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Two forms of radiosurgery for brain metastases are equally effective

With cancer spread to the brain on the rise, patients benefit from advanced techniques, say researchers

Date:
February 23, 2016
Source:
Thomas Jefferson University
Summary:
While two advanced radiosurgery approaches -- Gamma Knife and RapidArc® -- offer different strengths, they are equally effective at eradicating cancer in the brain, report researchers.
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While two advanced radiosurgery approaches -- Gamma Knife and RapidArc® -- offer different strengths, they are equally effective at eradicating cancer in the brain, say researchers at Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center.

Their study, published online Jan. 25, 2016 in Frontiers in Oncology, compared the two different devices in brain radiosurgery. Six patients, each with three or four brain metastases, were studied.

The Gamma Knife was slightly more effective than RapidArc® at focusing the beam of radiation, thus limiting spread to normal tissue, and RapidArc® offered much quicker treatment compared to the Gamma Knife, researchers say. Gamma Knife treatment usually take 60-100 minutes, about 3-5 times longer than RapidArc®, they say.

"In the end, using one or the other doesn't make a significant clinical difference and that is important to know because physicians and patients now know they have a choice of treatments," says the study's senior author, associate professor Wenyin Shi, M.D., Ph.D., co-director of the Jefferson Brain Tumor Program.

Thomas Jefferson University was one of the first institutions in the country to treat patients with RapidArc® technology. Its physicians have been using Gamma Knife technology for 21 years.

Understanding the benefits of advanced radiosurgery technology is essential because there has been, and will continue to be, an increase in cases of brain metastases -- tumors that spread to the brain from cancer somewhere else in the body, says co-author Adam Dicker, M.D., Ph.D., Chair and Professor of Radiation Oncology, Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics at the Sidney Kimmel Medical College at Thomas Jefferson University.

"As drug therapy for cancer becomes better at controlling systemic cancer, disease in the brain increases over time. The brain is a sanctuary for cancer -- chemotherapies and targeted agents can't reach the brain and the central nervous system because of the blood-brain barrier," Dr. Dicker says. "The results are that a number of different cancers are now showing up in the brain."

Radiosurgery delivers a focused dose of radiation on tumors in order to shrink or kill the cancer, while sparing normal brain tissue. The Gamma Knife, invented in Sweden, features a circular array of 201 beams of gamma radiation that meet at a single point. The downside of the treatment, which is very accurate, is that patients wear a helmet that is fixed to the skull, Dr. Shi says. The procedure can also take a long time, he says.

RapidArc® radiation is a type of linear accelerator that emits high-energy X-rays (also known as photons). Very small beams with varying intensities are aimed at a tumor and then rotated around the patient. This results in attacking the target in a complete three-dimensional manner. A single treatment can take as little as 10-15 minutes.

"We can do a comparison study like this because our Brain Tumor Program is a long-standing extremely collaborative group of specialists," Dr. Dicker says.


Story Source:

Materials provided by Thomas Jefferson University. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Haisong Liu, David W. Andrews, James J. Evans, Maria Werner-Wasik, Yan Yu, Adam Paul Dicker, Wenyin Shi. Plan Quality and Treatment Efficiency for Radiosurgery to Multiple Brain Metastases: Non-Coplanar RapidArc vs. Gamma Knife. Frontiers in Oncology, 2016; 6 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2016.00026

Cite This Page:

Thomas Jefferson University. "Two forms of radiosurgery for brain metastases are equally effective." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 23 February 2016. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/02/160223132549.htm>.
Thomas Jefferson University. (2016, February 23). Two forms of radiosurgery for brain metastases are equally effective. ScienceDaily. Retrieved March 28, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/02/160223132549.htm
Thomas Jefferson University. "Two forms of radiosurgery for brain metastases are equally effective." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/02/160223132549.htm (accessed March 28, 2024).

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