The Effectiveness of Bevacizumab in Radionecrosis After Radiosurgery of a Single Brain Metastasis

Rare Tumors. 2015 Dec 29;7(4):6018. doi: 10.4081/rt.2015.6018.

Abstract

Radionecrosis (RN) of brain tissue is a serious late complication of brain irradiation and historically has been treated with corticos-teroid therapy and alternatively surgical decompression. Recently, bevacizumab has been suggested for treatment of cerebral radiation necrosis. We present a case of a 73-years-old women affected by a primary non-small cell lung cancer with a single brain metastasis treated with radiosurgery. Two years after radiosurgery the patient referred neurological symptoms and a brain magnetic resonance confirmed the presence of RN. The patient refused surgical decompression so underwent at the treatment with bevacizumab 7.5 mg/kg/2 weeks for a total of 4 cycles. After two months of treatment the patient reported strumental and clinical improvement. Ten months after bevacizumab discontinuation the patient experienced a recurrence of RN with evident clinical manifestation and confirmed by radiological imaging. A new treatment with bevacizumab was not performed due to the systemic progression disease and the worsening of clinical status. Despite limited to only one clinical case, our study suggests the efficacy of bevacizumab to treat RN. Future studies are needed to confirm its mechanism and to properly define the optimal scheduling, dosage and duration of therapy.

Keywords: Bevacizumab; radionecrosis; stereotactic radiotherapy.

Publication types

  • Case Reports