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1.
PURPOSE: To evaluate the efficacy and toxicity of gamma knife radiosurgery in the treatment of melanoma metastases to the brain. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed 55 patients with single or multiple intracranial melanoma metastases treated at the University of California, San Francisco, with gamma knife radiosurgery from 1991 through 1995. Sixteen patients were treated with gamma knife radiosurgery for recurrence following previous radiation therapy, 11 received radiosurgery as a boost to whole-brain radiation therapy, and 28 had radiosurgery alone for initial management of brain metastases. The median minimum radiosurgery tumor dose for 140 treated lesions was 19 Gy (range, 10-22 Gy) prescribed at the 35% to 90% isodose contour (median, 50%). The median total target volume per patient was 6.1 cc (range, 0.25-28.3 cc). RESULTS: With a median follow-up of 75 weeks in living patients, the median survival times were 35 weeks overall: 35 weeks for patients with solitary metastases versus 33 weeks for those with multiple metastases. A factor that was significant in univariate analysis of survival was total target volume treated. This parameter remained significant on multivariate analysis. The actuarial median freedom from progression analyzed by lesion for 113 lesions in 46 patients with imaging follow-up was 89 weeks with 6-month and 1-year actuarial freedom from progression rates of 89% (95% confidence interval, 80%-95%) and 77% (95% confidence interval, 62%-87%). In univariate analysis, improved freedom from progression was associated with smaller target volume treated, smaller maximum diameter, or higher prescribed dose. Four patients (7%) developed acute Radiation Therapy Oncology Group grade > or = 2 morbidity, and five patients (9%) developed late grade > or = 2 morbidity. DISCUSSION: Median survival and freedom from progression in patients treated with radiosurgery for melanoma metastatic to the brain are comparable to results in published radiosurgery series of grouped histologies. For melanoma patients, total intracranial tumor volume appears to be of greater prognostic significance than the absolute number of metastases treated. We conclude that gamma knife radiosurgery is effective and should be considered among various management strategies.  相似文献   

2.
PURPOSE: Retrospective analysis of the influence of clinical and technical factors on local control and survival after radiosurgery for brain metastasis. PATIENTS AND METHODS: From January 1994 to December 1996, 42 patients presenting with 71 metastases underwent radiosurgery for brain metastasis. The median age was 56 years and the median Karnofsky index 80. Primary sites included: lung (20 patients), kidney (seven), breast (five), colon (two), melanoma (three), osteosarcoma (one) and it was unknown for three patients. Seventeen patients had extracranial metastasis. Twenty-four patients were treated at recurrence which occurred after whole brain irradiation (12 patients), surgical excision (four) or after both treatments (eight). Thirty-six sessions of radiosurgery have been realized for one metastasis and 13 for two, three or four lesions. The median metastasis diameter was 21 mm and the median volume 1.7 cm3. The median peripheral dose to the lesion was 14 Gy, and the median dose at the isocenter 20 Gy. RESULTS: Sixty-five metastases were evaluable for response analysis. The overall local control rate was 82% and the 1-year actuarial rate was 72%. In univariate analysis, theoretical radioresistance (P = 0.001), diameter less than 3 cm (P = 0.039) and initial treatment with radiosurgery (P = 0.041) were significantly associated with increased local control. Only the first two factors remained significant in multivariate analysis. No prognostic factor of overall survival was identified. The median survival was 12 months. Six patients had a symptomatic oedema (RTOG grade 2), only one of which requiring a surgical excision. CONCLUSION: In conclusion, 14 Gy delivered at the periphery of metastasis seems to be a sufficient dose to control most brain metastases, with a minimal toxicity. Better results were obtained for lesions initially treated with radiosurgery, theoretically radioresistant and with a diameter less than 3 cm.  相似文献   

