
Management of Cerebral Metastases: The Role of Surgery
Frederick F. Lang, MD, David M. Wildrick, PhD, and Raymond Sawaya, MD
In appropriate circumstances, surgical resection may be used to
treat both single and multiple brain metastases.
Background: Metastatic brain tumors represent the most common neurological
complication in patients with systemic cancer. They are predominantly cerebrally
located and constitute a significant source of morbidity and mortality. The overall
incidence of brain metastases exceeds that of all other intracranial tumors, and as
improved systemic cancer treatments have extended patients lives, this number is
rising.
Methods: The role of surgery in the management of cerebral metastases is
reviewed by considering patient selection criteria, surgical approaches to metastases,
intraoperative adjuncts, whole-brain irradiation as a postoperative adjuvant, resection of
multiple vs single metastases, and the relative roles of stereotactic radiosurgery and
conventional surgery.
Results: Surgical resection of single or multiple metastases can be
effective management for patients with otherwise good prognoses, providing all the known
metastases can be removed without producing significant neurologic deficit.
Radiosurgery, an alternate approach, can be used for smaller or inaccessible tumors.
Conclusions: The presence of multiple brain metastases does not
automatically contraindicate surgery because in properly selected patients, resection of
multiple metastases can extend survival and enhance the quality of life. An
awareness of how the modalities of open craniotomy, whole-brain radiotherapy, and
stereotactic radiosurgery best complement each other will result in the best outcomes.
Introduction
In patients with systemic cancer, brain metastases constitute a
significant source of morbidity and mortality as first reported by Bucholz in 1898.1
Cerebral metastases are by far the most common intracranial tumors in adults, and their
overall incidence is increasing as systemic cancer therapies have improved and thus have
extended patients lives.2 Of the many primary cancers able to metastasize
to the brain, carcinomas of the lung and breast, melanoma, renal cell carcinoma, and colon
cancers are the predominant brain metastasis types seen clinically, whereas those from
sarcomas and primary carcinomas of the prostate, ovary, and bladder are infrequently
observed.3
In the modern era, metastatic brain tumors are treated with
high-dose corticosteroids, whole-brain radiotherapy, stereotactic radiosurgery, and open
craniotomy. These modalities are most effectively employed when medical oncologists,
radiation oncologists, and neurosurgeons are involved equally in clinical decision making.
Candidates for surgery are selected according to the clinical status of the patient, the
number and location of the brain lesions, and the histology of the primary cancer. The
goals of surgical resection are to obtain a histologic diagnosis, to relieve symptoms, and
to provide local cure through gross total resection.
Surgical Resection of Single Cerebral Metastases
Background
Two independent randomized prospective clinical trials in the
early 1990s4,5 showed that surgical resection of single brain metastases
followed by radiation therapy was superior to radiotherapy alone in the treatment of
patients with single brain metastases. Specifically, patients with single metastases,
Karnofsky scores of 70 and above, and limited systemic disease who underwent surgery lived
significantly longer, had fewer recurrences, and had a better quality of life than
patients receiving only radiotherapy. Though the role of stereotactic radiosurgery needs
to be more precisely defined, surgery is generally accepted as the preferred method for
treating single brain metastases.
Patient Selection
When choosing patients with single metastases for surgery,
consideration must be given to the clinical status of the patient, the surgical
accessibility of the tumor, and the histology of the primary cancer. A risk-benefit
analysis is formulated from these factors for each patient.
Clinical Determinants: The most important factor influencing
survival in a patient undergoing resection of single brain metastases is the status of his
or her primary cancer.6,7 As many as 70% of patients undergoing surgery for
removal of single brain metastases die of progression of the primary disease rather than
neurological causes.5 Consequently, patients with "absent,"
"controlled," or "limited" primary cancer are expected to survive
longer than patients with "uncontrolled" primary disease or with
"progressive" widespread end-stage disease. Patients should undergo a thorough
preoperative staging workup including computed tomography of the chest, abdomen, and
pelvis, as well as a bone scan and appropriate laboratory tests for tumor markers, if
indicated. From these data, the clinician can determine the expected survival in relation
to the extent of noncerebral (systemic) disease. At The University of Texas M.D. Anderson
Cancer Center, patients who are expected to survive longer than four months are usually
considered to be candidates for surgical resection of a single brain metastasis.
