
July 22,
2005
|
Noninvasive
radiotherapy effective for ear tumors
An MGH research team has shown that stereotactic radiotherapy (SRT) is
a safe and effective treatment for patients with vestibular schwannomas
— non-malignant tumors affecting nerves supplying the inner ears.
Patients with these tumors, which also are called acoustic neuromas, may
develop hearing loss and balance problems. Advanced cases can proceed
to facial weakness or paralysis and, if critical brain structures are
affected, may be life-threatening.
In a follow-up to a 1996 study, Annie Chan, MD, of MGH Radiation Oncology,
and her colleagues report in the July issue of Neurosurgery the largest
study of this application of SRT with the longest follow-up. "Our
results show that SRT provides a tumor control rate of 98 percent at five
years, which is comparable to that of the best surgical and radiosurgical
series," says Jay Loeffler, MD, chief of MGH Radiation Oncology and
the senior author of the paper.
SRT delivers highly focused radiation over a six-week course of treatment
and, in contrast to surgery and radiosurgery, is noninvasive. Information
from CT and MR imaging studies is used to carry out three-dimensional
treatment planning, and a noninvasive stereotactic frame immobilizes the
patient's head during radiation to assure precise treatment delivery.
"In addition to the excellent tumor control rate, SRT results in
very low treatment-related side effects," says Chan. "In our
study, none of the patients developed new facial weakness, and in patients
who already had facial weakness, the rate of worsening over five years
was only 1 percent. No additional tumor development or malignant transformation
was seen for up to 10 years after treatment." The paper's MGH co-authors
are Frederick Barker, MD, Hanne Kooy, PhD, Robert Martuza, MD, and Robert
Ojemann, MD.
|