| Literature DB >> 32617203 |
Pantaleo Romanelli1, Cynthia Chuang2, Antonio Meola3, Radhika M Bodduluri4, John R Adler5,6.
Abstract
Introduction The treatment of trigeminal neuralgia (TN) is one of the most demanding of all radiosurgery procedures, requiring accurate delivery and sharp dose fall off. ZAP-X®, a new, innovative frameless radiosurgical device, maybe an attractive platform for the treatment of TN and other functional brain disorders. Here, we compared the dosimetry of ZAP-X plans for a single patient to that generated by a well-established dedicated radiosurgery device, the CyberKnife. Methods Radiosurgery plans that delineated the cranial nerve from a single patient's fused computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging (CT-MR) data set were planned on both the ZAP-X and CyberKnife, with the latter serving as a validated benchmark. The same target and treatment planning constraints were applied. Plans were evaluated by a physician with experience treating TN and a medical physicist. The ZAP-X treatment plan used two isocenters delivered through 4-mm collimators based on a non-isocentric plan that delivered 29,441 MU through 81 beams. The CyberKnife plans used a 5-mm collimator for a non-isocentric plan that delivered 17,880 MU through 88 beams. Results Based on visual inspection, the isodose volumes covered by ZAP-X and CyberKnife were similar at the prescription isodose (70% and 80%, respectively, with a maximum dose (Dmax) of 7500 cGy. The conformality index was better for the CyberKnife as compared to ZAP-X. However, the irradiated volumes were smaller at the 50%, 20%, and 10% isodoses for ZAP-X (0.12 cc, 0.57 cc, and 1.69 for ZAP-X; 0.18 cc, 0.91 cc, and 3.41 cc for CyberKnife). In particular, the 20% and 10% isodose volumes were much smaller for ZAP-X, especially on the axial and sagittal planes. Conclusions ZAP-X treatment planning for TN compares favorably with equivalent planning on CyberKnife. The brain volumes containing the 20% and 10% isodoses are smaller using ZAP-X, thus relatively sparing critical structures close to the target, including the Gasserian ganglion and brainstem. This feature could be of clinical relevance by potentially reducing treatment-related complications.Entities:
Keywords: cyberknife; gamma knife; neurosurgery; radiation oncology; radiosurgery; srs; stereotactic radiosurgery; trigeminal neuralgia; zap; zap-x
Year: 2020 PMID: 32617203 PMCID: PMC7325335 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.8324
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Comparison of the prescription isodose curves. Note that ZAP-X uses 70% and CyberKnife uses 80% as their prescription lines.
ZAP-X: ZAP Surgical Systems, Inc., San Carlos, CA; CyberKnife: Accuray Incorporated, Sunnyvale, CA
Figure 250%, 20%, and 10% isodose lines for ZAP-X and CyberKnife
ZAP-X: ZAP Surgical Systems, Inc., San Carlos, CA; CyberKnife: Accuray Incorporated, Sunnyvale, CA