Title: Metastatic disease
1Metastatic disease
- Dr Andrew Potter
- Registrar, Department of Radiation Oncology
- Royal Adelaide Hospital
2Metastases
- Tumour implants discontinuous with the primary
tumour - Always marks a tumour as malignant
- Benign neoplasms never, ever, ever, ever, ever,
ever metastasise
3Metastases
- With few exceptions, all malignancies can
metastasise - Metasases from gliomas and basal cell carcinomas
of the skin are rare.
4Metastases
- 30 of all newly-diagnosed solid cancers present
with metastases - Excluding skin cancers other than melanoma
- Metastatic disease strongly reduces the chance of
cure - Preventing distant spread is a great challenge in
cancer research and treatment
5(No Transcript)
6The basement membrane
- Squamous cell carcinoma in situ
- Invasive squamous cell carcinoma
7Metastatic cascade
8Mechanisms of spread
- Direct extension
- Lymphatic spread
- Haematogenous spread
9Direct extension
- Seeding of body cavities or surfaces may occur
when a tumour penetrates into a natural open
field - Most commonly involves peritoneal cavity
- Any space may be involved
- Eg. Pleural, pericardial, subarachnoid spaces
- Characteristic of ovarian cancers
- Widespread peritoneal seeding
- Appendiceal carcinomas (rare)
- Fills peritoneum with pseudomyxoma peritonei
10Omental cake
11Lymphatic spread
- Most common pathway for spread for carcinomas
- No functional lymphatics within tumours - rely on
adjacent lymphatic channels - Pattern of lymph node involvement follows natural
routes of lymphatic drainage
12Pelvic lymphangiogram
13Lymphovascular invasion
14Skip metastases
- Numerous venous-lymphatic anastomoses or
- Where inflammation (or RT) has obliterated
lymphatics - Occasionally local lymph nodes are bypassed but
disease appears in distant nodes
15Sentinel nodes
- The first node in a regional lymphatic basin that
receives lymph flow from a primary tumour - Sentinel nodes identified by injection of dyes
and/or radiolabelled tracers - Identified nodes can then be biopsied to help
predict likelihood of further lymphatic spread - Important technique in breast and colon cancers,
melanoma and some other situations
16Lymphoscintigram
Injection site
Sentinel node
17Regional lymph nodes
- Regional nodes may be effective barriers to
further dissemination (or at least for a time) - Cells arrested within nodes may be destroyed by
immunological responses - This may also result in localised hyperplasia
(enlargement) - Enlarged nodes are not necessarily indicative of
disseminated disease
18Haematogenous spread
- Typical of sarcomas, also seen in carcinomas
- Veins are thin-walled vessels and more easily
invaded than arteries - Pulmonary tumours have ready access to arterial
vessels - Blood-borne tumour cells follow normal patterns
of venous drainage from the primary site - Liver and lungs most commonly involved
- All portal (GIT) blood drains via liver, all
caval blood flows to lungs
19Haematogenous spread
- Tumours arising in close proximity to vertebral
column often metastasise via paravertebral venous
plexus - Frequent vertebral metastases from thyroid and
prostate carcinomas
20Aims of management
- Treat local symptoms
- Delay progression of systemic disease in patients
who are otherwise well - Disease-free survival
- Progression-free survival
- Overall survival
- Cure ?
21Brain metastases
- Common, far outnumbering primary brain tumours
- Up to 15 of cancer patients have brain
metastases, up to 55 for melanoma - Exact incidence unknown but probably increasing
- Better cancer treatment longer survival
- Earlier brain screening
- Modern imaging
22Brain metastases - incidence
- Varies according to primary site
- Lung - 18-64
- Breast - 2-21
- Colo-rectal - 2-12
- Melanoma - 4-16
- Renal - 1-8
- Thyroid - 1-10
- Prostate, skin, oropharyngeal - rarely
- Overall incidence 6-24
23Brain metastases
- Median time from diagnosis to identification of
brain metastases is 12 months - 2-3 years for melanoma, breast, renal cell,
gynaecological cancers
24Brain metastases
- Access to brain is governed by blood-brain-barrier
- Brain mets may occur in several positions
- Meninges/leptomeninges
- Brain parenchyma (more common)
- 80 in cerebrum, mostly in grey-white matter
interface - 15 in cerebellum
- 5 in brainstem
- Result of haematogenous spread
- Median survival 1-2 months if untreated
25Brain metastases - presentation
- Headache - 24-53
- Focal weakness - 16-40
- Altered mental state - 24-31
- Seizures - 15-16
- Ataxia - 9-20
- Asymptomatic in up to 10
- Onset of symptoms days to weeks
26Brain metastases - diagnosis
- History and clinical examination
- CT the mainstay of imaging
- MRI
- Important if thought to have single metastasis
- More sensitive in distinguishing metastases from
other lesions
27Brain metastases - imaging
- Well circumscribed
- Often at grey-white matter interface
- Do not infiltrate surrounding tissue
- vasogenic oedema
28Brain metastases - treatment
- Steroids
- Reduce peritumoural oedema
- Dexamethasone 16mg/day, tapering downwards based
on clinical response - Anti-seizure medications
- Used for patients presenting with or developing
seizures during treatment - Generally not started prophylactically
29Brain metastases - surgery
- Diagnostic craniotomy and biopsy can be useful if
initial presentation with brain mets and no
tissue diagnosis - Improves local control and survival (assuming low
volume of extra-cranial disease) compared to WBRT
alone - Relieves mass effect
- Lesion(s) must be resectable
- Patient must be fit for surgery
30Brain metastases - SRS
- Smaller metastases, up to 4cm
- High dose, small volume, single fraction
- Useful for small number of mets
- SRS vs surgery?
