The goal of this phase II randomized trial is to determine if Stereotactic Radiosurgery (SRS) or Cognitive Sparing WBRT (CS-WBRT) better preserves neurocognitive function than standard Hippocampal Avoidance WBRT (HA-WBRT) in patients with multiple brain metastases ( $\\ge6$ lesions). The main questions it aims to answer are: * Which treatment best preserves cognitive function (memory and executive tasks) at 6 months post-intervention? * Can sparing the left hippocampus and corpus callosum (CS-WBRT) or using focal SRS reduce cognitive decline compared to bilateral sparing? Comparison Groups Researchers will compare three arms to evaluate their impact on cognition and disease control: * Arm A (SRS): Focal high-dose radiation (15-20 Gy in 1 fraction) to intracranial lesions. * Arm B (CS-WBRT): Whole-brain radiation (30 Gy in 10 fractions) sparing the left hippocampus and corpus callosum plus Memantine. * Arm C (HA-WBRT): Whole-brain radiation (30 Gy in 10 fractions) with bilateral hippocampal avoidance plus Memantine. Participant Tasks Participants will: * Complete neurocognitive and neuropsychological tests (HVLT-R, TMT, COWAT, CANTAB) at baseline and follow-up. * Undergo contrast-enhanced brain MRI for planning and tracking tumor progression. * Take Memantine HCL daily for 24 weeks if assigned to the WBRT arms (B or C). * Provide blood samples for biomarker and genetic analysis (e.g., APOE, Tau). * Undergo olfactory function testing and complete quality-of-life questionnaires.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
90
Focal high-dose radiation (15-20 Gy in 1 fraction) to intracranial lesions
Conformal Whole Brain Radiotherapy 3000 cGy in 10 fractions with Left Hippocampal Avoidance \& Corpus Callosum Sparing using RapidArc
Conformal Whole Brain Radiotherapy 3000 cGy in 10 fractions with Bilateral Hippocampal Avoidance using RapidArc
Preservation in neurocognitive function at 6 months after the start of brain radiotherapy for patients with multiple brain metastases
The primary endpoint is defined as the z-scores of changes in HVLT-R memory score, and CANTAB® tasks at 6 months after the start of cranial radiotherapy or radiosurgery for multiple brain metastases. Investigators hypothesize that at least one of the three treatment arms will outperform the others in preserving neurocognitive function at 6 months
Time frame: From enrollment to 6 months after the start of brain radiotherapy
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