Introduction: Radiosurgery is an alternative to the microsurgical resection of vestibular schwannoma (VS). Since its introduction, radiosurgery has been used in more than 8000 patients with VS worldwide and the long term tumor control rates are reported to be 86 to 100%. The aim of this study is to report our experience with Leksell Gamma Knife (LGK) radiosurgery in the management of VS and to evaluate the serviceable hearing preservation rate after one-year follow-up.
Material And Methods: Between January 2000 and October 2002, 95 patients with unilateral VS underwent LGK radiosurgery at the University Erasmus Hospital of Brussels with the first worldwide installed LGK C. All patients in our series underwent evaluation with high resolution neurodiagnostic imaging including computed tomography and MRI, and clinical evaluation as well as audiological tests that included tonal and vocal audiometries. The Gardner Robertson (GR) classification is used to report the results of this study. We identified 48 patients treated for VS with LGK, tested and retested with vocal and tonal audiometries by the same team, and followed for a minimum of one year. There were 38 patients with previously untreated VS (9 grade I, 9 grade II, 20 grade III according to Koos) and 10 patients with postoperative evolutive residual tumor.
Results: Before LGK, 24 patients had serviceable (17 GR class I and 7 GR class II) hearing; 16 (67%) of these patients had preservation of serviceable hearing (Pure tone average < 50 db and Speech discrimination > 50%) at the one-year audiological follow-up. It was observed that 9 of the 17 GR class I patients (52.9%) maintained their level of audition and 14 of these (82.3%) preserved serviceable hearing. No deterioration of hearing occurred in the 7 patients with preradiosurgery radiosurgery nonserviceable hearing (GR class III) at the one-year follow-up. One patient improved from GR class V to III after LGK. No patient developed trigeminal neuropathy and only one patient who had preradiosurgery facial nerve dysfunction experienced deterioration at one-year follow-up.
Conclusions: In view of the high tumor control rate and excellent long-term cranial nerve preservation rates, LGK radiosurgery should now be considered as an excellent alternative strategy to microsurgery for the management of VS grade I to III as well as in cases of residual tumor after microsurgery. Compared to results obtained in centers with long-term experience, our data suggest that LGK radiosurgery is an efficient reproducible therapeutic approach that offers high rate of hearing preservation. This justifies the choice of radiosurgery as the first treatment option in VS.
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Phys Med
January 2024
Department of Radiation Oncology, University Medical Center Mannheim, University of Heidelberg, Germany, Theodor-Kutzer-Ufer 1-3, 68167 Mannheim, Germany. Electronic address:
Purpose: Stereotactic radiosurgery with linear accelerators (LINACs) or Leksell Gamma Knife® (LGK, Elekta AB) is an established treatment option for intracranial tumors. When those are involving/abutting organs at risk (OAR), homogenous and normofractionated treatments outmatch single fraction deliveries. In such situations, it would be desirable to balance LINAC's homogeneity benefits with LGK's dose gradient attributes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurol India
April 2023
Surgery and Neurosurgery, Army Hospital (Research and Referral) Delhi, India.
Gamma knife radiosurgery saw the light of the day when the Swedish physician "Lars Leksell" postulated the salient first principles of stereotactic radiosurgery. Prior to being realized in its new 'avatar' "The ICON", Leksell Gamma Knife (LGK) "Perfexion" has been the most practiced model and is still in practice in most of the centers in India. The Gamma Knife ICON (the sixth generation model) utilizes the concept of the Cone-Beam Computed Tomography (CBCT) module, thus allowing non-invasive immobilization of the skull employing frameless treatments without jeopardizing accuracy to sub-millimeters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Phys
June 2023
Elekta Instrument AB, Stockholm, Sweden.
Background: Methods described in the literature for designing shielding for treatment rooms for radiotherapy systems often involve assumptions that lead to overestimations of the wall thicknesses required to meet dose rate constraints outside the room. The Leksell Gamma Knife (LGK) has built-in shielding that results in primarily scattered photons leaking into the room. The field of leakage radiation, therefore, has a wide spectrum of energies, up to the primary energies of cobalt-60, and is highly anisotropic, making standard site planning methods difficult to adapt to the LGK.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurosurg
September 2023
1Department of Medical Radiation Physics and Nuclear Medicine, Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden.
Objective: The authors' objective was to investigate the stability of the newly introduced Vantage stereotactic frame fixation in single-fraction Gamma Knife radiosurgery.
Methods: A total of 255 patients were included in this work and treated with the Vantage frame and Leksell Gamma Knife (LGK) Icon equipped with cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) imaging. After the frame was mounted on the patient's head, a CT scan was acquired.
J Appl Clin Med Phys
April 2023
Department of Neurosurgery, Chungbuk National University Hospital, Cheongju, Republic of Korea.
The Leksell Gamma Knife (LGK) Icon is used for mask-based and frame-based fixation. The mask fixation provides a noninvasive method. However, an optimal mask fixation method is yet to be established.
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