intervention type. Time-dependent hazard ratios were estimated to identify when the radiotherapy impact was greatest.

Results: 85,284 patients with primary brain tumour diagnoses were analysed. Overall, the 5-year cumulative SSM rate was low (0.6%) with the highest rate (0.76%) in patients receiving no treatment, in whom it mainly occurred < 1 month after diagnosis. SSM rates were lower in patients treated with radiotherapy alone (0.27%) or radiotherapy plus surgery (0.24%); stroke-related deaths also occurred later in these groups. While these patterns were observed in both glioblastoma and non-glioblastoma patients, stroke deaths tended to occur later in non-glioblastoma patients receiving radiotherapy. Relative to the 'no treatment' group, the highest risk of stroke mortality in radiotherapy treated patients occurred 3.5-4 years after diagnosis.

Conclusion: The risk of SSM is low in patients with primary brain tumours and is not increased by radiotherapy. Two different patterns were observed: acute stroke mortality in patients receiving no treatment, and delayed stroke mortality in patients receiving radiotherapy (+/- surgery) with the latter peaking 3.5-4 years after diagnosis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10368762PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ctro.2023.100658DOI Listing

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