The patients neurological status is also an important clinical
parameter that influences surgical decision making. Shorter postoperative survival is
typical of patients with severe neurological deficits relative to patients with minimal
deficits.6,7 Patients with Karnofsky scores of > or = 70
(independent despite deficits) are usually the best surgical candidates. However, the mere
presence of neurological dysfunction does not preclude a surgical option because surgery
often radically improves function by relieving pressure on neurons surrounding the tumor
and reducing intracranial pressure. Response to preoperative corticosteroid administration
can be used to assess a patients potential for postoperative neurological recovery.
There is a higher chance of postsurgical recovery for patients whose neurological
functions improve after receiving preoperative corticosteroids.
Other clinical factors associated with decreased survival include
increasing age, male gender, and infratentorial tumor location.8 Survival is
also related to the interval between the diagnosis of the primary tumor and the appearance
of the brain metastasis. Patients who present with a cerebral metastasis one or more years
after their primary cancer is diagnosed survive significantly longer than those in whom
the metastasis was detected within one year after diagnosis of the primary cancer.6
Surgical Accessibility: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
studies are assessed to determine whether a metastasis can be removed with limited
morbidity, ie, whether it is resectable (Fig 1). The essential features are whether the
tumor is deep or superficial and whether it is within or outside functionally critical
areas of the brain (often referred to as "eloquent" areas) such as the motor
cortex, Brocas speech area, or the brainstem. At present, tumors previously
considered unresectable have been rendered resectable by modern surgical techniques such
as microneurosurgery, computer-guided stereotaxy, complex skull base exposures, and
intraoperative functional mapping (Figs 1 and 2). Nevertheless, lesions that are deep and
within eloquent areas are associated with higher surgical morbidity than those within
superficial and noneloquent areas. One must consider the potential morbidity associated
with surgical removal in relation to the potentially limited survival of patients with
systemic cancer. Patients with metastases in the brainstem, thal-amus, and basal ganglia
are generally rejected from consideration as surgical candidates.

Histological Factors: The radiosensitivity and
chemosensitivity of the primary tumor should be considered before proceeding with surgery.9
Metastases from primary cancers of certain histologic types such as small-cell lung
cancer, lymphoma, and germ-cell tumors are especially sensitive to radiation and/or
chemotherapy and are likely to respond better to these modalities than to surgery.
Conversely, melanoma, renal cell carcinoma, and most sarcomas are essentially resistant to
radiation therapy and are better treated surgically. Finally, for brain metastases from
non-small-cell lung cancer and breast cancer, which have an intermediate sensitivity to
radiation therapy, surgery should be employed as one aspect of a multidisciplinary
treatment plan.
Surgical Approaches and Intraoperative Adjuncts
At present, cerebral metastases can be removed successfully and
safely due to a better current understanding of the surgical anatomy related to brain
metastases and due to advances in microsurgical techniques along with improvements in
intraoperative tumor localization and functional cortical mapping. These advancements have
reduced the operative mortality and morbidity for this procedure to less than 3% and 10%,
respectively.
Surgical Approaches: The least traumatic approach to a
cerebral metastasis is determined by the macroscopic location of the tumor, which is
usually defined surgically relative to the sulci and gyri adjacent to it.10-12
Thus, an incision at the apex of the sulcus can be used for resection of subcortical
lesions (transcortical approach), whereas lesions in subsulcal or subgyral locations are
best approached by splitting the sulcus leading to the lesion. For metastases located at
the midline, the optimal approach is to split the interhemispheric fissure. The best
approach to cerebellar tumors is along the shortest transparenchymal route to the lesion.
Intraoperative Adjuncts: Safe resection of cerebral
metastases depends on accurately localizing the lesion and avoiding eloquent brain tissue.
Several new technologies have improved the surgeons ability to locate a tumor,
differentiate it from surrounding structures, and safely resect it, even when it is small
or deeply located.8
Intraoperative ultrasound permits visualization of tumors below the
surface of the brain. Most metastatic tumors are echogenic on ultrasound and can be
clearly delineated from surrounding nonechogenic edematous brain. Ultrasound also provides
information about the lesions relationship to adjacent sulci and to other anatomical
landmarks, such as the ventricles. Ultrasound has the advantage of imaging in "real
time" so that changes in the tumor and brain can be followed (on a television
monitor) as resection proceeds. Disadvantages of ultrasound include its inability to
visualize tumors that are not echogenic or to "see through" bone during
positioning of patients for craniotomies.
