Object: The purpose of this paper was to describe the clinical outcome in patients with brain metastases who underwent gamma knife radiosurgery (GKS).
Methods: The authors retrospectively reviewed the clinical courses of 54 patients with brain metastases who underwent 62 GKS procedures. This series covered a 43-month period. A total of 174 lesions were treated: 38 patients harbored solitary whereas 24 patients harbored multiple metastases. The authors assessed outcome by examining local disease control, survival, and quality of life. The overall local control rate was 85%; the mean time to failure of local control was 10.5 months; and median survival was 8.4 months. Median survival, evaluated by the log-rank test, was greater among patients with a single metastasis (p = 0.043), breast cancer (p = 0.021), and those who had undergone multiple GKS procedures for local failure (p = 0.009). The initial Karnofsky Performance Scale (KPS) score and whole-brain radiotherapy were not significantly related to median survival. The KPS scores tended to remain stable through the follow-up period. There were no morbidities or deaths attributable to the procedure.
Conclusions: Results in this series suggest that GKS can be an effective tool for the control of brain metastases. A prospective investigation should be performed to validate trends seen in this retrospective study.