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Gamma knife thalamotomy for disabling tremor [Letter]
Kondziolka, Douglas
PMID: 12374506
ISSN: 0003-9942
CID: 188292
Radiosurgery for treatment of recurrent intracranial hemangiopericytomas
Sheehan, Jason; Kondziolka, Douglas; Flickinger, John; Lunsford, L Dade
OBJECTIVE: Hemangiopericytomas are highly aggressive meningeal tumors with tendencies for recurrence and metastasis. The purpose of this retrospective, single-institution review was to evaluate the efficacy and role of stereotactic radiosurgery in the management of recurrent hemangiopericytomas. METHODS: We reviewed data for patients who underwent stereotactic radiosurgery at the University of Pittsburgh between 1987 and 2001. Fourteen patients underwent radiosurgery for 15 discrete tumors. Prior treatments included transsphenoidal resection (n = 1), craniotomy and resection (n = 27), embolization (n = 1), and conventional radiotherapy (n = 7). Clinical and radiological responses were evaluated. Follow-up periods varied from 5 to 76 months (mean, 31.3 mo; median, 21 mo). The mean radiation dose to the tumor margin was 15 Gy. RESULTS: Seventy-nine percent of patients (11 of 14 patients) with recurrent hemangiopericytomas demonstrated local tumor control after radiosurgery. Twelve of 15 tumors (i.e., 80%) dramatically decreased in size on follow-up imaging scans. Regional intracranial recurrences were retreated with radiosurgery for two patients (i.e., 15%); neither of those two patients experienced long-term tumor control. Local recurrences occurred 12 to 75 months (median, 21 mo) after radiosurgery. Local tumor control and survival rates at 5 years after radiosurgery were 76 and 100%, respectively (Kaplan-Meier method). We could not correlate prior irradiation or tumor size with tumor control. Twenty-nine percent of the patients (4 of 14 patients) developed remote metastases. Radiosurgery did not seem to offer protection against the development of intra- or extracranial metastases. CONCLUSION: Gamma knife radiosurgery provided local tumor control for 80% of recurrent hemangiopericytomas. When residual tumor is identified after resection or radiotherapy, early radiosurgery should be considered as a feasible treatment modality. Despite local tumor control, patients are still at risk for distant metastasis. Diligent clinical and radiological follow-up monitoring is necessary.
PMID: 12234396
ISSN: 0148-396x
CID: 188312
The role of radiosurgery for the treatment of pineal parenchymal tumors
Hasegawa, Toshinori; Kondziolka, Douglas; Hadjipanayis, Constantinos G; Flickinger, John C; Lunsford, L Dade
OBJECTIVE: Radiosurgery is an appealing alternative management strategy for selected patients with biopsy-proved pineal parenchymal tumors. The purpose of this report was to clarify its role in conjunction with other surgical, radiation, and medical approaches. METHODS: We retrospectively evaluated 16 patients who had undergone radiosurgery as the primary or adjuvant treatment for pineal parenchymal tumors. Ten patients (62.5%) had pineocytomas, two (12.5%) had mixed pineocytoma and pineoblastoma, and four (25%) had pineoblastomas. The mean marginal dose was 15 Gy, and the mean tumor volume was 5.0 cm(3). The mean follow-up periods from the time of diagnosis or the time of radiosurgery were 61 and 52 months, respectively. RESULTS: The overall actuarial 2- and 5-year survival rates after diagnosis were 75.0 and 66.7%, respectively. In 14 patients who were evaluated with imaging, 4 (29%) demonstrated complete remission, 8 (57%) had partial remission, 2 (14%) had no change, and no patient had local progression. The local tumor control rate (complete remission, partial remission, or no change) was 100%. Five patients died during follow-up. One patient with a pineocytoma and three patients with pineoblastomas died secondary to leptomeningeal or extracranial spread tumor. No cause of death was established for one patient. Two patients developed adverse radiation effects after radiosurgery. CONCLUSION: Our initial experience suggests that stereotactic radiosurgery is a valuable primary management modality for patients with pineocytomas. As adjuvant therapy, radiosurgery may be used to boost local tumor dose during multimodality management of malignant pineal parenchymal tumors.
PMID: 12234394
ISSN: 0148-396x
CID: 188322
Correlations between magnetic resonance spectroscopy and image-guided histopathology, with special attention to radiation necrosis - Comments [Comment]
Kondziolka, D; Gutin, PH; Lis, E; Loeffler, JS; Piepmeier, JM; Weinberg, JS; Sawaya, R
ISI:000178308500018
ISSN: 0148-396x
CID: 195162
Stereotactic radiosurgery for patients with "radioresistant" brain metastases - Comments [Comment]
Loeffler, JS; Adler, JR; Ryu, S; Gutin, PH; Kondziolka, D; Piepmeier, JM
ISI:000177925700014
ISSN: 0148-396x
CID: 195172
Prospective feasibility study of outpatient stereotactic brain lesion biopsy - Comments [Comment]
Ostertag, CB; Cyron, D; Bakay, RAE; Berger, MS; Piepmeier, JM; Bruce, JN; Kondziolka, D; Gildenberg, PL
ISI:000177273400016
ISSN: 0148-396x
CID: 195182
Gamma knife radiosurgery in combination with intratumoral coexpression of connexin 43, human tumor necrosis factor a and herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (HSV-TK) gene therapy improves survival of 9L gliosarcoma-bearing rats [Meeting Abstract]
Niranjan, A; Wolfe, D; Tamura, M; Lunsford, LD; Kondziolka, D; Fellows, W; DeLuca, N; Glorioso, JC
ISI:000177273400108
ISSN: 0148-396x
CID: 195192
Hardware complications with deep brain stimulation devices [Meeting Abstract]
Germanwala, A; Kondziolka, D; Whiting, D; Oh, MY
ISI:000177273400207
ISSN: 0148-396x
CID: 195202
Decision-making and cost-effectiveness analysis of radiosurgery for cavernous malformations [Meeting Abstract]
McInerney, J; Kondziolka, D; Hasegawa, T; Lee, JYK; Flickinger, JC; Lunsford, LD
ISI:000177273400209
ISSN: 0148-396x
CID: 195212
Gamma knife radiosurgery for lung carcinoma metastases to the brain: Outcomes and prognostic factors influencing survival [Meeting Abstract]
Sheehan, JP; Sun, MH; Kondziolka, D; Flickinger, JC; Lunsford, LD
ISI:000177273400217
ISSN: 0148-396x
CID: 195222