Brain Metastases in Havana Cancer Patients

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION

Cancer is a major public health problem worldwide and in Cuba. Approximately one third of cancer patients develop a brain metastasis. Despite this, epidemiological studies are scarce, internationally and in Cuba; published research is mainly limited to autopsy studies and hospital case series.

OBJECTIVE

Characterize patients with brain metastases residing in Habana del Este Municipality, Havana, Cuba, with respect to demographics, metastasis location and primary tumor site.

METHODS

A retrospective descriptive study was carried out with data for all patients with histologically confirmed cancer diagnosed in 2014 and registered in primary health care in Habana del Este Municipality. Diagnostic reports from computed tomography and/or magnetic resonance imaging were used to identify patients with brain metastases. Study variables were age, sex, skin color, number and location of brain metastases, control of primary tumor, and presence of extracranial metastases. Percentages were calculated and presented in tables.

RESULTS

We identified 832 cancer patients in the Habana del Este population of 181,473 (prevalence 458.5 per 100,000 population). Among patients with cancer, 27.6% (230/832) had brain tumors, among which 83% (191/230) were brain metastases and 17% (39/230) primary tumors, a ratio of 4.9:1. Brain metastases appeared in 23% (191/832) of cancer patients (prevalence 105.2 per 100,000 population). Among patients with brain metastases, 48.2% (92/191) were aged 41–60 years and 61.3% (117/191) were female sex. The majority, 59.7% (114/191) had multiple metastases. The most frequent primary tumor location was the breast (40.8%, 78/191), followed by the lung (31.9%; 61/191); 46.8% (211/451) of brain metastases were in the parietal lobe.

CONCLUSIONS

Brain metastases are more prevalent in this Cuban municipality than reported in other countries, but they constitute a higher proportion of cancer cases than seen in other population-based studies. The study’s results underline the importance of detecting brain metastasis early, to permit timely interventions to improve quality of life and survival.

CONTRIBUTION OF THIS RESEARCH

This is the first epidemiological study of brain metastases in Cuba and one of the few carried out internationally.

Cancer; neoplasm metastasis; tumor metastasis/brain; epidemiology; prevalence; Cuba

INTRODUCTION

Cancer is a major public health problem worldwide,[11 Horton S, Gauvreau CL. Cancer in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: An Economic Overview. In: Gelband H, Jha P, Sankaranarayanan R, Horton S, editors. Cancer: Disease Control Priorities. Vol 3. 3rd ed. Washington, D.C.: The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/The World Bank; 2015 Nov 1 [updated 2016 Jul 31; cited 2017 Feb 1]. Available from: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK343620/
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] with 17.5 million cases and 8.7 million deaths in 2015.[11 Horton S, Gauvreau CL. Cancer in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: An Economic Overview. In: Gelband H, Jha P, Sankaranarayanan R, Horton S, editors. Cancer: Disease Control Priorities. Vol 3. 3rd ed. Washington, D.C.: The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/The World Bank; 2015 Nov 1 [updated 2016 Jul 31; cited 2017 Feb 1]. Available from: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK343620/
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,22 GBD 2015 Mortality and Causes of Death Collaborators. Global, regional, and national life expectancy, all-cause mortality, and cause-specific mortality for 249 causes of death, 1980–2015: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2015. Lancet. 2016 Oct 8;388(10053):1459–544.] Approximately one third of cancer patients develop a brain metastasis (BM).[33 Grossman R, Mukherjee D, Chang DC, Purtell M, Lim M, Brem H, et al. Predictors of inpatient death and complications among postoperative elderly patients with metastatic brain tumors. Ann Surg Oncol. 2011 Feb;18(2):521–8.,44 Stanford J, Gardner S, Schwartz M, Davey P. Does the surgical resection of a brain metastasis alter the planning and subsequent local control achieved with radiosurgery prescribed for recurrence at the operated site? Br J Neurosurg. 2011 Aug;25(4):488–91.] BM is 10 times more frequent than primary brain cancers.[55 Tabouret E, Bauchet L, Carpentier AF. Brain metastases epidemiology and biology. Bull Cancer. 2013;100(1):57–62.] It is the most frequent tumor of the central nervous system (CNS) and has a very poor prognosis in most cases.[55 Tabouret E, Bauchet L, Carpentier AF. Brain metastases epidemiology and biology. Bull Cancer. 2013;100(1):57–62.,66 Nieder C, Spanne O, Mehta MP, Grosu AL, Geinitz H. Presentation, patterns of care and survival in patients with brain metastases: what has changed in the last 20 years? Cancer. 2011 Jun 1;117(11):2505–12.]

