Αρχειοθήκη ιστολογίου

Πέμπτη 7 Δεκεμβρίου 2017

Treating patients with brain metastases has evolved: scalp-sparing, hippocampal avoidance whole brain radiotherapy with simultaneous integrated boost

Description

A 43-year-old male with a history of receiving treatment for squamous cell carcinoma (SqCC) of lung 2 years back presented with a complaint of a single episode of self-resolving generalised tonic–clonic seizure 1 day prior. General physical and neurological examinations were unremarkable. An MRI of the brain revealed a well-defined, enhancing, space-occupying lesion (SOL) in the right temporal lobe (figure 1). He was started on oral dexamethasone, oral phenytoin (after an intravenous loading dose) and underwent a whole body 18flourodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography CT (18FDG PET-CT), which revealed increased FDG uptake in the SOL without evidence of metastatic disease elsewhere (figure 1). A diagnosis of oligometastatic SqCC lung (cTx, cNx and cM1b) was made, and the options for management were discussed with the patient.

Figure 1

Pretreatment MRI and positron emission tomography   CT (PET-CT) images. (A) T1-weighted contrast-enhanced axial image reveals a well-defined space occupying lesion in...



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