Computer-assisted, image-guided stereotaxis represents the most
advanced method of localizing and resecting metastases.10,13 With this system,
the surgeon uses preoperative imaging studies, often with three-dimensional
reconstructions of the operating region, to guide the approach and resection. In this
technique, the surgical site is matched to preoperative images from computed tomography
and/or MRI so that the surgeon can identify specific areas within the surgical field
corresponding to areas seen on the imaging studies. Computer-assisted, image-guided
craniotomy allows for smaller cranial and dural openings, minimal exposure of normal
brain, predetermined trajectories to deep lesions, and precise identification of the
border between the tumor and the surrounding edematous brain. It is more effective than
ultrasound because it allows the surgeon to "see through" the bone when planning
surgery. However, unlike ultrasound, it does not update the images in "real
time."
Neurological deficit often can be prevented by identifying eloquent
brain prior to resection. Intraoperative functional mapping of motor and sensory cortices
can be performed by eliciting somatosensory evoked potentials and recording the phase
reversal between grid electrodes placed on the cortical surface.14 After
exposure of the cortical surface, a strip electrode is placed on the surface of the brain
perpendicular to the long axis of the motor and sensory cortices. Stimulation of the
median nerve results in recordable cortical potentials via the strip electrodes.
Recordings from the motor cortex produce positive potentials, whereas simultaneous
recording from the sensory cortex results in negative potentials. Identification of the
electrodes in which this reversal of phase occurs defines the central sulcus. Proximity of
the lesion to the functionally identified motor gyrus can then be determined by visual
inspection (Fig 2).
Postoperative Adjuvant Whole-Brain Radiation Therapy
Postoperative whole-brain radiation therapy (WBRT) is often
routinely administered to patients after craniotomy for resection of a cerebral metastasis
in an attempt to destroy any residual cancer cells at the surgical site. However, as
patients survive longer, the deleterious effects of WBRT (dementia and other irreversible
neurotoxicities) become evident.15 This has raised the question as to whether
elective postoperative WBRT should be administered to all patients after resection of a
single brain metastasis. Several studies indicate that the risk:benefit ratio of
postoperative WBRT may deserve re-examination.16-18 Because the use of MRI has
improved our ability to verify the extent of tumor resection and to identify recurrences
before they become symptomatic, a more selective use of adjuvant WBRT may be possible. At
our center, we no longer routinely give WBRT after resection of solitary metastases
(although we do in the case of multiple metastases). Decisions are made based on the
completeness of resection, the radiosensitivity of the tumor, the extent of noncerebral
disease, and the patients potential for long-term survival.
Surgical Resection of Multiple Cerebral Metastases
Background
The presence of multiple brain metastases has traditionally been
considered a surgical contraindication, even when all the lesions were deemed surgically
resectable and when the patient had good neurological function with no evidence of other
systemic metastases.19-22 Nevertheless, in 1993, Bindal et al23
retrospectively analyzed the experience with 56 consecutive patients undergoing surgical
resection for multiple brain metastases between 1984 and 1992. These patients were divided
into group A (30 patients with multiple tumors who underwent resection of some but not all
the lesions) and group B (26 patients in whom all the lesions were resected). These
two groups were compared with 26 matched controls who had single brain metastases that
were completely resected (group C). Most patients (52%) in groups A and B had two lesions
removed, and the largest number of lesions removed from a single patient was three (five
patients). There were no differences among the three groups with respect to patient age
distribution, man:woman ratio, type of primary tumor, median time to metastasis, Karnofsky
score, or percentage having systemic cancer.
Bindal et al23 found a significantly longer survival
(median = 14 months) for patients in whom all metastases were completely resected (group
B) than for patients with multiple metastases in whom at least one lesion was left
unresected (group A; median = 6 months; P=0.003). In fact, the survival of patients
in group B was similar to the survival (median = 14 months) of patients with resected
single metastases (group C). This analysis demonstrated that removing multiple metastatic
lesions is as effective as resecting single metastases, provided all lesions are removed.
Patient Selection
Patients with multiple brain metastases are selected as surgical
candidates according to criteria that are similar to those for patients with single brain
metastases. For each patient, the clinical features (general medical condition, extent of
systemic disease, level of neurological function), the resectability of each lesion, and
the sensitivity of the primary tumor to radiation or chemotherapy are carefully weighed.
As in the case of single brain metastases, only patients with absent, limited, or
controlled systemic disease status are considered for surgery. Patients with multiple
brain metastases who have chemosensitive or radiosensitive primaries, such as small-cell
lung cancer, are treated with chemotherapy or radiotherapy in the same manner as patients
having single brain lesions. Surgical candidates with multiple cerebral metastases
typically should not have more than four lesions, all of which should be
resectable. Resection of only some lesions provides no survival advantage unless there is
considerable mass effect.