- Current trial at RAH for solitary brain mets
31Brain metastases - WBRT
- Mainstay of treatment
- Simple, quick, effective
- Symptomatic improvement in 60
- Median survival 3-6 months
- Dose and fractionation based on local and
systemic disease load and patient factors - 10Gy single fraction or 12Gy in 2
- 20Gy in 5 or 30Gy in 10
- Consider boosting?
- Adjuvant WBRT after surgery or SRS
32Brain metastases - chemotherapy
- Many agents do not cross the blood-brain barrier
- ? BBB compromised by tumour vessels
- Indications for chemotherapy
- Salvage after failing surgery RT
- Chemosensitive primary tumour
- Systemic metastases requiring chemotherapy
- Intrathecal chemotherapy for leptomeningeal
disease
33Lung metastases
- Second most common site of metastases
- Solitary site of metastases in up to 20 of
cancer patients - Common site of failure in sarcomas (30-80)
- Median survival 12 months if unresected
- Lung metastases uncommonly seen in isolation for
carcinomas - Uncommonly occur as solitary lesions
- i.e. always look for more than one lung met
34Lung metastases - presentation
- Often asymptomatic
- Incidental finding on CXR or CT chest
- Airway compression/obstruction
- Dyspnoea
- Cough
- Haemoptysis
- Stridor
- Atelectasis/collapse
- Post-obstructive pneumonia
- Pain
- Invasion into pleura or chest wall
35Lung metastases - imaging
- CXR
- Often first indicator of lung metastases
- Lung nodules
- cannonball lesions
- Segmental collapse
- Mediastinal/hilar nodal disease
- Pleural effusion
36Lung metastases - imaging
- CT
- Most effective imaging technique
- Shows nodules lt5mm
- Rounded, well circumscribed lesions
- Nodal or parenchymal
- Can be difficult to distinguish from primary lung
cancer
37Lung metastases - imaging
- PET
- Metastases often FDG-avid
- Useful in distinguishing tumour from other
lesions, esp where CT inconclusive - Important when deciding on radical vs palliative
primary treatment
38Lung metastases - chemotherapy
- Preferential treatment for chemosensitive
tumours, and for primaries that metastasise
elsewhere - Variety of agents
- Traditional cytotoxics
- Hormonal manipulation - eg. tamoxifen
- Molecular therapies - eg. Herceptin
39Lung metastases - radiotherapy
- Whole lung RT for micrometastases
- Significant risks - radiation pneumonitis
- No proven benefit
- Focal RT to symptomatic lesions
- May be used to control local symptoms
- Airway compression/obstruction, haemoptysis, pain
40Lung metastases - surgery
- Indications
- Metastatic disease limited to lung
- Primary neoplasm is definitively controlled
- Patient fit for lung resection
- Prognostic factors
- Age
- Disease-free interval
- Histology and grade of primary tumour
- Number of metastases resected
41Survival following metastatectomy
42Lung metastases - other management
- Fibre-optic bronchoscopy and laser resection of
endobronchial lesions - EBRT for durability
- Endobronchial stenting
- Endobronchial brachytherapy
43Liver metastases
- Common site of haematogenous metastases from GIT
because of portal venous drainage - Other primaries to metastasise to liver include
- Breast
- Lung (small cell and non-small cell)
- Melanoma
- Neuroendocrine tumours
- Prognosis generally poor, even with aggressive
therapy
44Liver metastases - presentation
- May be asymptomatic
- Deranged liver function tests
- Incidental finding on imaging
- Jaundice
- Right upper quadrant pain
- Nausea and vomiting
45Liver metastases - imaging
- Ultrasound
- Inexpensive
- Simple
- Accessible
- Safe - no radiation
46Liver metastases - imaging
- CT
- Most commonly used modality
- Overall detection rate for liver mets from
colo-rectal cancers around 85 - Rounded hypodense or enhancing lesions
- Small lesions may be difficult to characterise
47Liver metastases - imaging
- PET
- Useful in distinguishing malignant vs
non-malignant lesions - Identifies or excludes further metastases in 20
of patients following conventional staging
investigations
48Liver metastases - surgery
- Well established benefit of resection in
colo-rectal and neuroendocrine tumours - Overall 5-year survival after liver resection for
colo-rectal metastases 26-40 - 5-year O/S variable for other histologies
- 20 for breast
- 70 for neuro-endocrine
49Liver metastases - chemotherapy
- Systemic chemotherapy/hormonal therapy
- Variable, depending on histology
- Intra-hepatic arterial chemotherapy