3.
PURPOSE: To evaluate the role of stereotactic radiosurgery in the management of recurrent malignant gliomas. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We treated 35 patients with large (median treatment volume, 28 cm3) recurrent tumors that had failed to respond to conventional treatment. Twenty-six patients (74%) had glioblastomas multiforme (GBM) and nine (26%) had anaplastic astrocytomas (AA). RESULTS: The mean time from diagnosis to radiosurgery was 10 months (range, 1 to 36), from radiosurgery to death, 8.0 months (range, 1 to 23). Twenty-one GBM (81%) and six AA (67%) patients have died. The actuarial survival time for all patients was 21 months from diagnosis and 8 months from radiosurgery. Twenty-two of 26 patients (85%) died of local or marginal failure, three (12%) of noncontiguous failure, and one (4%) of CSF dissemination. Age (P = .0405) was associated with improved survival on multivariate analysis, and age (P = .0110) and Karnofsky performance status (KPS) (P = .0285) on univariate analysis. Histology, treatment volume, and treatment dose were not significant variables by univariate analysis. Seven patients required surgical resection for increasing mass effect a mean of 4.0 months after radiosurgery, for an actuarial reoperation rate of 31%. Surgery did not significantly influence survival. At surgery, four patients had recurrent tumor, two had radiation necrosis, and one had both tumor and necrosis. The actuarial necrosis rate was 14% and the pathologic findings could have been predicted by the integrated logistic formula for developing symptomatic brain injury. CONCLUSION: Stereotactic radiosurgery appears to prolong survival for recurrent malignant gliomas and has a lower reoperative rate for symptomatic necrosis than does brachytherapy. Patterns of failure are similar for both of these techniques.  相似文献   

4.
BACKGROUND: Stereotactic radiosurgery is the principal alternative to microsurgical resection for acoustic neuromas (vestibular schwannomas). The goals of radiosurgery are the long-term prevention of tumor growth, maintenance of neurologic function, and prevention of new neurologic deficits. Although acceptable short-term outcomes have been reported, long-term outcomes have not been well documented. METHODS: We evaluated 162 consecutive patients who underwent radiosurgery for acoustic neuromas between 1987 and 1992 by means of serial imaging tests, clinical evaluations, and a survey between 5 and 10 years after the procedure. The average dose of radiation to the tumor margin was 16 Gy, and the mean transverse diameter of the tumor was 22 mm (range, 8 to 39). Resection had been performed previously in 42 patients (26 percent); in 13 patients the tumor represented a recurrence of disease after a previous total resection. Facial function was normal in 76 percent of the patients before radiosurgery, and 20 percent had useful hearing. RESULTS: The rate of tumor control (with no resection required) was 98 percent. One hundred tumors (62 percent) became smaller, 53 (33 percent) remained unchanged in size, and 9 (6 percent) became slightly larger. Resection was performed in four patients (2 percent) within four years after radiosurgery. Normal facial function was preserved in 79 percent of the patients after five years (House-Brackmann grade 1), and normal trigeminal function was preserved in 73 percent. Fifty-one percent of the patients had no change in hearing ability. No new neurologic deficits appeared more than 28 months after radiosurgery. An outcomes questionnaire was returned by 115 patients (77 percent of the 149 patients still living). Fifty-four of these patients (47 percent) were employed at the time of radiosurgery, and 37 (69 percent) remained so. Radiosurgery was believed to have been successful by all 30 patients who had undergone surgery previously and by 81 (95 percent) of the 85 who had not. Thirty-six of the 115 patients (31 percent) described at least one complication, which resolved in 56 percent of those cases. CONCLUSIONS: Radiosurgery can provide long-term control of acoustic neuromas while preserving neurologic function.  相似文献   

5.
Since the first treatment of acoustic neurinoma using the gamma-knife by Leksell, a series of cases have been reported with good control rates. However, the most frequent complication is delayed hearing loss which occurs in more than 50% of patients. The purpose of this study was to define a safe dose by analyzing the radiosurgical dose-response relationship and histological effects on the normal cochlear nerve in rabbit. The rabbits had computed tomography (CT)-guided stereotactic radiosurgery on their cochlear nerves in the internal auditory canal with a 4 mm collimator focusing of a gamma-unit. Maximum doses of 10, 20, 30, 40, 60, 80, 100, 200 and 500 Gy were administered. After the radiosurgery, auditory brain stem responses (ABR) and the behavior of the rabbits were evaluated periodically. At the conclusion, histological investigations were performed. No physiological or histological findings were observed from doses of 30 Gy or below during the 12 month period after the radiosurgery. A dose of 100 Gy caused a severe ABR threshold elevation, vestibular dysfunction and facial palsy. Necrosis and demyelination of nerves were observed pathologically. In this study, we determined that the safe dose to the normal cochlear nerve during radiosurgery was under 40 Gy in rabbits, and complications seemed to vary due to individual differences in radiation tolerance.  相似文献   

