Page 34 - WNS 2022 Program Book-Final version
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Variable Practice Patterns and Seizure Outcomes In the Radiosurgical
             Treatment of Brain Metastases
             Won Kim, MD. UCLA Department of Neurosurgery
             Co-author:  Michelle  Shizu  Miller  MD,  Donatello  Telesca  PhD,  Stephen  Tenn
             PhD, John Hegde MD, Tania Kaprealian MD.
             Introduction: Stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) has become the mainstay of brain
             metastases  (BM)  treatment.  Seizures  are  a  common  presenting  symptom  of
             BMs, affecting 15-20% of newly diagnosed patients. However, variable practice
             patterns in the initiation and tapering of antiepileptic medications (AEDs) makes
             it difficult to determine true seizure risk following SRS. We performed a retro-
             spective analysis of our BM patients to delineate our post-SRS seizure rate and
             practice pattern variability when it comes to the management of these patients.
             Methods: We  performed  a  retrospective  analysis  of  patients  receiving  SRS  at
             UCLA from 2013-2020 and identified 444 patients. Patients without 90-day fol-
             low-up, supratentorial brain metastases, or SRS as part of their treatment plan
             were  excluded.  Our  cohort  included  288  patients,  of  which  155  had  sufficient
             planning target volume (PTV) to perform additional analyses on the relationship
             between overall tumor volume and seizure risk.
             Results: Of the 288 patients included in our overall cohort, 34 (11.8%) experi-
             enced  a seizure  prior to SRS.  Of  the  254  patients  that  did  not  have  seizures
             prior  to  SRS,  26  (10.2%)  had  seizures  within  the  90  days  post  treatment,  of
             whom 13 (50%) were on prophylactic AEDs. 13/140 (9.3%) seizure / AED naïve
             patients  experienced  seizures  within  90  days  post-treatment.  Of  the  228  pa-
             tients (89.8%) that did not have seizures in the 90 days following radiosurgery,
             28  (12.3%)  were  maintained  on  AED  treatment  without  ever  experiencing  a
             seizure.  PTV  data  was  available  in  155  patients.  PTV  was  a  significant  inde-
             pendent factor on regression analyses for likelihood of seizures (OR 1.619, SE
             0.191, p < 0.012) independent of treatment type.
             Conclusion: Our radiosurgery experience demonstrates considerable heteroge-
             neity in the practice patterns of AED prescription in patients undergoing treat-
             ment with brain metastases. PTV was an independent factor of seizures follow-
             ing radiosurgery and may guide the use of prophylactic AEDs.


























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