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Metastatic disease

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With few exceptions, all malignancies can metastasise ... Dosimetry difficult to establish. Risk of hepato-pulmonary shunting. Bone metastases ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Metastatic disease


1
Metastatic disease
  • Dr Andrew Potter
  • Registrar, Department of Radiation Oncology
  • Royal Adelaide Hospital

2
Metastases
  • Tumour implants discontinuous with the primary
    tumour
  • Always marks a tumour as malignant
  • Benign neoplasms never, ever, ever, ever, ever,
    ever metastasise

3
Metastases
  • With few exceptions, all malignancies can
    metastasise
  • Metasases from gliomas and basal cell carcinomas
    of the skin are rare.

4
Metastases
  • 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)
6
The basement membrane
  • Squamous cell carcinoma in situ
  • Invasive squamous cell carcinoma

7
Metastatic cascade
8
Mechanisms of spread
  • Direct extension
  • Lymphatic spread
  • Haematogenous spread

9
Direct 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

10
Omental cake
11
Lymphatic 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

12
Pelvic lymphangiogram
13
Lymphovascular invasion
14
Skip 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

15
Sentinel 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

16
Lymphoscintigram
Injection site
Sentinel node
17
Regional 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

18
Haematogenous 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

19
Haematogenous spread
  • Tumours arising in close proximity to vertebral
    column often metastasise via paravertebral venous
    plexus
  • Frequent vertebral metastases from thyroid and
    prostate carcinomas

20
Aims 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 ?

21
Brain 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

22
Brain 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

23
Brain metastases
  • Median time from diagnosis to identification of
    brain metastases is 12 months
  • 2-3 years for melanoma, breast, renal cell,
    gynaecological cancers

24
Brain 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

25
Brain 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

26
Brain 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

27
Brain metastases - imaging
  • Well circumscribed
  • Often at grey-white matter interface
  • Do not infiltrate surrounding tissue
  • vasogenic oedema

28
Brain 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

29
Brain 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

30
Brain 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

31
Brain 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

32
Brain 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

33
Lung 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

34
Lung 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

35
Lung metastases - imaging
  • CXR
  • Often first indicator of lung metastases
  • Lung nodules
  • cannonball lesions
  • Segmental collapse
  • Mediastinal/hilar nodal disease
  • Pleural effusion

36
Lung 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

37
Lung 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

38
Lung 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

39
Lung 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

40
Lung 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

41
Survival following metastatectomy
42
Lung metastases - other management
  • Fibre-optic bronchoscopy and laser resection of
    endobronchial lesions
  • EBRT for durability
  • Endobronchial stenting
  • Endobronchial brachytherapy

43
Liver 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

44
Liver metastases - presentation
  • May be asymptomatic
  • Deranged liver function tests
  • Incidental finding on imaging
  • Jaundice
  • Right upper quadrant pain
  • Nausea and vomiting

45
Liver metastases - imaging
  • Ultrasound
  • Inexpensive
  • Simple
  • Accessible
  • Safe - no radiation

46
Liver 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

47
Liver metastases - imaging
  • PET
  • Useful in distinguishing malignant vs
    non-malignant lesions
  • Identifies or excludes further metastases in 20
    of patients following conventional staging
    investigations

48
Liver 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

49
Liver 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

50
Liver 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

51
Liver 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

52
Bone 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

53
Bone metastases - presentation
  • Pain
  • Hypercalcaemia
  • bones, stones, groans and moans
  • Pathological fractures
  • Spinal instability
  • Spinal cord compression

54
Bone 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

55
Bone 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

56
Bone metastases - imaging
  • CT
  • Not routine
  • Useful in determining extent of cortical
    destruction
  • Can identify a target for biopsy if primary
    unknown

57
Bone metastases - imaging
  • MRI
  • Not routine
  • Gold standard for assessing spinal cord
    compression
  • Clearly distinguished between normal and
    metastatic marrow

58
Bone 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

59
Bone 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

60
Bone 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

61
Bone 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

62
Bone 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

63
Lymph 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

64
Summary
  • Definition
  • Mechanisms
  • Direct extension
  • Lymphatic spread
  • Haematogenous spread
  • Metastatic cascade

65
Summary
  • Specific sites
  • Brain
  • Lung
  • Liver
  • Bone
  • Nodes
  • Treatment modalities
  • Medical - chemotherapy/hormones/immuno/other
  • Surgical
  • Radiotherapy
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