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Possible Abscopal Effect Observed In Frontal Meningioma After Localized Imrt On Posterior Meningioma Resection Cavity Without Adjuvant Immunotherapy

Golub, D. 2019Brain tumor

Golub, D., Kwan, K., Knisely, J. P. S., & Schulder, M. (2019). Possible Abscopal Effect Observed in Frontal Meningioma After Localized IMRT on Posterior Meningioma Resection Cavity Without Adjuvant Immunotherapy. Frontiers in oncology, 9, 1109. https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2019.01109

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Abstract

Background: Localized radiation therapy (RT) is known to infrequently cause off-target or "abscopal" effects at distant metastatic lesions. The mechanism through which abscopal effects occur remains unknown, but is thought to be caused by a humoral immune response to tumor-specific antigens generated by RT. Combination treatment regimens involving RT and immunotherapy to boost the humoral immune response have demonstrated synergistic effects in promoting and accelerating abscopal effects in metastatic cancer. Nevertheless, abscopal effects, particularly after RT alone, remain exceedingly rare. Case Presentation: We report the case of an 84-year-old man with an atypical meningioma, who demonstrated a radiographically significant response to an untreated second intracranial lesion, likely also a meningioma, after intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) to a separate, detatched resection cavity. Serial annual MRI imaging starting at 2- to 3.5-year (most recent) post-IMRT follow-up demonstrated a persistent decrease in both tumor size and surrounding edema in the untreated second lesion, suggestive of a possible abscopal effect. Conclusions: We describe here the first report of a potential abscopal effect in meningioma, summarize the limited literature on the topic of abscopal effects in cancer, and detail the existing hypothesis on how this phenomenon may occur and possibly relate to the development of future treatments for patients with metastatic disease.

Case Details

Disease Location

Brain

Personal Characteristics

84-year-old male

Clinical Characteristics

Presented to the emergency room after progressively worsening gait instability resulted in a fall. Head CT revealed dural-based parasagittal left parietal and right frontal lesions with scattered calcifications. MRI showed the extra-axial lesions to be contrast-enhancing and most consistent with meningioma. The patient initially responded to a short trial of corticosteroids. One year later, he re-presented with acutely worsened altered mental status, right-sided hemiparesis and sensory loss. MRI showed significantly increased vasogenic edema surrounding the left parietal lesion (now measuring 4.1 × 5.3 × 6.7 cm) with resultant mass effect, midline shift (increased to 1.2 cm from 0.6 cm previously), effacement of the left lateral and third ventricles causing new obstructive hydrocephalus, and effacement of the ambient cistern denoting uncal herniation. The patient was admitted for urgent craniotomy aimed at subtotal tumor resection. A near-complete resection of the left parasagittal lesion was achieved. Surgical pathology was consistent with an “atypical,” WHO grade ii meningioma. Six weeks after surgery, the patient was started on a fractionated course of intensity-modulated radiation therapy (imrt) to the left parasagittal post-operative bed. He received a total targeted dose of 54gy in 30 fractions over 6 weeks.

Remission Characteristics

At 2-year follow-up, the left parietal lesion had mildly decreased in size (2.9 × 2.4 × 1.4cm) and at 2.5-year follow-up, both the left parietal (2.6 × 2.3 × 1.4cm) and the untreated right frontal (3.5 × 3.1 × 2.6cm) lesions were measurably smaller.

Treatment & Mechanisms

Proposed Remission Mechanisms

Systemic immune response (abscopal effect)

Clinical Treatment

Corticosteroids intensity-modulated radiation therapy (imrt) (54gy in 30 fractions over 6 weeks)

Non-Clinical Treatment

None reported