| Literature DB >> 34306912 |
Mohamed H Khattab1, Alexander D Sherry2, Nauman Manzoor3, Douglas J Totten2, Guozhen Luo1, Lola B Chambless4, Alejandro Rivas3, David S Haynes3, Anthony J Cmelak1, Albert Attia1,4.
Abstract
Objective Local failure of incompletely resected vestibular schwannoma (VS) following salvage stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) using standard doses of 12 to 13 Gy is common. We hypothesized that dose-escalated SRS, corrected for biologically effective dose, would have superior local control of high-grade VS progressing after subtotal or near-total resection compared with standard-dose SRS. Design Retrospective cohort study. Setting Tertiary academic referral center. Participants Adult patients treated with linear accelerator-based SRS for progressive VS following subtotal or near-total resection. Main Outcome Measures Dose-escalated SRS was defined by a biologically effective dose exceeding a single-fraction 13-Gy regimen. Study outcomes were local control and neurologic sequelae of SRS. Binary logistic regression was used to evaluate predictors of study outcomes. Results A total of 18 patients with progressive disease following subtotal (71%) and near-total (39%) resection of Koos grade IV disease (94%) were enrolled. Of the 18 patients, 7 were treated with dose-escalated SRS and 11 with standard-dose SRS. Over a median follow-up of 32 months after SRS, local control was 100% in the dose-escalated cohort and 91% in the standard-dose cohort ( p = 0.95). Neurologic sequelae occurred in 28% of patients, including 60% of dose-escalated cohort and 40% of the standard-dose cohort ( p = 0.12), although permanent neurologic sequelae were low at 6%. Conclusions Dose-escalated SRS has similar local control of recurrent VS following progression after subtotal or near-total resection and does not appear to have higher neurologic sequalae. Larger studies are needed. Thieme. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: acoustic neuroma; cohort; outcomes; progression; radiation dose; salvage; stereotactic radiosurgery; vestibular schwannoma
Year: 2020 PMID: 34306912 PMCID: PMC8289534 DOI: 10.1055/s-0040-1712462
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol Surg B Skull Base ISSN: 2193-634X