Erschienen in:
01.07.2013 | Original Article
Clinical features and outcome of leptomeningeal metastasis in patients with breast cancer: a single center experience
verfasst von:
Jae-Cheol Jo, Myoung Joo Kang, Jeong Eun Kim, Jin-Hee Ahn, Kyung Hae Jung, Gyungyub Gong, Hak Hee Kim, Seung Do Ahn, Su Ssan Kim, Byung Ho Son, Sei Hyun Ahn, Sung-Bae Kim
Erschienen in:
Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology
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Ausgabe 1/2013
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Abstract
Background
Leptomeningeal metastasis (LM) is one of the major problems in the management of metastatic breast cancer; typically, LM has a devastating prognosis and often represents a terminal event. The present study analyzed the clinical features and outcome of LM in patients with breast cancer.
Methods
The medical records of patients diagnosed with LM from breast cancer at Asan Medical Center, between 2002 and 2012, were reviewed retrospectively.
Results
Of 95 LM patients, 38 (40 %) had an ECOG performance status (PS) ≤ 2, and the median age was 47 years (range 26–72 years). At the time of LM diagnosis, 46 patients (48.4 %) presented with coincidental failure of systemic disease control. Seventy-eight patients (82.1 %) underwent intrathecal (IT) chemotherapy, resulting in cytologic negative conversion in 26 patients, and 46 patients (48.4 %) received systemic chemotherapy. The median overall survival (OS) time was 3.3 months, and 7.8 % of the patients survived for more than 1 year. OS tended to be higher in patients who achieved cytologic negative conversion from IT chemotherapy than in those who did not (4.5 vs. 2.4 months, P = 0.088). Multivariate analysis demonstrated that ECOG PS ≤ 2, controlled extracranial disease at the time of LM diagnosis, and systemic chemotherapy after LM diagnosis were independent factors associated with survival.
Conclusions
The prognosis of patients with LM from breast cancer is poor. Systemic chemotherapy, in addition to intrathecal chemotherapy, might confer a survival benefit, even after the detection of LM.