OBJECTIVE: To study the features of diagnosis and radiosurgery of tumors involving the cavernous sinus. METHODS: From December 1994 to the end of 2000, 175 patients with cavernous sinus lesions were treated by Leksell gamma knife (GK) in our Institute. Ninety patients (51.4%) had had open surgery previously. Our experience of treating cavernous sinus tumors by GK was analyzed retrospectively. RESULTS: A Hundred and forty-four (82.3%) patients were followed from 1 to 84 months (median 32.5 months); total tumor control rate was 94%. Surgery was performed after radiosurgery in 3 patients because of tumor enlargement. Metastatic tumor in the cavernous sinus was highly sensitive to irradiation. These lesions shrunk markedly on MRI 2-3 months after GK surgery. The median survival time was 12.2 months, and patients died of noncavernous sinus lesions. CONCLUSION: With high tumor control rate and few complications, GK surgery could become a main option for small benign or residual tumors involving the cavernous sinus. It is also very useful as part of comprehensive therapy for metastatic tumors in the cavernous sinus.
OBJECTIVE: To study the features of diagnosis and radiosurgery of tumors involving the cavernous sinus. METHODS: From December 1994 to the end of 2000, 175 patients with cavernous sinus lesions were treated by Leksell gamma knife (GK) in our Institute. Ninety patients (51.4%) had had open surgery previously. Our experience of treating cavernous sinus tumors by GK was analyzed retrospectively. RESULTS: A Hundred and forty-four (82.3%) patients were followed from 1 to 84 months (median 32.5 months); total tumor control rate was 94%. Surgery was performed after radiosurgery in 3 patients because of tumor enlargement. Metastatic tumor in the cavernous sinus was highly sensitive to irradiation. These lesions shrunk markedly on MRI 2-3 months after GK surgery. The median survival time was 12.2 months, and patients died of noncavernous sinus lesions. CONCLUSION: With high tumor control rate and few complications, GK surgery could become a main option for small benign or residual tumors involving the cavernous sinus. It is also very useful as part of comprehensive therapy for metastatic tumors in the cavernous sinus.
Authors: Kita Sallabanda; Sergey Usychkin; Fernando Puebla; José C Bustos; José A Gutiérrez-Diaz; Carmen Peraza; César Beltrán; Hugo Marsiglia; José Samblás Journal: J Radiosurg SBRT Date: 2011
Authors: Carl Wibom; Lina Mörén; Mads Aarhus; Per Morten Knappskog; Morten Lund-Johansen; Henrik Antti; A Tommy Bergenheim Journal: J Neurooncol Date: 2009-04-07 Impact factor: 4.130
Authors: Marco V Corniola; Pierre-Hugues Roche; Michaël Bruneau; Luigi M Cavallo; Roy T Daniel; Mahmoud Messerer; Sebastien Froelich; Paul A Gardner; Fred Gentili; Takeshi Kawase; Dimitrios Paraskevopoulos; Jean Régis; Henry W S Schroeder; Theodore H Schwartz; Marc Sindou; Jan F Cornelius; Marcos Tatagiba; Torstein R Meling Journal: Brain Spine Date: 2022-01-21