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The impact of whole brain radiation therapy on the long-term control and morbidity of patients treated with gamma knife radiosurgery for brain metastases [Meeting Abstract]

Varlotto, J. M.; Flickinger, J. C.; Niranjan, A.; Bhatnagar, A. K.; Kondziolka, D.; Lunsford, L. D.
BIOSIS:PREV200300505886
ISSN: 0360-3016
CID: 195042

Radiosurgery: Current techniques

Niranjan, A; Maitz, AH; Kondziolka, D; Lunsford, LD
ISI:000186833600003
ISSN: 1077-2855
CID: 195052

Gamma knife radiosurgery for acoustic tumors

Lunsford, LD; Niranjan, A; Kondziolka, D; Flickinger, JC
ISI:000186833600004
ISSN: 1077-2855
CID: 195062

Cavernous sinus meningioma radiosurgery

Lee, JYK; Kondziolka, D; Flickinger, JC; Lunsford, LD
ISI:000186833600005
ISSN: 1077-2855
CID: 195072

Radiosurgery for patients with metastasis to the brain

Sheehan, J; Kondziolka, D; Flickinger, J; Lunsford, LD
ISI:000186833600007
ISSN: 1077-2855
CID: 195082

Risks and benefits of arteriovenous malformation radiosurgery

Flickinger, JC; Kondziolka, D; Lunsford, LD
ISI:000186833600009
ISSN: 1077-2855
CID: 195092

Radiosurgical treatment of cavernous sinus neoplasms: Indications and results

Lee, JYK; Kondziolka, D; Flickinger, JC; Lunsford, LD
ISI:000184568900008
ISSN: 1077-2855
CID: 195102

Radiosurgery for nonfunctioning pituitary adenoma

Sheehan, Jason P; Kondziolka, Douglas; Flickinger, John; Lunsford, L Dade
OBJECT: Nonfunctioning pituitary adenomas comprise approximately 30% of all pituitary tumors. The purpose of this retrospective study was to evaluate the efficacy and role of gamma knife surgery (GKS) in the treatment of these lesions. METHODS: The authors conducted a review of cases in which GKS was performed at the University of Pittsburgh between 1987 and 2001. Forty-six patients with nonfunctioning pituitary adenomas and with at least 6 months of follow- up data were identified. In 41 of these patients some form of prior treatment such as transsphenoidal resection, craniotomy and resection, or conventional radiation therapy had been conducted. Five patients were deemed ineligible for microsurgery, and GKS served as the primary treatment modality. Endocrinological, ophthalmological, and radiological responses were evaluated. The mean radiation dose to the margin was 16 Gy. In all patients with microadenomas and 91% of those with macroadenomas tumor control was demonstrated after radiosurgery. Gamma knife surgery had essentially equal efficacy in terms of achieving tumor control in cases of adenomas with cavernous sinus invasion and suprasellar extension. No new endocrinopathies were noted following radiosurgery. In two patients, however, tumor growth and decline in visual function occurred. CONCLUSIONS: Gamma knife surgery is safe and effective in treating nonfunctioning pituitary adenomas. Radiosurgery may serve as a primary treatment modality in some or as a salvage treatment in others. Treatment must be tailored to meet the patient's symptoms, overall health, and tumor morphometry.
PMID: 15669820
ISSN: 1092-0684
CID: 187892

The role of stereotactic radiosurgery for low-grade astrocytomas

Hadjipanayis, Costas G; Kondziolka, Douglas; Flickinger, John C; Lunsford, L Dade
OBJECT: This study was conducted to examine the role of radiosurgery in the management of patients with recurrent or unresectable low-grade astrocytomas. METHODS: During a 13-year interval, 49 patients underwent stereotactic radiosurgery as part of multimodal treatment of their recurrent or unresectable low-grade astrocytomas. Thirty-seven of these patients (median age 14 years) harbored pilocytic astrocytomas and 12 patients harbored World Health Organization (WHO) Grade II fibrillary astrocytomas (median age 25 years). Tumors involved the brainstem in 22 cases, cerebellum in four, thalamus in six, temporal lobe in five, frontal lobe in four, and parietal lobe in three, as well as the hypothalamus, corpus callosum, insular cortex, optic tract, and third ventricle in one patient each. Each diagnosis was confirmed with the aid of stereotactic biopsy sampling in 17 patients, open biopsy sampling in five, partial resection in 13, and near-total resection in 14. Multimodal treatment included fractionated radiotherapy in 14 patients, stereotactic intracavitary irradiation in five, chemotherapy in two, cyst drainage in eight, ventriculoperitoneal shunt placement in five, and additional cytoreductive surgery in five. Tumor volumes ranged from 0.42 to 45.1 cm3. The median radiosurgical dose to the tumor margin was 15 Gy (range 9.6-22.5 Gy). After radiosurgery, serial neuroimaging demonstrated complete tumor resolution in 11 patients, reduced tumor volume in 12, stable tumor volume in 10, and delayed tumor progression in 16. No procedure-related death was encountered. Forty-five of 49 patients are alive at a median follow-up period of 32 months after radiosurgery and 63 months after diagnosis. Sixteen patients participated in follow-up review for more than 60 months. Three patients died of local tumor progression. CONCLUSIONS: Stereotactic radiosurgery is a potential alternative or adjunctive intervention in the management of selected patients with pilocytic or WHO Grade II fibrillary astrocytomas, usually performed for small-volume tumors in an attempt to avoid larger-field fractionated radiotherapy.
PMID: 15669811
ISSN: 1092-0684
CID: 187902

Comparison of management options for patients with acoustic neuromas

Kondziolka, Douglas; Lunsford, L Dade; Flickinger, John C
Management options for patients with vestibular schwannomas (acoustic neuromas) include observation, tumor resection, stereotactic radiosurgery, and fractionated radiotherapy. In this report the authors review their 15-year experience with radiosurgery and discuss indications and expectations in relation to the different approaches. They conducted a survey of neurosurgeons to determine management preferences in two different cases of intra- and extra-canalicular tumor presentations. Patient decisions must be based on quality information derived from peer-reviewed literature.
PMID: 15669805
ISSN: 1092-0684
CID: 187912