- Injection of chemotherapy agents into hepatic
artery - focally high dose of drug, especially if
highly extracted by liver
50Liver metastases - radiotherapy
- EBRT
- Uncommon procedure
- Temporary palliation of pain
- Especially capsule pain caused by expansion of
liver and capsular stretch - Dexamethasone cover
- Doses variable
- Eg. 10Gy in 2
51Liver metastases - radiotherapy
- Yttrium-90 spheres
- Small spheres of radioactive yttrium-90 injected
into hepatic artery - Typical activity 2-3GBq
- Physical half-life 2.7 days
- ? emitter up to 2.3 MeV energy
- Effective path length 5mm
- Dosimetry difficult to establish
- Risk of hepato-pulmonary shunting
52Bone metastases
- Cause of significant morbidity in cancer patients
- Most commonly breast (65-75) and prostate (70)
primaries - Lung, thyroid, renal carcinoma 30-40
- Most common metastatic site is the spine
- Important quality of life issue
- Mean survival variable
- 3 months with lung cancer
- 19 months with thyroid and breast cancer
53Bone metastases - presentation
- Pain
- Hypercalcaemia
- bones, stones, groans and moans
- Pathological fractures
- Spinal instability
- Spinal cord compression
54Bone metastases - imaging
- Plain X-rays
- Inexpensive, simple
- Useful in establishing bone integrity
- ?need for surgical fixation
- Lytic lesions
- Breast, lung, renal, thyroid
- Sclerotic lesions
- Prostate, sometimes breast
55Bone metastases - imaging
- Bone scintigraphy (bone scan)
- 99mTc
- 72-84 sensitive for occult bone metastases
- May not show lytic lesions well
- Useful for RT planning to correlate with
structural (simulation) imaging
56Bone metastases - imaging
- CT
- Not routine
- Useful in determining extent of cortical
destruction - Can identify a target for biopsy if primary
unknown
57Bone metastases - imaging
- MRI
- Not routine
- Gold standard for assessing spinal cord
compression - Clearly distinguished between normal and
metastatic marrow
58Bone metastases - chemotherapy
- Cytotoxics and immunotherapies
- Agent(s) and response dependent on primary
histology - Overall response around 20-30
- Hormonal therapies
- 30-65 response for receptor-positive breast
cancers - Up to 80 response for prostate cancers
59Bone metastases - bisphosphonates
- Pyrophosphate analogues
- Bind to bone and inhibit osteoclastic bone
resorption - Effective in preventing skeletal events (eg.
Fractures) in osteolytic metastases (such as
breast cancer) - Effective in treating hypercalcaemia of malignancy
60Bone metastases - surgery
- Indications
- Spinal cord compression
- Surgical decompression followed by RT
- Lytic lesions with significant cortical
destruction (especially load-bearing long bones) - Prophylactic internal fixation followed by RT
- Pathological fracture treatment, eg. fractured
neck of femur
61Bone metastases - radiotherapy
- EBRT
- Mainstay of palliative treatment
- Provides some degree of pain relief in up to
80-90 of cases, and total relief in 50-85
(where disease is localised) - Good evidence that single fractions (8Gy) are as
effective for bone pain as fractionated treatment
(20Gy in 5 or 30Gy in 10) - Fractionated course may be superior where there
is significant neuropathic pain or soft tissue
component
62Bone metastases - radiotherapy
- Unsealed radionuclides
- Strontium-89, samarium-153
- Low-energy ? emitters injected intravenously
- Attached to bone-seeking carriers, incorporated
into metabolically active (osteoblastic) bone
metastases - Results in localised irradiation and pain relief
- Indicated in widespread bony metastases from
prostate or breast cancers - Contra-indicated in incontinence, short life
expectancy (lt6 months), poorly compliant patients - Improvement in pain in up to 80 of cases at 6
months
63Lymph node metastases
- Usually considered in primary management
- Also a common site for disease recurrence
- Lymphatic spread
- Role for surgical excision if localised
recurrence - eg. recurrent melanoma, SCC head and neck
- Improves local control (and in some cases
survival) - Chemotherapy and radiotherapy may offer effective
palliation if symptomatic
64Summary
- Definition
- Mechanisms
- Direct extension
- Lymphatic spread
- Haematogenous spread
- Metastatic cascade
65Summary
- Specific sites
- Brain
- Lung
- Liver
- Bone
- Nodes
- Treatment modalities
- Medical - chemotherapy/hormones/immuno/other
- Surgical
- Radiotherapy