伽玛刀放射治疗三叉神经痛在高剂量率下提供更大的疼痛缓解。

IF 0.7 Q4 SURGERY
Journal of radiosurgery and SBRT Pub Date : 2022-01-01
Andrew I Yang, Kobina G Mensah-Brown, Emily F Shekhtman, Svetlana Kvint, Connor A Wathen, Frederick L Hitti, Michelle Alonso-Basanta, Stephen M Avery, Jay F Dorsey, John Y K Lee
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在伽玛刀(GK)放射外科手术中,剂量率在其辐射源的生命周期内降低,延长治疗时间。长期治疗影响在照射期间修复的亚致死辐射损伤量,并与生物等效剂量(BED)降低有关。我们评估了治疗时间对三叉神经GK后临床结果的影响,这是一种罕见的分离治疗时间影响的临床模型。这是一项对192例面部疼痛患者的回顾性分析,这些患者接受了三种来源的治疗。所有患者均接受单次等中心治疗至80 Gy。根据患者解剖特异性剂量率分析治疗时间,以及根据患者个体光束照射时间计算的BED。在干预前后使用结果工具测量三个不同领域的疼痛(疼痛强度,对日常生活的一般和面部活动的干扰)。以剂量率/BED、脑干剂量、性别、年龄、诊断和既往干预为预测因素进行多元线性回归。BED是疼痛严重程度三个维度改善程度的独立预测因子。剂量率降低1.5 Gy/min,总体疼痛严重程度的改善减少31.8%。放疗后面部麻木的发生率在最高四分位数的床上增加。治疗时间是疼痛结果的独立预测因子,这表明处方剂量应该定制,以确保同样有效的治疗,同时考虑到最高床位可能增加的不良反应。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Gamma Knife radiosurgery for trigeminal neuralgia provides greater pain relief at higher dose rates.

Gamma Knife radiosurgery for trigeminal neuralgia provides greater pain relief at higher dose rates.

Gamma Knife radiosurgery for trigeminal neuralgia provides greater pain relief at higher dose rates.

In Gamma Knife (GK) radiosurgery, dose rate decreases during the life cycle of its radiation source, extending treatment times. Prolonged treatments influence the amount of sublethal radiation injury that is repaired during exposure, and is associated with decreased biologically-equivalent dose (BED). We assessed the impact of treatment times on clinical outcomes following GK of the trigeminal nerve - a rare clinical model to isolate the effects of treatment times. This is a retrospective analysis of 192 patients with facial pain treated across three source exchanges. All patients were treated to 80 Gy with a single isocenter. Treatment time was analyzed in terms of patient anatomy-specific dose rate, as well as BED calculated from individual patient beam-on times. An outcome tool measuring pain in three distinct domains (pain intensity, interference with general and oro-facial activities of daily living), was administered before and after intervention. Multivariate linear regression was performed with dose rate/BED, brainstem dose, sex, age, diagnosis, and prior intervention as predictors. BED was an independent predictor of the degree of improvement in all three dimensions of pain severity. A decrease in dose rate by 1.5 Gy/min corresponded to 31.8% less improvement in the overall severity of pain. Post-radiosurgery incidence of facial numbness was increased for BEDs in the highest quartile. Treatment time is an independent predictor of pain outcomes, suggesting that prescription dose should be customized to ensure iso-effective treatments, while accounting for the possible increase in adverse effects at the highest BEDs.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
8.30%
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