Clinical, Radiological, and Surgical Features of Brain Metastases in Colorectal Cancer. A strong correlation between surgical patterns and outcome

Giuseppa Zancana, Daniele Armocida,Mattia Capobianco,Sergio Corvino,Fabio Cofano,Diego Garbossa,Antonio Santoro, Alessandro Frati

World Neurosurgery(2024)

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Abstract
Background Brain metastases (BMs) from colorectal cancer (CRC) are a small percentage of metastatic patients and surgery is considered the best choice to improve survival. While most research has focused on the risk of CRC spreading to the brain, no studies have examined the characteristics of BMs in relation to surgery and outcome. In this study, we evaluate the clinical and radiological features of BMs from CRC patients who underwent surgery and analyze their outcomes. Methods The study is a retrospective observational analysis that included a cohort of 31 patients affected by CRC surgically-treated for their related BMs. For all patients clinical and surgical data (number, site, side, tumor and edema volume and morphology) were recorded. Results Analysis found that synchronous diagnosis and lesion morphology, particularly cystic versus solid, had the most significant impact on survival (6 versus 22 months, p=0.04). To compare BMs with cystic morphology to those with solid morphology, a multivariate analysis was conducted. No significant differences were observed between the two groups in terms of age, sex, clinical onset, or performance status. The analysis revealed no significant differences in localization with regard to site, tumor and edema volume, biology, or complications rate. Conclusion BMs derived from CRC have a significantly different prognosis depending on whether they present as a solid or cystic pattern. Although solid pattern is more common, cystic BMs in this tumor type are less frequent and are associated with a poorer prognosis, regardless of molecular expression, location, size and adjuvant treatment.
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Key words
Brain metastases,Colorectal cancer,Overall survival,Neuro-oncology,Neurosurgery
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