Compassionate AllowancesAdult CancersSecondary Adenocarcinoma of the Brain
Compassionate Allowance Condition

Secondary Adenocarcinoma of the Brain

Metastatic adenocarcinoma to the brain from another primary site.

Why Secondary Adenocarcinoma of the Brain qualifies for fast-track approval

SSA has determined that this diagnosis is so medically severe and debilitating that it clearly meets the legal definition of disability — you don't need to prove residual functional capacity or work limitations separately. Your medical records + diagnostic confirmation are typically enough.

What this means for your SSDI claim

  • Timeline: Most CAL decisions issue in 30–90 days, compared to 3–8 months for a regular claim. Some arrive within weeks.
  • Same application: Use the standard SSDI process (online, phone, or in-person). SSA's systems auto-flag CAL diagnoses.
  • Same 5-month waiting period applies: Your benefit entitlement still starts 5 months after your Established Onset Date (waived only for ALS).
  • Still need work credits: CAL covers the medical evaluation; you still must meet SSDI's non-medical requirements (enough work credits, not earning above SGA).
  • SSI may also apply: If you haven't worked enough to qualify for SSDI, you can concurrently apply for SSI. Both programs recognize CAL conditions.

What SSA will want to see

  • Diagnostic confirmation — pathology reports, genetic testing, imaging, or the specific diagnostic study that established your diagnosis.
  • Treating specialist records — notes from the oncologist, neurologist, geneticist, or other specialist who diagnosed you. Primary care records alone may not suffice.
  • Treatment history — any surgeries, chemo, radiation, or other therapy, with dates and responses.
  • Staging or severity markers — where the CAL listing includes specific stage/severity criteria (e.g., "with distant metastases"), your records must confirm that qualifier.

How to file

Apply through one of the standard SSDI channels:

On form SSA-3368 (Adult Disability Report), list your diagnosis by the exact name — including the CAL-qualifying qualifier (e.g., "metastatic breast cancer," "glioblastoma multiforme"). Include the date of diagnosis, treating specialist, and the hospital/clinic. The more precise the diagnosis language, the more reliably SSA's systems flag it for the CAL queue.

Diagnosed with a terminal illness? If your condition is terminal and your prognosis is less than 6 months, also request TERI (Terminal Illness) designation — it expedites payment in addition to the medical approval. Call SSA at 1-800-772-1213 or flag this at your field office.