Researchers analyzed data from 247 patients whose thyroid cancer had spread to the brain. They looked at whether receiving whole-brain radiation therapy (WBRT) was linked to how long patients lived after their brain metastasis diagnosis. The patients came from 20 different studies, had a median age of 58, and most had a type called differentiated thyroid cancer. During the follow-up period, which was a median of 12 months, about 71.5% of the patients died.
The main finding was that receiving WBRT was not significantly associated with overall survival. The statistical analysis showed a hazard ratio of 1.25, with a confidence interval crossing 1.0, meaning there was no clear link to either improved or worsened survival. Further analysis also did not show a survival benefit for patients who had WBRT along with other treatments like surgery or targeted radiation.
It is important to be cautious with these results. This was a meta-analysis, meaning it combined data from existing observational studies. It was not a randomized controlled trial, which is the gold standard for proving a treatment's effect. Brain metastases from thyroid cancer are rare, and there are no standard guidelines for managing them. The study did not report on side effects or safety concerns related to WBRT.
Readers should understand that this research does not show that WBRT helps patients with thyroid cancer brain metastases live longer. It also does not show that it harms survival. The findings highlight that more prospective, controlled studies are urgently needed to find the best way to care for these patients.