6.
The treatment results of cavernous sinus meningioma with gamma-radiosurgery are reported. There were 18 cases of cavernous sinus meningioma, including 2 males and 16 females, whose age ranged from 39 to 63 with an average of 51.0 years. As prior treatments, operative tumor resection or biopsy had been carried out in 14 cases, and the pathology was verified. The other 4 cases were diagnosed clinically with radiological studies. The mean tumor diameter was 28.3mm (17.7-35.0) during the radiosurgery. The maximum dose ranged from 22 to 36Gy (mean 28.0Gy), with the marginal tumor dose ranging from 11 to 18Gy (mean 13.9Gy). Irradiation to the near-by optic nerves was less than 10Gy. Follow-up period ranged from 12 to 50 months with a mean of 25.5 months. MRI showed a minor tumor shrinkage in 9 (50.0%) and no obvious change in 8 (44.4%), and tumor progression in 1 (5.6%), which required a 2nd radiosurgery. Neurologically facial pain and facial dysesthesia were well improved (7/13). However the ophthalmoparesis was usually unchanged and only 1 out of 11 (9.1%) improved after radiosurgery. Deterioration of neurological signs was rare. Symptomatic edema presenting neurological signs was not seen. In conclusion, radiosurgery with a gamma-knife is one of the useful alternatives to operative intervention in the treatment of cavernous sinus meningiomas, not only for tumor control, but also for relief from the symptoms.  相似文献   

7.
Prognostic factors for hearing preservation following observation-only versus STI were compared in patients with acoustic neuroma. There were 48 patients with acoustic neuroma treated by fractionated STI. Between 1991 and 1997, patients were given 36 Gy in 20 fractions over 5 weeks (36 Gy/20 Fr/5 wks) to 44 Gy/22 Fr/6 wks followed by a 4 Gy boost. A linear accelerator was used for irradiation. Twenty-three patients with acoustic neuroma who were followed without any treatment (observation-only group) were selected as matched controls. The largest hearing loss was observed at the frequency of 2 kHz in the observation-only group and at 1-2 kHz in the STI group. Hearing loss at 1 kHz was more frequent in the STI group (p < 0.01). There were no significant prognostic factors which predicted hearing preservation in the observation-only group. Stereotactic irradiation has been suggested to damage to cochlear nerve function in patients whose cochlear nerve had been impaired already. Tumor control rate of STI appeared to be as good as single fraction radiosurgery rates in the literature and better than in the observation-only group. Hearing preservation rate in the STI group was as good as in the observation-only group and appeared to be better than single fraction radiosurgery. In conclusion, because there were no factors predictive of hearing preservation in the observation-only group, it is difficult to select patients for observation only. Fractionated STI is potentially the treatment of choice, resulting in the same hearing preservation rate as achieved with observation only, although longer follow-up periods are needed.  相似文献   

8.
Radical microsurgical resection is the procedure of choice for tentorial meningiomas. Despite advances in microsurgery, tentorial meningiomas continue to challenge surgeons and patients. To evaluate the response of tentorial meningiomas, we evaluated 41 patients who had Gamma knife stereotactic radiosurgery during a 9 year period. Patient age varied from 32 to 79 years. Headache, trigeminal neuralgia, or facial paraesthesia were the most common presenting symptoms. Sensory deficits in the distribution of the trigeminal nerve were the most common finding. Eighteen patients (44%) had undergone between 1 and 5 (mean, 1.9) resections prior to radiosurgery; 23 had tumors diagnosed by neuroimaging. The average tumor diameter in this series was 20 mm. The maximum tumor dose varied from 24 to 40 Gy (mean, 30.5 Gy), and the tumor margin dose varied from 12 to 20 Gy (mean, 15.3 Gy). During the average follow-up interval of 3 years (range, 1-8 years), 19 patients had clinical improvement, 20 remained stable, and 2 patients deteriorated. Follow-up imaging showed a reduction in tumor size in 18 patients, no further tumor growth in 22, and an increase in tumor size in one (overall tumor control rate of 98%). Stereotactic radiosurgery using the Gamma Knife was a safe and effective primary or adjuvant treatment for patients with tentorial meningiomas.  相似文献   

