Medical oncology
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Metastatic cancer to the brain has a poor prognosis. The focus of this work was to determine the incidence of long-term (> or = 2y) survival for patients with brain metastases from different primary cancers and to identify prognostic variables associated with prolonged survival. A retrospective review of 740 patients with brain metastases treated over a 20 y period identified 51 that survived 2 or more years from the time of diagnosis of the brain metastasis. ⋯ Multiple bilateral metastases was a poor prognostic indicator (P= 0.001). Multivariate analysis showed younger age (P< 0.05), single metastasis (P < 0.0001), surgical resection (P < 0.0001), whole brain radiation therapy (P < 0.0001), and chemotherapy (P = 0.0288) were associated with prolonged survival. 29 patients (57%) died of systemic disease progression, 9 (18%) died of central nervous system progression, and the cause of death was unknown in 3 (6%). Patients with a single non-SCLC, breast, melanoma, renal cell, and ovarian carcinoma brain metastasis have the best chance for long-term survival if treated with surgical resection and WBRT.