BM incidence has increased worldwide 2–5 times in the past 40 years, despite scientific and medical advances.[55 Tabouret E, Bauchet L, Carpentier AF. Brain metastases epidemiology and biology. Bull Cancer. 2013;100(1):57–62.] This increase can be explained by the following: increased cancer patient survival, which gives more time for metastases to appear;[77 Platta CS, Khuntia D, Mehta MP, Suh JH. Current treatment strategies for brain metastasis and complications from therapeutic techniques: a review of current literature. Am J Clin Oncol. 2010 Aug;33(4):398–407.,88 Niibe Y, Chang JY. Novel Insights of Oligometastases and Oligo-Recurrence and Review of the Literature. Pulmonary Med [Internet]. 2012 Jul [cited 2014 Dec 21];2012(Art 261096):1–5. Available from: http://www.hindawi.com/journals/pm/2012/261096/cta/
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] improvements in diagnostic imaging with the advent of computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), allowing identification of increasingly smaller metastases;[99 Kienast Y, von Baumgarten L, Fuhrmann M, Klinkert WE, Goldbrunner R, Herms J, et al. Real-time imaging reveals the single steps of brain metastasis formation. Nat Med. 2010 Jan;16(1):116–22.] increased lung cancer and melanoma incidence;[66 Nieder C, Spanne O, Mehta MP, Grosu AL, Geinitz H. Presentation, patterns of care and survival in patients with brain metastases: what has changed in the last 20 years? Cancer. 2011 Jun 1;117(11):2505–12.,1010 Davies MA, Liu P, McIntyre S, Kim KB, Papadopoulos N, Hwu WJ, et al. Prognostic factors for survival in melanoma patients with brain metastases. Cancer. 2011 Apr 15;117(8):1687–96.] general population aging; the fact that most systemic chemotherapeutic agents do not cross the blood–brain barrier; and finally, that some chemotherapeutics weaken this barrier, which facilitates entry of malignant cells into the CNS.[1010 Davies MA, Liu P, McIntyre S, Kim KB, Papadopoulos N, Hwu WJ, et al. Prognostic factors for survival in melanoma patients with brain metastases. Cancer. 2011 Apr 15;117(8):1687–96.]

According to official health statistics, cancer was the second cause of overall mortality in Cuba in 2016, with an incidence rate of 216.3 per 100,000 population,[1111 National Health Statistics and Medical Records Division (CU). Anuario Estadistico de Salud 2016 [Internet]. Havana: Ministry of Public Health (CU); 2017 [cited 2017 May 20]. 206 p. Available from: http://files.sld.cu/dne/files/2017/05/Anuario_Estad%C3%ADstico_de_Salud_e_2016_edici%C3%B3n_2017.pdf. Spanish.
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,1212 Ministry of Public Health (CU). Registro Nacional del Cancer [Internet]. Havana: National Medical Sciences Information Center (CU); c1999–2017 [updated 2016 Apr 2; cited 2017 May 2]. Available from: http://instituciones.sld.cu/sicc/registro-nacional-del-cancer/. Spanish.
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] thus a high burden of BM can be expected. Most Cuban research on the subject consists of autopsy studies and hospital case series, rather than population studies.[1313 Cruz Garcia O, Caballero Garcia J, Salas Rubio JH. Para cambiar la percepción ante las metastasis encefalicas en Cuba. Rev Cubana Neurol Neurocir. 2014;4(2):103–4. Spanish.1818 Lacerda Gallardo AJ, Borroto Pacheco R. Metastasis cerebral: estudio clinico-quirürgico y anatomopatológico. Rev Cubana Cir. 2000 Aug [cited 2015 Jan 22];39(2):103–7. Available from: http://neuroc99.sld.cu/text/metastasis.htm#up. Spanish.
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] The most extensive study was carried out in 2014,[1616 Chi Ramírez D, Forteza Saez M, Galan Alvarez Y, Chon Rivas I, Ortiz Reyes RM, Caballero Garcia J. Mortalidad por metastasis encefalica (La Habana, 2006–2008). Rev Cubana Neurol Neurocir. 2014 Jul–Dec;4(2):109–16. Spanish.] but only included patients admitted to selected hospitals, which did not permit determination of population prevalence or relative frequency of BM among cancers. After an exhaustive search of national publications in PubMed and SciELO databases, as well as Cuba’s National Cancer Registry,[1212 Ministry of Public Health (CU). Registro Nacional del Cancer [Internet]. Havana: National Medical Sciences Information Center (CU); c1999–2017 [updated 2016 Apr 2; cited 2017 May 2]. Available from: http://instituciones.sld.cu/sicc/registro-nacional-del-cancer/. Spanish.
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] using the search terms “brain metastasis/Cuba/epidemiology/incidence/prevalence,” five articles were identified, two autopsy studies[1414 Caballero Garcia J, Felipe Moran A, Toledo Valdés C, Pérez La O P, Morales Pérez I. Consideraciones anatomopatológicas y demográficas de la metastasis intracraneal. Rev Cubana Neurol Neurocir. 2012;2(1):23–7. Spanish.,1515 Caballero Garcia J, de Mendoza Amat JH, Cruz Garcia O, Montero Gonzalez TJ, Felipe Moran A. Caracteristicas de la metastasis intracraneal en 14 321 autopsias realizadas en el Hospital “Dr. Luis Diaz Soto”, La Habana (1962–2011). Rev Cubana Neurol Neurocir. 2013 Jul–Dec;3(2):132–8. Spanish.] and three hospital case series.[1616 Chi Ramírez D, Forteza Saez M, Galan Alvarez Y, Chon Rivas I, Ortiz Reyes RM, Caballero Garcia J. Mortalidad por metastasis encefalica (La Habana, 2006–2008). Rev Cubana Neurol Neurocir. 2014 Jul–Dec;4(2):109–16. Spanish.1818 Lacerda Gallardo AJ, Borroto Pacheco R. Metastasis cerebral: estudio clinico-quirürgico y anatomopatológico. Rev Cubana Cir. 2000 Aug [cited 2015 Jan 22];39(2):103–7. Available from: http://neuroc99.sld.cu/text/metastasis.htm#up. Spanish.
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] No population studies of BM were found.

Population studies only appear in the international literature, along with some mistakenly classified as such. For example, in 2002 an epidemiological study of BM based on hospital populations in Aragón and La Rioja, Spain, was published.[1919 Pascual Piazuelo MC, Bestué M, Serrano Ponz M, Montori-Lasilla M. Estudio epidemiológico de las metastasis cerebrales en Aragón y La Rioja. Rev Neurol. 2002 May 1–15;34(9):897–8.] On the other hand, true population studies are scarce, among them Barnholtz-Sloan’s 1973–2001 cohort study of 16,210 US cancer patients,[2020 Barnholtz-Sloan JS, Sloan AE, Davis FG, Vigneau FD, Lai P, Sawaya RE. Incidence proportions of brain metastases in patients diagnosed (1973 to 2001) in the Metropolitan Detroit Cancer Surveillance System. J Clin Oncol. 2004 Jul 15;22(14):2865–72.] and Schouten’s 1986–2005 cohort study in the Netherlands.[2121 Schouten LJ, Rutten J, Huveneers HA, Twijnstra A. Incidence of brain metastases in a cohort of patients with carcinoma of the breast, colon, kidney, and lung and melanoma. Cancer. 2002 May 15;94(10):2698–705.] These two studies constitute our main external referents.

Due to the paucity of epidemiological studies on the subject, our study aimed to characterize patients with brain metastases residing in Habana del Este Municipality, in Havana, Cuba, with respect to demographic indicators, metastasis location and primary tumor.

METHODS

Study type and population

A retrospective descriptive study was carried out based on data for patients residing in the municipality of Habana del Este in Havana, Cuba who were diagnosed with cancer in 2014. This municipality was selected to allow comparison with a previous study in the Luis Díaz Soto Hospital (serving a large part of the Municipality’s population), which gathered the largest series of autopsies in Cuba.[1515 Caballero Garcia J, de Mendoza Amat JH, Cruz Garcia O, Montero Gonzalez TJ, Felipe Moran A. Caracteristicas de la metastasis intracraneal en 14 321 autopsias realizadas en el Hospital “Dr. Luis Diaz Soto”, La Habana (1962–2011). Rev Cubana Neurol Neurocir. 2013 Jul–Dec;3(2):132–8. Spanish.] In Cuba’s National Health System (NHS), primary health care (PHC) is delivered in family-doctor-and-nurse offices (CMF), and multispecialty community polyclinics to which CMFs report.[2222 Sanchez Jacas I. La planeación estratégica en el Sistema Nacional de Salud cubano. MEDISAN. 2017 May;21(5):635–41. Spanish.] Habana del Este has 24 polyclinics and 192 CMFs. In Cuba, cancer patients receive special diets through PHC and are continuously linked with CMFs in office and home visits, even while being treated in secondary or tertiary care.

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Patients with histologically confirmed cancer diagnoses, treated at any level in the NHS were included. Patients with primary hematopoietic neoplasms (leukemias, lymphomas) were excluded, since in such cases, infiltration of the leptomeninges causes BMs with different biological and pathological characteristics.

Terminology

  • Patients with BM: those with imaging confirmation (CT or MRI)

  • Supratentorial: located above the cerebellar tentorium

  • Infratentorial: located below the tentorium

  • Cortico–subcortical: located in the cerebral cortex or immediately adjacent

  • Synchronous metastases: diagnosed at same time as primary tumor

  • Metachronous metastases: occurring months or years after pri-mary tumor diagnosis

Variables

  • Age in years at time of BM diagnosis, grouped as categorical variable: 20–40, 41–60, >60

  • Sex: male, female

  • Skin color: white, black, mestizo

  • Primary site: organ where primary tumor was located

  • BM location: frontal, parietal, temporal, occipital lobes; cerebel-lum; brainstem

  • Number of metastases: 1, 2–5, 6–10, >10

  • Control of primary tumor: controlled, uncontrolled (with residual lesions)

  • Extracranial metastases: present, absent

Data collection

Initially, we visited the municipal Office of Food Supply Control (OFICODA), which distributes cancer patients’ special diets, to obtain the number of patients receiving such diets, and the Municipal Health Department of Habana del Este, which maintains health statistics about its population. The number of patients with cancer was obtained from these sources, as well as data on demographics (age and sex), on diet requisitions, and the numbers of patient’s CMFs and community polyclinics.

Thus, we were able to contact the corresponding CMFs by phone to obtain the remaining information needed. When this was not possible, we visited patient residences personally or contacted them by telephone. Patients with a history of BM were visited at home and clinical histories were reviewed at the clinical–surgical hospitals or the research and care institutions where they were diagnosed and treated.

From these records, information was obtained on imaging studies (CT and/or simple or contrast cranial MRI). A data collection form was used (Appendix) and data were then transferred to a Microsoft Excel 2010 table.

Analysis

Cancer and BM prevalence was calculated as the number of patients diagnosed with each in 2014, over the population of Habana del Este Municipality obtained from the 2014 population and housing census (181,473), multiplied by 100,000. Relative frequency of BM for each site was calculated as the proportion of patients with BM among the total number of cancer patients for that site the same year. Data were organized in frequency distribution tables. Absolute and relative frequencies were used.

Ethics

Patients with BM received all the necessary information about the study before been asked to provide written consent to participate. The study protocol was approved by the Habana del Este Municipal Health Department’s Ethics Committee and authorization was obtained to access data from OFICODA. Data management procedures protected patient confidentiality.

RESULTS

There were 832 persons diagnosed with cancer in 2014, for a prevalence of 458.5 per 100,000 population; of these, 27.6% (230/832) had malignant brain neoplasms, 83% (191/230) of which were BMs and 17% (39/230) primary, a ratio of 4.9:1. Relative frequency of BMs among all cancer patients was 23% (191/832), for a prevalence of 105.2 per 100,000 population. Melanoma had the highest relative frequency of BM, 77.4% (Table 1).

Table 1
Relative frequency of brain metastases by primary site, Habana del Este, 2014

The largest age group among BM patients was aged 41–60 years (48.2%, 92/191); there were no patients aged <20 years with BM. Some 61.3% (117/191) of BM patients were female. Relative frequency was similar among white, black and mestizo patients (36.6%, 29.8% and 33.5%, respectively). Breast and lung were the primary sites in 72.8% of BM patients, breast being the most frequent site in women (66.7%, 78/117), and lung in men (50%, 37/74) (Table 2).

Table 2
Demographic characteristics of patients with brain metastases by primary site, Habana del Este, 2014

BMs from melanoma were more frequent in men than in women (28.4% vs. 2.6%). Of patients with other primary sites, two BMs originated in prostate adenocarcinoma and one in laryngeal adenocarcinoma. No association with primary site was found for age group and skin color (Table 2).

Almost half (46.8%) of all BMs were in the parietal lobe. All BMs secondary to kidney cancer were in the cerebellum, but there was no association between location and primary site (Table 3).

Table 3
Location of intracranial brain metastases by primary site, Habana del Este, 2014 (n = 451)a

In 59.6% of BM patients there were multiple lesions, the majority (91.6%) having <6. All BMs of colon, kidney and “other” sites were solitary (Table 4).

Table 4
Number of patients with brain metastases by primary site, 2014 (n = 191)

Residual lesions in the primary site were observed in 98 patients (51.3%), despite cancer treatment, while 87 (45.5%) had extracranial metastases.

DISCUSSION

True BM prevalence is difficult to determine in clinical and hospital series, since many metastases are not diagnosed during life and autopsy studies have selection biases; hospitalized patients are not necessarily representative of the population. Not all patients diagnosed with BM are admitted to a hospital or brought to autopsy.

That motivated our population-wide study, which is more reliable, has fewer biases and is more representative of the population. The data source, OFICODA, is highly reliable, because virtually all cancer patients receive the special diets it distributes. Data capture methods employed cannot guarantee 100% coverage or biasfree information, but data are more complete than would be obtained in hospital or autopsy-based studies. Furthermore, the retrospective design allowed us to obtain and process selected variable data in a relatively brief time.

The relative frequency of BM in cancer patients (23%) is in the range found by Grossman (10%–40%),[33 Grossman R, Mukherjee D, Chang DC, Purtell M, Lim M, Brem H, et al. Predictors of inpatient death and complications among postoperative elderly patients with metastatic brain tumors. Ann Surg Oncol. 2011 Feb;18(2):521–8.] but higher than in epidemiological studies by Barnholtz-Sloan and Schouten, in which prevalence for all primary sites combined was 9.6%[2020 Barnholtz-Sloan JS, Sloan AE, Davis FG, Vigneau FD, Lai P, Sawaya RE. Incidence proportions of brain metastases in patients diagnosed (1973 to 2001) in the Metropolitan Detroit Cancer Surveillance System. J Clin Oncol. 2004 Jul 15;22(14):2865–72.] and 8.5%,[2121 Schouten LJ, Rutten J, Huveneers HA, Twijnstra A. Incidence of brain metastases in a cohort of patients with carcinoma of the breast, colon, kidney, and lung and melanoma. Cancer. 2002 May 15;94(10):2698–705.] respectively. However, these two studies included only certain cancers (lung, breast, melanoma, colorectal and kidney). In most cancer patients, routine imaging studies are not performed, and many metastases may remain asymptomatic; therefore, theoretically the true prevalence of BM is greater than that found in epidemiological studies.

Of the two epidemiological studies we retrieved, Schouten did not examine skin color,[2121 Schouten LJ, Rutten J, Huveneers HA, Twijnstra A. Incidence of brain metastases in a cohort of patients with carcinoma of the breast, colon, kidney, and lung and melanoma. Cancer. 2002 May 15;94(10):2698–705.] while Barnholtz-Sloan observed significantly higher incidence proportions in African Americans compared with white patients for lung, melanoma and breast cancer; similar for colon cancer; and lower for renal cancer.[2020 Barnholtz-Sloan JS, Sloan AE, Davis FG, Vigneau FD, Lai P, Sawaya RE. Incidence proportions of brain metastases in patients diagnosed (1973 to 2001) in the Metropolitan Detroit Cancer Surveillance System. J Clin Oncol. 2004 Jul 15;22(14):2865–72.] We were unable to stratify all cancer patients by skin color and calculate comparative BM risk from relative frequency, which excludes any reliable inference about an association between skin color and BM risk. However, skin color distribution in BM cases is not suggestive of an association.

BM constitutes a high proportion of CNS neoplasms in autopsy studies, surpassing primary brain neoplasms by 10:1,[55 Tabouret E, Bauchet L, Carpentier AF. Brain metastases epidemiology and biology. Bull Cancer. 2013;100(1):57–62.,66 Nieder C, Spanne O, Mehta MP, Grosu AL, Geinitz H. Presentation, patterns of care and survival in patients with brain metastases: what has changed in the last 20 years? Cancer. 2011 Jun 1;117(11):2505–12.] double what we observed. This could be explained by differences, discussed earlier, between population studies and hospital case series and autopsy studies. In Cuba (as elsewhere), underdiagnosis or underregistration of metastases may reduce numbers seen in population studies, while autopsy studies may be able to detect even micrometastases.

BM patients are usually older, with peak incidence between ages 50 and 60 years,[55 Tabouret E, Bauchet L, Carpentier AF. Brain metastases epidemiology and biology. Bull Cancer. 2013;100(1):57–62.] in keeping with the higher frequency of cancer in these age groups. Thus, the predominance of age >40 years in our study is not surprising.

BM incidence tends to be similar for men and women, with slight predominance in men, (except for breast cancer, which is very rare in men).[66 Nieder C, Spanne O, Mehta MP, Grosu AL, Geinitz H. Presentation, patterns of care and survival in patients with brain metastases: what has changed in the last 20 years? Cancer. 2011 Jun 1;117(11):2505–12.] The predominance of women in the BM group we studied reflects the high numbers of breast cancers and small numbers of cancers that are more frequent in men, such as prostate and colon cancers.

Some neoplasms tend to develop brain metastases more than others. The “seed and soil” hypothesis describes one possible biological mechanism, that some neoplasms tend to develop metastases in certain target organs through molecular mediators and membrane receptors.[2323 Jackson JE, Burmeister BH, Burmeister EA, Foote MC, Thomas JM, Meakin JA, et al. Melanoma brain metastases: the impact of nodal disease. Clin Exp Metastasis. 2014 Jan;31(1):81–5. 24 Hauswald H, Dittmar JO, Habermehl D, Rieken S, Sterzing F, Debus J, et al. Efficacy and toxicity of whole brain radiotherapy in patients with multiple cerebral metastases from malignant melanoma. Radiat Oncol. 2012 Aug 2;7:130.2626 Kondziolka D, Kalkanis SN, Mehta MP, Ahluwalia M, Loeffler JS. It is time to reevaluate the management of patients with brain metastases. Neurosurgery. 2014 Jul;75(1):1–9.] Testicular cancer, melanoma, lung cancer and renal cell carcinoma display the greatest propensity for BM, in order of frequency.[1515 Caballero Garcia J, de Mendoza Amat JH, Cruz Garcia O, Montero Gonzalez TJ, Felipe Moran A. Caracteristicas de la metastasis intracraneal en 14 321 autopsias realizadas en el Hospital “Dr. Luis Diaz Soto”, La Habana (1962–2011). Rev Cubana Neurol Neurocir. 2013 Jul–Dec;3(2):132–8. Spanish.] On the other hand, other lesions such as prostate and stomach cancer rarely metastasize to the brain.[1414 Caballero Garcia J, Felipe Moran A, Toledo Valdés C, Pérez La O P, Morales Pérez I. Consideraciones anatomopatológicas y demográficas de la metastasis intracraneal. Rev Cubana Neurol Neurocir. 2012;2(1):23–7. Spanish.,1515 Caballero Garcia J, de Mendoza Amat JH, Cruz Garcia O, Montero Gonzalez TJ, Felipe Moran A. Caracteristicas de la metastasis intracraneal en 14 321 autopsias realizadas en el Hospital “Dr. Luis Diaz Soto”, La Habana (1962–2011). Rev Cubana Neurol Neurocir. 2013 Jul–Dec;3(2):132–8. Spanish.] The high relative frequency of BM we observed for melanoma is consistent with reports from other authors.[2020 Barnholtz-Sloan JS, Sloan AE, Davis FG, Vigneau FD, Lai P, Sawaya RE. Incidence proportions of brain metastases in patients diagnosed (1973 to 2001) in the Metropolitan Detroit Cancer Surveillance System. J Clin Oncol. 2004 Jul 15;22(14):2865–72.,2121 Schouten LJ, Rutten J, Huveneers HA, Twijnstra A. Incidence of brain metastases in a cohort of patients with carcinoma of the breast, colon, kidney, and lung and melanoma. Cancer. 2002 May 15;94(10):2698–705.]

The lung is the most common primary site for BM in most hospital and pathology series[1414 Caballero Garcia J, Felipe Moran A, Toledo Valdés C, Pérez La O P, Morales Pérez I. Consideraciones anatomopatológicas y demográficas de la metastasis intracraneal. Rev Cubana Neurol Neurocir. 2012;2(1):23–7. Spanish.,1515 Caballero Garcia J, de Mendoza Amat JH, Cruz Garcia O, Montero Gonzalez TJ, Felipe Moran A. Caracteristicas de la metastasis intracraneal en 14 321 autopsias realizadas en el Hospital “Dr. Luis Diaz Soto”, La Habana (1962–2011). Rev Cubana Neurol Neurocir. 2013 Jul–Dec;3(2):132–8. Spanish.,1717 Caballero Garcia J, Cruz Garcia O, Morales Pérez I, Pérez La O P, Hernandez Diaz Z, Salazar Rodriguez S. Caracteristicas clinicas y de neuroimagen de las metastasis cerebrales. Rev Cubana Neurol Neurocir. 2015 Jan–Jun;5(1):5–12. Spanish.] and in epidemiological studies.[2020 Barnholtz-Sloan JS, Sloan AE, Davis FG, Vigneau FD, Lai P, Sawaya RE. Incidence proportions of brain metastases in patients diagnosed (1973 to 2001) in the Metropolitan Detroit Cancer Surveillance System. J Clin Oncol. 2004 Jul 15;22(14):2865–72.,2121 Schouten LJ, Rutten J, Huveneers HA, Twijnstra A. Incidence of brain metastases in a cohort of patients with carcinoma of the breast, colon, kidney, and lung and melanoma. Cancer. 2002 May 15;94(10):2698–705.] This is reflective of its higher incidence as primary tumor as well as its propensity to metastasize. In two autopsy studies of Cuban adults, the most frequent origins of BM were lung cancer (50%–60%), breast cancer (15%–20%), skin cancer (5%–10%) and cancers of the GI tract (4%–6%).[1414 Caballero Garcia J, Felipe Moran A, Toledo Valdés C, Pérez La O P, Morales Pérez I. Consideraciones anatomopatológicas y demográficas de la metastasis intracraneal. Rev Cubana Neurol Neurocir. 2012;2(1):23–7. Spanish.,1515 Caballero Garcia J, de Mendoza Amat JH, Cruz Garcia O, Montero Gonzalez TJ, Felipe Moran A. Caracteristicas de la metastasis intracraneal en 14 321 autopsias realizadas en el Hospital “Dr. Luis Diaz Soto”, La Habana (1962–2011). Rev Cubana Neurol Neurocir. 2013 Jul–Dec;3(2):132–8. Spanish.]

However, in our study, breast was the predominant site for BM, followed closely by lung cancer. This phenomenon could be explained by the high proportion of breast cancer patients with BM found in the study population, perhaps related to the current low survival of patients with lung cancer compared with those of breast cancer, who experience longer survival thanks to advances in early diagnosis and current therapies that increase time available for metastasis to occur.[2626 Kondziolka D, Kalkanis SN, Mehta MP, Ahluwalia M, Loeffler JS. It is time to reevaluate the management of patients with brain metastases. Neurosurgery. 2014 Jul;75(1):1–9.,2727 Dziggel L, Segedin B, Podvrsnik NH, Oblak I, Schild SE, Rades D. A survival score for patients with brain metastases from less radiosensitive tumors treated with whole-brain radiotherapy alone. Strahlentherap und Onkolog. 2014 Jan;190(1):54–8.] Interestingly, there were only 3 more cases of lung cancer than there were of breast cancer in our series; in 2013, there were 5722 new cases of lung cancer and <4000 new cases of breast cancer in Cuba.[1111 National Health Statistics and Medical Records Division (CU). Anuario Estadistico de Salud 2016 [Internet]. Havana: Ministry of Public Health (CU); 2017 [cited 2017 May 20]. 206 p. Available from: http://files.sld.cu/dne/files/2017/05/Anuario_Estad%C3%ADstico_de_Salud_e_2016_edici%C3%B3n_2017.pdf. Spanish.
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] This difference could also reflect lower lung cancer survival, since our series examined prevalent cases.

Our findings regarding BM location are consistent with observations elsewhere that most BMs are supratentorial. Between 60% and 80% of intracranial metastases are supratentorial, with 20%–40% infratentorial (15% cerebellum and 5% brainstem).[66 Nieder C, Spanne O, Mehta MP, Grosu AL, Geinitz H. Presentation, patterns of care and survival in patients with brain metastases: what has changed in the last 20 years? Cancer. 2011 Jun 1;117(11):2505–12.] Cortico–subcortical location in the frontal, parietal and temporal lobes has been explained by vascular and molecular factors, since it is the distribution area of the middle cerebral artery, which has the largest caliber of terminal branches of the internal carotid artery. Thus, tumor emboli are more likely to be directed to this artery.[66 Nieder C, Spanne O, Mehta MP, Grosu AL, Geinitz H. Presentation, patterns of care and survival in patients with brain metastases: what has changed in the last 20 years? Cancer. 2011 Jun 1;117(11):2505–12.,2525 Vermeulen L, de Sousa e Melo F, Richel DJ, Medema JP. The developing cancer stem-cell model: clinical challenges and opportunities. Lancet Oncol. 2012 Feb;13(2):e83–9.]

Adenocarcinoma of the breast and colon, renal cell carcinoma and thyroid carcinoma are known to produce single BMs, while melanoma and lung cancer tend to produce multiple BMs.[66 Nieder C, Spanne O, Mehta MP, Grosu AL, Geinitz H. Presentation, patterns of care and survival in patients with brain metastases: what has changed in the last 20 years? Cancer. 2011 Jun 1;117(11):2505–12.] In Cuban autopsy studies, more than half of cancer patients have single metastases.[1414 Caballero Garcia J, Felipe Moran A, Toledo Valdés C, Pérez La O P, Morales Pérez I. Consideraciones anatomopatológicas y demográficas de la metastasis intracraneal. Rev Cubana Neurol Neurocir. 2012;2(1):23–7. Spanish.,1515 Caballero Garcia J, de Mendoza Amat JH, Cruz Garcia O, Montero Gonzalez TJ, Felipe Moran A. Caracteristicas de la metastasis intracraneal en 14 321 autopsias realizadas en el Hospital “Dr. Luis Diaz Soto”, La Habana (1962–2011). Rev Cubana Neurol Neurocir. 2013 Jul–Dec;3(2):132–8. Spanish.] While single BMs were frequent in our study, most frequent were patients with 2–5 lesions. International research reports frequent multiple BMs in breast cancer, partly because longer survival provides more time for patients to accumulate risk of new metastases.[2626 Kondziolka D, Kalkanis SN, Mehta MP, Ahluwalia M, Loeffler JS. It is time to reevaluate the management of patients with brain metastases. Neurosurgery. 2014 Jul;75(1):1–9.] Also, the brain is a propitious location for breast cancer cells, since BMs are not affected by chemotherapeutic agents and monoclonal antibodies, principally because of the blood–brain barrier. Patients with HER2 positive and triple-negative breast cancer (negative for estrogen, progesterone and HER2 receptors) have increased BM risk.[2828 Murrell DH, Foster PJ, Chambers AF. Brain metastases from breast cancer: lessons from experimental magnetic resonance imaging studies and clinical implications. J Mol Med. 2014 Jan;92(1):5–12.,2929 Jenkinson MD, Haylock B, Shenoy A, Husband D, Javadpour M. Management of cerebral metastasis: Evidence-based approach for surgery, stereotactic radiosurgery and radiotherapy. Eur J Cancer. 2011 Mar;47(5):649–55.]

Treatment with trastuzumab has been shown to act on extracranial metastases, but not on intracranial ones, thereby “unmasking” the latter.[3030 Carlson JA, Nooruddin Z, Rusthoven C, Elias A, Borges VF, Diamond JR, et al. Trastuzumab emtansine and stereotactic radiosurgery: an unexpected increase in clinically significant brain edema. Neuro Oncol. 2014 Jul;16(7):1006–9.,3131 Senkus E, Cardoso F, Pagani O. Time for more optimism in metastatic breast cancer? Cancer Treat Rev. 2014 Mar;40(2):220–8.] Our retrospective design and limited available data prevented us from obtaining insights on this point.

In our series, multiple breast metastases predominated, more than half of breast cancer patients having oligometastasis. Oligometastasis may have a better prognosis than a larger number of lesions, if the primary lesion is controlled and metastases treated focally.[88 Niibe Y, Chang JY. Novel Insights of Oligometastases and Oligo-Recurrence and Review of the Literature. Pulmonary Med [Internet]. 2012 Jul [cited 2014 Dec 21];2012(Art 261096):1–5. Available from: http://www.hindawi.com/journals/pm/2012/261096/cta/
http://www.hindawi.com/journals/pm/2012/...
,3030 Carlson JA, Nooruddin Z, Rusthoven C, Elias A, Borges VF, Diamond JR, et al. Trastuzumab emtansine and stereotactic radiosurgery: an unexpected increase in clinically significant brain edema. Neuro Oncol. 2014 Jul;16(7):1006–9.,3232 Marchetti M, Milanesi I, Falcone C, De Santis M, Fumagalli L, Brait L, et al. Hypofractionated stereotactic radiotherapy for oligometastases in the brain: a single-institution experience. Neurol Sci. 2011 Jun;32(3):393–9.] Some authors arbitrarily use the term “extensive metastases” to refer to presence of ≥10 metastases.[2525 Vermeulen L, de Sousa e Melo F, Richel DJ, Medema JP. The developing cancer stem-cell model: clinical challenges and opportunities. Lancet Oncol. 2012 Feb;13(2):e83–9.,2727 Dziggel L, Segedin B, Podvrsnik NH, Oblak I, Schild SE, Rades D. A survival score for patients with brain metastases from less radiosensitive tumors treated with whole-brain radiotherapy alone. Strahlentherap und Onkolog. 2014 Jan;190(1):54–8.,2828 Murrell DH, Foster PJ, Chambers AF. Brain metastases from breast cancer: lessons from experimental magnetic resonance imaging studies and clinical implications. J Mol Med. 2014 Jan;92(1):5–12.] In our series, only two patients, having primary breast and lung cancer, respectively, were found with ≥10 lesions.

Just over half of patients had uncontrolled primary cancer and almost half had extracranial metastasis, something that has not been reported in previous Cuban studies.[1414 Caballero Garcia J, Felipe Moran A, Toledo Valdés C, Pérez La O P, Morales Pérez I. Consideraciones anatomopatológicas y demográficas de la metastasis intracraneal. Rev Cubana Neurol Neurocir. 2012;2(1):23–7. Spanish.,1515 Caballero Garcia J, de Mendoza Amat JH, Cruz Garcia O, Montero Gonzalez TJ, Felipe Moran A. Caracteristicas de la metastasis intracraneal en 14 321 autopsias realizadas en el Hospital “Dr. Luis Diaz Soto”, La Habana (1962–2011). Rev Cubana Neurol Neurocir. 2013 Jul–Dec;3(2):132–8. Spanish.] This substantially worsens their prognosis, because an uncontrolled primary lesion limits options for specific BM treatment.[2929 Jenkinson MD, Haylock B, Shenoy A, Husband D, Javadpour M. Management of cerebral metastasis: Evidence-based approach for surgery, stereotactic radiosurgery and radiotherapy. Eur J Cancer. 2011 Mar;47(5):649–55.] In Nieder’s study, 32% of patients had uncontrolled primary disease (consistent with our study) and 77% had extracranial metastasis,[66 Nieder C, Spanne O, Mehta MP, Grosu AL, Geinitz H. Presentation, patterns of care and survival in patients with brain metastases: what has changed in the last 20 years? Cancer. 2011 Jun 1;117(11):2505–12.] a higher percentage than we found.

Our results are useful as a starting point to approach BM as a health problem. However, they should be interpreted cautiously, because of some study limitations. In the first place, this was a descriptive retrospective study, without control of relevant variables that can be assessed in prospective studies, such as overall survival, local control and disease-free survival. In addition, because the study was based on administrative data, it could not have the rigorous data standardization of a clinical research study. For example, when contrast media were not available, imaging results could have been subject to bias, if some metastases were missed.

Furthermore, data on disease states at the municipal level might not be representative of the national situation. Presence of asymptomatic metastases can lead to underestimates of true prevalence in population studies, while at the same time, there can be false positives because of concomitant nonmetastatic lesions. Nonetheless, the advantage goes to population-based studies over autopsy series or hospital studies, for the reasons enumerated earlier.

A highly developed PHC system in Cuba, based on CMFs reporting to community polyclinics, ensures that medical attention and services are accessible to the entire population. There have been advances in complementary detection methods with increasingly higher sensitivity and specificity and increasingly targeted therapies (such as radiosurgery). Deployment of BM imaging studies in cancer patients on an epidemiological scale has an unacceptably high cost–benefit ratio.[55 Tabouret E, Bauchet L, Carpentier AF. Brain metastases epidemiology and biology. Bull Cancer. 2013;100(1):57–62.] Together these factors tend to reduce the role of PHC in early detection of metastases.

Nevertheless, early neurological BM signs might be detectable in PHC if physicians maintain a sufficiently high index of suspicion. Such timely detection could lead to earlier referral to other care levels for confirmation and interventions to improve quality of life and survival.

CONCLUSIONS

Brain metastases are more prevalent in this Cuban municipality than reported in other countries, but they constitute a higher proportion of cancer cases than seen in other population-based studies. The study’s results underline the importance of detecting brain metastasis early, to permit timely interventions to improve quality of life and survival.

 APPENDIX: DATA COLLECTION FORMGeneral information

Name ____________________________

Clinical history __________

Age _____

Sex _____

Skin color _________

Primary tumor

Organ/site ______________

Histological type ____________

Number of extracranial metastases ____________

Control: Controlled _________ Not controlled _________

Brain metastasis

Number of metastases _______

Location

M1 ____________

M2 ____________

M3 ____________

M4 ____________

M5 ____________

M6 ____________

M7 ____________

M8 ____________

M9 ____________

M10 ____________

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  • Disclosures: None

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    Jan-Mar 2018

History

  • Received
    18 Jan 2017
  • Accepted
    30 Oct 2017
Medical Education Cooperation with Cuba Oakland - California - United States
E-mail: editors@medicc.org