9.
OBJECTIVES: To measure the prevalence of hearing aid use among older adults with hearing loss and to identify factors associated with those currently using hearing aids. DESIGN: Population-based cohort study. SETTING: The south-central Wisconsin community of Beaver Dam. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 1629 adults, aged 48 to 92 years, who have hearing loss and are participating in the Epidemiology of Hearing Loss Study and the Beaver Dam Eye Study. MEASUREMENTS: A hearing-related risk factor and medical history questionnaire, the Hearing Handicap Inventory for the Elderly (screening version), screening tympanometry, pure-tone air- and bone-conduction audiometry, and word recognition tests were administered by trained examiners using standard protocols. RESULTS: The prevalence of current hearing aid use among those with a hearing loss (pure-tone average > 25 decibels hearing level over 500, 1000, 2000, and 4000 Hertz, worse ear) was 14.6%. The prevalence was 55% in a subset of the most severely affected participants. In univariate analyses, current hearing aid use was associated with age, severity of loss, word recognition scores, self-reported hearing loss, self-perceived hearing handicap, and history of noise exposure. Factors associated with current hearing aid use in multivariate logistic regression models were age, severity of loss, education, word recognition scores, Hearing Handicap Inventory for the Elderly (screening version) score, and self-report of a hearing loss. CONCLUSIONS: Few older adults with hearing loss are currently utilizing hearing aids. Improved screening and intervention programs to identify older adults who would benefit from amplification are needed to improve hearing-related quality of life for this large segment of the population.  相似文献   

10.
The purpose of this study was to compare the efficacy of stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) and brachytherapy in the treatment of recurrent glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). The patients had either progressive GBM or pathologically proven GBM at recurrence after previous treatment for a lower grade astrocytoma. Thirty-two patients were treated with interstitial brachytherapy, and 86 received treatment with stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS). The patient characteristics were similar in the two groups. Those patients treated with SRS had a median tumor volume of 10.1 cm3 and received a median peripheral tumor dose of 13 Gy. Patients treated with brachytherapy had a median tumor volume of 29 cm3. Median dose to the periphery of the tumor volume was 50 Gy delivered at a median dose rate of 43 cGy/hour. Twenty-one patients (24%) treated with SRS were alive, with a median follow-up of 17.5 months. Median actuarial survival, measured from the time of treatment for recurrence, for all patients treated with SRS was 10.2 months, with survivals of 12 and 24 months being 45 and 19%, respectively. A younger age and a smaller tumor volume were predictive of better outcome. The tumor dose, the interval from initial diagnosis, and the need for reoperation were not predictive of outcome after SRS. Five patients (16%) treated with brachytherapy were alive, with a median follow-up of 43.3 months. The median actuarial survival for all patients treated with brachytherapy was 11.5 months. Survivals of 12 and 24 months were 44 and 17%, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
BE Pollock  LD Lunsford  G Norén 《Canadian Metallurgical Quarterly》1998,43(3):475-81; discussion 481-3
PURPOSE: To discuss how the evolution of vestibular schwannoma radiosurgery, changes in health care delivery, and patient accessibility to medical information will affect the management of vestibular schwannomas in the future. CONCEPT: In comparison with microsurgical resection of vestibular schwannomas, radiosurgery has a lower morbidity rate, a similar risk of requiring further surgery, and higher patient satisfaction. As this information becomes more widely available to patients and third-party payors, radiosurgery may replace surgical resection as the preferred management strategy for patients with small to medium sized vestibular schwannomas in the United States. RATIONALE: It is estimated that 2500 patients are diagnosed with vestibular schwannomas each year in the United States. Assuming that 80% undergo surgery, 2000 operations are performed annually for newly diagnosed vestibular schwannomas. Data available since 1987 regarding the number of cases for which gamma knife radiosurgery was performed were used to predict the number of patients who will undergo vestibular schwannoma radiosurgery in the future. If the current trend continues, an equal number of patients will undergo surgical resection and radiosurgery to treat their vestibular schwannomas (approximately 1000/yr) sometime between 2005 and 2010. Moreover, it is predicted that by 2020, two-thirds of the patients who are newly diagnosed with vestibular schwannomas will undergo radiosurgery, with surgical resection being reserved for patients with large tumors associated with symptomatic brain stem compression. DISCUSSION: Early data regarding vestibular schwannoma radiosurgery predicted an exponential growth curve. Although it is premature to assume that the current trend will continue, it is likely that an ever increasing percentage of patients will undergo radiosurgery as accessibility to this alternative increases, and more data are published regarding long-term tumor growth control rates. If the mathematical model proves to be accurate, then stereotactic radiosurgery will replace surgical resection as the preferred management strategy for the majority of patients with vestibular schwannomas.  相似文献   

