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Surgical advances in the management of brain metastases

Patrick R. Ng, Bryan D. Choi, Manish K. Aghi, Brian V. Nahed

2021Neuro-Oncology Advances19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

As the epidemiological and clinical burden of brain metastases continues to grow, advances in neurosurgical care are imperative. From standard magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) sequences to functional neuroimaging, preoperative workups for metastatic disease allow high-resolution detection of lesions and at-risk structures, facilitating safe and effective surgical planning. Minimally invasive neurosurgical approaches, including keyhole craniotomies and tubular retractors, optimize the preservation of normal parenchyma without compromising extent of resection. Supramarginal surgery has pushed the boundaries of achieving complete removal of metastases without recurrence, especially in eloquent regions when paired with intraoperative neuromonitoring. Brachytherapy has highlighted the potential of locally delivering therapeutic agents to the resection cavity with high rates of local control. Neuronavigation has become a cornerstone of operative workflow, while intraoperative ultrasound (iUS) and intraoperative brain mapping generate real-time renderings of the brain unaffected by brain shift. Endoscopes, exoscopes, and fluorescent-guided surgery enable increasingly high-definition visualizations of metastatic lesions that were previously difficult to achieve. Pushed forward by these multidisciplinary innovations, neurosurgery has never been a safer, more effective treatment for patients with brain metastases.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineNeuronavigationNeurosurgeryIntraoperative MRIMagnetic resonance imagingRadiologyRadiosurgerySurgeryInterventional magnetic resonance imagingRadiation therapyBrain Metastases and TreatmentGlioma Diagnosis and TreatmentMeningioma and schwannoma management
Surgical advances in the management of brain metastases | Litcius