A new analysis of 3,666 patients who received intracranial brachytherapy (a type of internal radiation) for brain tumors found that about 5.7% developed symptomatic radiation necrosis (RN). This is a condition where radiation damages healthy brain tissue, causing symptoms like headaches, seizures, or weakness.
The risk varied by tumor type. For low-grade gliomas, the rate was 3.72%; for high-grade gliomas, 8.44%; for brain metastases, 2.07%; and for meningiomas, 8.98%. The type of radioactive isotope also mattered: Cesium-131 had the lowest rate at 2.07%, while Iridium-192 had the highest at 7.61%.
However, these subgroup differences were not statistically significant, meaning they could be due to chance. The analysis also found high heterogeneity among the studies, which limits the reliability of the pooled numbers.
What this means for patients: Symptomatic RN is a known risk of brachytherapy, but it occurs in a minority of cases. The exact risk depends on individual factors, so patients should discuss their specific situation with their doctor.