Stereotactic radiosurgery for brain metastases: multistate and competing risk models of progression and survival from a single-centre 11-year experience.

Stereotactic radiosurgery for brain metastases: multistate and competing risk models of progression and survival from a single-centre 11-year experience.

Publication date: Feb 05, 2026

The diagnosis of brain metastases has risen due to advances in systemic treatments prolonging survival and the use of MRI. Whilst surgical resection remains a valuable mean of acutely alleviating raised intracranial pressure, reducing seizure risk, and preventing progression of neurological deficit, stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) delivers radiotherapy to precise target volumes, including the treatment of a larger number of metastases with high rates of local control, whilst avoiding the neurological complications of WBRT or the need for invasive resection. The aim of this study was to evaluate the 11-year experience of SRS at the Leeds Gamma Knife Centre, examining patient outcomes, and the association of patient-dependent factors and intracranial disease burden to survival. A retrospective cohort study of 1,031 patients (2,836 metastases) treated with SRS at the Leeds Gamma Knife Centre between 2010 and 2020. Data included primary tumour, Karnofsky performance status, intracranial disease burden, and prior/subsequent treatment. Follow-up was at least 30 months. Kaplan-Meier analysis was used for 10-year survival curves. Multistate and competing risks models assessed progression/death predictors. Lung (50. 4%), breast (15. 4%) and melanoma (9. 9%) were the most common primary tumour. 364 (35. 3%) patients had recurrence, and 875 (84. 5%) died by the end of follow-up. Survival outcomes were worse in men compared to women in both lung (p = 0. 003) and other (p = 0. 02) metastases. Breast cancer patients spent the most time in the no progression state (rmean = 1. 56 years) whereas gastrointestinal primary spent the least (rmean = 0. 99 years). Each additional metastatic lesion at the time of treatment increased the risk of progression by 9. 2% (p 

Open Access PDF

Concepts Keywords
Leeds Brain metastases
Mri Gamma Knife
Radiotherapy SRS
Valuable Stereotactic radiosurgery

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH brain metastases
disease MESH seizure
disease MESH SRS
disease MESH metastases
disease MESH included
disease MESH death
disease MESH melanoma
pathway KEGG Melanoma
disease MESH recurrence
disease MESH Breast cancer
pathway KEGG Breast cancer
pathway REACTOME Reproduction

Original Article

(Visited 6 times, 1 visits today)

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *