• Journal of neurosurgery · Feb 2024

    Genomic alterations associated with postoperative nodular leptomeningeal disease after resection of brain metastases.

    • Ramin A Morshed, Daniel D Cummins, Minh P Nguyen, Satvir Saggi, Harish N Vasudevan, Steve E Braunstein, Ezequiel Goldschmidt, Edward F Chang, Michael W McDermott, Mitchel S Berger, Philip V Theodosopoulos, Mariza Daras, Shawn L Hervey-Jumper, and Manish K Aghi.
    • Departments of1Neurological Surgery and.
    • J. Neurosurg. 2024 Feb 1; 140 (2): 328337328-337.

    ObjectiveThe relationship between brain metastasis resection and risk of nodular leptomeningeal disease (nLMD) is unclear. This study examined genomic alterations found in brain metastases with the aim of identifying alterations associated with postoperative nLMD in the context of clinical and treatment factors.MethodsA retrospective, single-center study was conducted on patients who underwent resection of brain metastases between 2014 and 2022 and had clinical and genomic data available. Postoperative nLMD was the primary endpoint of interest. Targeted next-generation sequencing of > 500 oncogenes was performed in brain metastases. Cox proportional hazards analyses were performed to identify clinical features and genomic alterations associated with nLMD.ResultsThe cohort comprised 101 patients with tumors originating from multiple cancer types. There were 15 patients with nLMD (14.9% of the cohort) with a median time from surgery to nLMD diagnosis of 8.2 months. Two supervised machine learning algorithms consistently identified CDKN2A/B codeletion and ERBB2 amplification as the top predictors associated with postoperative nLMD across all cancer types. In a multivariate Cox proportional hazards analysis including clinical factors and genomic alterations observed in the cohort, tumor volume (× 10 cm3; HR 1.2, 95% CI 1.01-1.5; p = 0.04), CDKN2A/B codeletion (HR 5.3, 95% CI 1.7-16.9; p = 0.004), and ERBB2 amplification (HR 3.9, 95% CI 1.1-14.4; p = 0.04) were associated with a decreased time to postoperative nLMD.ConclusionsIn addition to increased resected tumor volume, ERBB2 amplification and CDKN2A/B deletion were independently associated with an increased risk of postoperative nLMD across multiple cancer types. Additional work is needed to determine if targeted therapy decreases this risk in the postoperative setting.

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