Stereotactic radiosurgery for primary and metastatic sarcomas involving the spine

被引:0
|
作者
U. K. Chang
W. I. Cho
D. H. Lee
M. S. Kim
C. K. Cho
S. Y. Lee
D. G. Jeon
机构
[1] Korea Institute of Radiological and Medical Science,Department of Neurosurgery, Korea Cancer Center Hospital
[2] Korea Institute of Radiological and Medical Science,Cyberknife Center, Korea Cancer Center Hospital
[3] Korea Institute of Radiological and Medical Science,Department of Radiation Oncology, Korea Cancer Center Hospital
[4] Korea Institute of Radiological and Medical Science,Department of Orthopedics, Korea Cancer Center Hospital
来源
Journal of Neuro-Oncology | 2012年 / 107卷
关键词
Spinal sarcoma; Primary; Metastatic; Stereotactic radiosurgery; Local control;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The treatment for spinal sarcomas is difficult due to inadequate surgical margin and an inability to deliver high dose radiation. Advanced technology of stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) enabled higher biological effective doses of radiation to be delivered to spinal sarcomas by hypofractionation method. The authors evaluated local control rate following SRS for primary and metastatic spinal sarcomas. Thirty-two spinal sarcomas (10 primary tumors, 22 metastatic tumors) in 27 patients were treated by SRS from November 2002 to September 2009. Patients were assessed for pain status, neurological status and radiological response by regular follow-up. Overall survival and local progression-free survival were calculated and prognostic factors were sought. Median tumor volume was 18.6 ml. Radiation doses to the tumor margins ranged from 16 to 45 Gy in one to three fractions, and the median single session equivalent dose was 21.8 Gy. Follow-up ranged from 4 to 68 months (median, 22 months). Overall median survival was 29 months and no related prognostic factors were identified. During follow-up, pain was controlled in 89.3% (25/28) lesions at 6 months, in 68.2% (15/22) at 1 year, and in 61.5% (8/13) at 2 years. Tumor volume was found to be significantly related to post-SRS pain control rate. Radiological evaluation showed that local control was maintained in 96.7% (29/30) lesions at 6 months, in 78.3% (18/23) at 1 year, and in 76.9% (10/13) at 2 years. Radiation dose and tumor volume were found to be related to radiological control at 24 months following SRS. Nine cases developed recurrence between 2 and 33 months, median local progression-free survival was 23 months. Age was found to be predictive of local progression-free survival (P = 0.009). SRS proved to be an effective modality for the local control of primary and metastatic spinal sarcomas, and age was significantly related to local recurrence.
引用
收藏
页码:551 / 557
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Repeat stereotactic radiosurgery for progressive vestibular schwannomas after primary gamma knife radiosurgery
    Taori, Suchet
    Bin-Alamer, Othman
    Tang, Anthony
    Niranjan, Ajay
    Flickinger, John C.
    Hadjipanayis, Constantinos G.
    Lunsford, L. Dade
    JOURNAL OF NEURO-ONCOLOGY, 2024, 169 (03) : 591 - 599
  • [42] Clinical Outcomes of Stereotactic Radiosurgery in the Treatment of Patients with Metastatic Brain Tumors
    Elaimy, Ameer L.
    Mackay, Alexander R.
    Lamoreaux, Wayne T.
    Fairbanks, Robert K.
    Demakas, John J.
    Cooke, Barton S.
    Lee, Christopher M.
    WORLD NEUROSURGERY, 2011, 75 (5-6) : 673 - 683
  • [43] Dosimetric Comparison between the HyperArc and Conventional VMAT in Cervical Spine Stereotactic Radiosurgery
    Park, Jeehoon
    Park, Byungdo
    Kim, Jeongho
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE, 2024, 13 (18)
  • [44] Stereotactic radiosurgery as a primary treatment modality for pineal parenchymal tumors
    Ahn, K. S.
    Park, J. S.
    Song, J. H.
    Hong, Y. K.
    Jeun, S. S.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION RESEARCH, 2020, 18 (04): : 785 - 790
  • [45] Stereotactic Radiosurgery Alone for One to Two Brain Metastases from Cancer of Unknown Primary
    Dziggel, Liesa
    Bajrovic, Amira
    Schild, Steven E.
    Rades, Dirk
    ANTICANCER RESEARCH, 2018, 38 (01) : 565 - 567
  • [46] Stereotactic Radiosurgery and Hypofractionated Stereotactic Radiotherapy for Nonfunctioning Pituitary Adenoma
    Khattab, Mohamed H.
    Sherry, Alexander D.
    Xu, Mark C.
    Kelly, Patrick
    Anderson, Joshua L.
    Luo, Guozhen
    Chambless, Lola B.
    Cmelak, Anthony J.
    Attia, Albert
    JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY PART B-SKULL BASE, 2021, 82 : E51 - E58
  • [47] Predictors of tumor control in patients treated with linac-based stereotactic radiosurgery for metastatic disease to the brain
    Schomas, DA
    Roeske, JC
    MacDonald, RL
    Sweeney, PJ
    Mehta, N
    Mundt, AJ
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY-CANCER CLINICAL TRIALS, 2005, 28 (02): : 180 - 187
  • [48] Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Skull Base Meningioma
    Igaki, Hiroshi
    Maruyama, Keisuke
    Koga, Tomoyuki
    Murakami, Naoya
    Tago, Masao
    Terahara, Atsuro
    Shin, Masahiro
    Nakagawa, Keiichi
    Ohtomo, Kuni
    NEUROLOGIA MEDICO-CHIRURGICA, 2009, 49 (10) : 456 - 460
  • [49] Stereotactic radiosurgery for large brain metastases
    Ebner, Daniel
    Rava, Paul
    Gorovets, Daniel
    Cielo, Deus
    Hepel, Jaroslaw T.
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NEUROSCIENCE, 2015, 22 (10) : 1650 - 1654
  • [50] Metastatic Neoplasm Volume Kinetics Following 2-Stage Stereotactic Radiosurgery
    Damron, Ethan P.
    Dono, Antonio
    Chafi, Hatim
    Martir, Magda
    Yu, Tse-Kuan
    Khwaja, Shariq
    Amsbaugh, Mark
    Tandon, Nitin
    Esquenazi, Yoshua
    Blanco, Angel, I
    WORLD NEUROSURGERY, 2022, 161 : E210 - E219