Whole-Brain Radiation Therapy After Resection of Multiple Metastases
WBRT is typically administered to all patients after resection of
multiple cerebral metastases, even when postoperative imaging studies show no evidence of
disease. Unlike the situation for patients with single brain metastases, there is a high
likelihood of microscopic residual disease at sites distant from the resected tumors in
cases of multiple brain metastases. The potential for distant cerebral recurrence
warrantsm treatment with WBRT, despite the potential risk of radiation-induced injury.
Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Brain Metastases
Background
Stereotactic radiosurgery employs multiple small, well-collimated
beams of ionizing radiation from a linear accelerator or gamma knife to eradicate
stereotactically located intracranial lesions. An advantage of this method over
conventional surgery is that it can safely treat metastases that are surgically
inaccessible such as those that are unreachable without violating eloquent brain. The
technique is also minimally invasive as it requires only the placement of a stereotactic
headframe while the patient is under local anesthesia. The radiation dose is delivered as
a single fraction, resulting in shorter hospital stays.
Nevertheless, radiosurgery is suited only for small lesions,
typically with a diameter of less than 3 cm (volume 3).24,25 Other problems
arise due to the fact that the effect of radiosurgery is not immediate; thus, neurological
deficits and mass effects of the tumor are not relieved immediately as in conventional
surgery, thereby necessitating longer treatmen with high cortico-steroid doses. Another
shortcoming is that radiosurgery is unable to provide histologic verification that a
cerebral lesion is truly a metastasis (the same imaging features are seen for abscesses
and primary brain tumors). Indeed, 5% to 11% of patients with systemic cancer have been
observed to possess a brain lesion that is either an abscess or a primary tumor rather
than a metastasis.5,26
Radiosurgery vs Conventional Surgery
Largely due to the ease of performing radiosurgery and the
perception that its cost is lower, some have suggested that it should replace conventional
surgery for all small metastases (<3 cm). This is currently one of the most
controversial issues in the management of single brain metastases, but to date, no
prospective randomized trial has compared the effectiveness of surgery relative to
radiosurgery for treating brain metastases. There are, however, two studies that have
attempted to retrospectively compare these modalities.27,28 At present,
these reports represent the best estimates of the relative efficacy of each modality, but
they do not resolve the controversy because their conclusions are exactly opposite.
Auchter et al27 compared a group treated for single
metastases by radiosurgery (n = 122) who were also deemed eligible for surgery to an
historical control group of patients who had undergone surgery followed by WBRT at other
hospitals. They obtained an actuarial median survival of 56 weeks for those who had
radiosurgery compared with 43 weeks for patients undergoing conventional surgery. Thus,
they concluded that radiosurgery plus WBRT was at least as effective as, if not better
than, surgery plus WBRT, and they favored the use of radiosurgery rather than surgery for
single brain metastases.
At our center, we also reported a retrospective comparison of
radiosurgery and conventional surgery.28 This analysis used matched patients,
thereby avoiding historical controls, and yielded a median survival of 7.5 months for the
radiosurgical group and 16.4 months for the surgical group, a difference that was
significant by both multivariate (P=.0009) and univariate (P=.0041)
analyses. In contrast to Auchter et al,27 this study showed that surgery was
superior to radiosurgery. Consequently, our preference is to perform surgery rather than
radiosurgery for lesions that are surgically accessible and to reserve radiosurgery for
inaccessible tumors or for patients whose advanced systemic disease or other medical
conditions remove them from consideration as surgical candidates.
Until prospective, randomized trials are performed to assess the
effectiveness of stereotactic radiosurgery relative to conventional surgery for cerebral
metastases, it is probably better to view these two treatment modalities as complimentary
rather than competing therapies. Radiosurgery has a unique potential for treatment of
small, deep lesions with minimal morbidity that is quite distinct from surgerys
ability to rapidly reverse neurological deficit from larger symptomatic lesions. This
point has become especially clear during the treatment of patients with multiple brain
metastases, for whom we often combine surgery with radiosurgery. Specifically, large
metastases are surgically resected, and small inaccessible lesions are treated with
radiosurgery.
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From the Department of Neurosurgery, The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer
Center, Houston, Texas.
Address reprint requests to Raymond Sawaya, MD, Department of
Neurosurgery, Box 064, The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, 1515 Holcombe
Blvd, Houston, TX 77030.
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