Aaron Jin, Daniel Roos, Adrian Esterman, Sandy Patel, Peter Gorayski, Frank Saran, Ramkumar Govindaraj
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Purpose: The implications of intratumoural cystic change on management and treatment outcomes in vestibular schwannoma (VS) remain uncertain. This retrospective analysis aims to compare the treatment outcomes of solid and cystic tumours treated with linear accelerator (LINAC)-based stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS).
Methods: Sixty-eight patients were analysed including 22 with cystic tumours. All received a marginal dose of 12 Gy to the 80% isodose line (range: 70-90%) delivered in a single fraction. Local progression was defined as a maximum linear dimension (MLD) enlargement of > 2 mm persisting for over 2 years, pseudoprogression as an MLD enlargement of > 2 mm within the first 2 years followed by stability or reduction.
Results: With an average follow-up of 92.2 months, crude tumour control rates were similar: 95.5% for cystic and 93.5% for solid tumours. Pseudoprogression occurred in 7 patients (10.3%), 2 with solid (4.3%) and 5 with cystic VS (22.7%). The mean MLD reduction was 4.2 mm for solid tumours and 5.0 mm for cystic tumours (p = 0.51). Only pretreatment size correlated with the percentage reduction in tumour diameter (p = 0.025). Although a higher proportion of cystic tumours demonstrated at least a 10%, 20%, and 30% size reduction compared to solid tumours, none of these differences were statistically significant.
Conclusion: LINAC-based SRS achieves similar tumour control for both cystic and solid VS. Despite cystic tumours being typically of higher Koos grade, they may demonstrate numerically greater reduction after SRS. Future studies should aim to standardise the criteria for classifying cystic tumours.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Neuro-Oncology is a multi-disciplinary journal encompassing basic, applied, and clinical investigations in all research areas as they relate to cancer and the central nervous system. It provides a single forum for communication among neurologists, neurosurgeons, radiotherapists, medical oncologists, neuropathologists, neurodiagnosticians, and laboratory-based oncologists conducting relevant research. The Journal of Neuro-Oncology does not seek to isolate the field, but rather to focus the efforts of many disciplines in one publication through a format which pulls together these diverse interests. More than any other field of oncology, cancer of the central nervous system requires multi-disciplinary approaches. To alleviate having to scan dozens of journals of cell biology, pathology, laboratory and clinical endeavours, JNO is a periodical in which current, high-quality, relevant research in all aspects of neuro-oncology may be found.