Clinical course of asymptomatic small enhancing brain nodules in patients with nonsmall cell lung cancer: do we have to follow them up?

Author:

Lee Hyun WooORCID,Cho Jaeyoung,Kwak Nakwon,Hwang Inpyeong,Park Young Sik,Lee Chang-Hoon,Lee Sang-Min,Yoo Chul-Gyu,Kim Young Whan,Choi Sun MiORCID

Abstract

AimsBrain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is recommended during the initial work-up for nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Although small enhancing brain nodules not radiologically confirmed as metastatic lesions have often been detected, their clinical course has not been well studied.MethodsThis nested case–control study included NSCLC patients who had small enhancing brain nodules detected by serial brain MRIs from January 2014 through December 2018 at a tertiary university hospital. Small enhancing brain nodules were defined as round enhancing nodules of ≤10 mm diameter without oedema in thin-section (1 mm) contrast MRIs. The incidence, natural course and risk factors of growing nodules were evaluated.ResultsA total of 171 small enhancing brain nodules in 123 patients were observed over an average of 22.1 months. The incidence of nodule growth was 49.1% with mean growth rate of 11 mm·year−1. We found that 25.0% of the growing nodules contributed to clinical upstaging compared to the initial stage. Cerebral events were more common in growing nodules; therefore, local therapy was performed more often. However, there was no difference in the cerebral event-related mortality. Nodule growth was more frequent in younger individuals, multiple nodules, advanced disease, poorly differentiated carcinoma, rim enhancement and larger initial size. In multivariable analysis, predictors of growth were N stage ≥1, existence of epidermal growth factor receptor mutation and larger initial size.ConclusionConsidering the clinical course of small enhancing brain nodules, more intensive evaluation is required for early detection and pre-emptive intervention when accompanied by risk factors.

Publisher

European Respiratory Society (ERS)

Subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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