Brain Metastatic NSCLC: Targeted Therapy Approach

Video

Transcript:

Naiyer Rizvi, MD: Tim, you know brain metastases are certainly very common in these patients. ALK-fusion patients especially tend to have a higher incidence of these brain metastases. Do you screen them often? Do you manage them with SRS [stereotactic radiosurgery] gamma knife? What’s your approach for the brain metastases in these targeted-therapy patients?

Tim Kruser, MD: There was some concern with the first generation and some earlier reports that the discordant responses warranted earlier brain-directed radiotherapy. We’ve become far more comfortable with osimertinib and erlotinib and such, doing surveillance. I often see these people at 1 month just to make sure they are responding, and then backing off to q3 [every 3 months] to q6 [every 6 months] MRI [magnetic resonance imaging] scans and hopefully instituting radiosurgery if they start to have localized progression. I would put a plug in as well for the recent hippocampal avoidance study that came out, which is making whole-brain radiation—although we are still loath to use it early—a more tolerable approach if we have to use it for diffuse progression at a later time.

Naiyer Rizvi, MD: For most of these patients, for whom the EGFR and ALK therapies have such good brain penetration, do you tend to just observe them initially?

Tim Kruser, MD: Yeah, the scenario that comes in is someone presents with symptomatic or larger, bulkier lesions, and you’re waiting for the targeted therapy. They’re a nonsmoker, and you’re not sure if you should institute radiation and wait and hope, so that can be a challenging clinical scenario. It’s not as challenging if it’s a radiosurgery option because you’re not as concerned about long-term toxicity. But if it’s burden of disease, that’s either whole-brain radiation or nothing. And you hope you can wait and use a targeted molecular therapy.

Transcript Edited for Clarity

Related Videos
Ashish Saxena, MD, PhD
Eric Vallieres, MD, FRCSC
Benjamin Levy, MD
Sangeeta Goswami, MD, PhD, of The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
Pasi A. Jänne, MD, PhD, discusses an exploratory analysis from the FLAURA2 trial of osimertinib plus chemotherapy in treatment-naive, EGFR-mutant NSCLC.