12.
BACKGROUND: Reports on locoregional control and survival of squamous cell carcinoma of buccal mucosa are scarce in literature. In this study, a single institutions's experience of combined surgery and postoperative radiotherapy (RT) for buccal mucosal malignancy with favorable results was analyzed and presented. The prognostic factors on locoregional control were also discussed. METHODS: From January 1988 to July 1994, 57 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of buccal mucosa treated by surgery and RT were reviewed. The distributions according to American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) staging were: stage II, 6; stage III, 21; and stage IV, 30 patients. Total dose of RT at the buccal area ranged from 45 Gy to 68.4 Gy, median 61.2 Gy. Tumor-related factors (AJCC stage, T stage, histologic grading, pathologic tumor invasion to skin of cheek, adjacent bony structures, and regional lymph nodes) and treatment-related factors (surgical margin, radiation dose, and the time interval between operation and RT) were analyzed to determine their influence on locoregional control. RESULTS: Three-year actuarial locoregional control rate, overall survival rate, and disease-specific survival rates were 64%, 55%, and 62%, respectively. Ten of these 22 patients (45%) with recurrent tumors were reoperated, but only 2 patients were successfully salvaged. Positive surgical margin and tumor invasion to skin of cheek were significantly poor prognostic factors on locoregional control by univariate analysis. In multivariate analysis, tumor invasion to skin of cheek was the only prognostic factor (p = .0014). CONCLUSIONS: Locoregional failure was the major cause of death for squamous buccal mucosa cancers managed with surgery and RT. Few recurrences could be detected early and successfully salvaged. Skin of cheek involvement is an important prognostic factor for buccal mucosa cancers.  相似文献   

13.
OBJECT: The indications, operative findings, and outcomes of vestibular schwannoma microsurgery are controversial when it is performed after stereotactic radiosurgery. To address these issues, the authors reviewed the experience at two academic medical centers. METHODS: During a 10-year interval, 452 patients with unilateral vestibular schwannomas underwent gamma knife radiosurgery. Thirteen patients (2.9%) underwent delayed microsurgery at a median of 27 months (range 7-72 months) after they had undergone radiosurgery. Six of the 13 patients had undergone one or more microsurgical procedures before they underwent radiosurgery. The indications for surgery were tumor enlargement with stable symptoms in five patients, tumor enlargement with new or increased symptoms in five patients, and increased symptoms without evidence of tumor growth in three patients. Gross-total resection was achieved in seven patients and near-gross-total resection in four patients. The surgery was described as more difficult than that typically performed for schwannoma in eight patients, no different in four patients, and easier in one patient. At the last follow-up evaluation, three patients had normal or near-normal facial function, three patients had moderate facial dysfunction, and seven had facial palsies. Three patients were incapable of caring for themselves, and one patient died of progression of a malignant triton tumor. CONCLUSIONS: Failed radiosurgery in cases of vestibular schwannoma was rare. No clear relationship was demonstrated between the use of radiosurgery and the subsequent ease or difficulty of delayed microsurgery. Because some patients have temporary enlargement of their tumor after radiosurgery, the need for surgical resection after radiosurgery should be reviewed with the neurosurgeon who performed the radiosurgery and should be delayed until sustained tumor growth is confirmed. A subtotal tumor resection should be considered for patients who require surgical resection of their tumor after vestibular schwannoma radiosurgery.  相似文献   

14.
BACKGROUND: Radiotherapy is used in the treatment of laryngeal carcinoma. The search for biologic parameters that could be used to identify patients who will respond to radiotherapy is crucial. The aim of this study was to determine whether the Ki-67 and p53 indices and the pretreatment apoptotic index would be useful in predicting local control and survival for a group of laryngeal carcinoma patients given postoperative radiotherapy. METHODS: Fifty-seven patients with laryngeal carcinoma treated between 1988 and 1993 were included in this study. Postoperative radiotherapy was given to a mean dose of 57.7 gray (Gy) (range, 50-68; median, 60) in 2-Gy daily fractions. Ki-67 and p53 immunostaining were performed on paraffin-embedded tissue. Cells were evaluated for apoptosis using hematoxylin and eosin-stained slides. Clinicopathologic tumor characteristics were studied in relation to Ki-67, p53, and apoptotic indices, and as prognostic factors for local control and survival in both univariate and multivariate analysis. RESULTS: The Ki-67, p53, and pretreatment apoptotic indices were not related to any clinicopathologic tumor characteristics. Five-year actuarial local control for the whole group was 47%. Patients with tumors that had low Ki-67 proliferation had better long term local control (P < 0.01). and survival (P < 0.03). p53 expression was not predictive of local control or survival in this study. Patients with tumors that had low pretreatment apoptotic indices had better local control (P < 0.049) and survival (P < 0.056) than patients with highly apoptotic tumors. Tumor extension and the pretreatment apoptotic index were significant predictive factors for local control and survival in multivariate analysis. CONCLUSIONS: Ki-67 proliferation measurement and the pretreatment apoptotic index are useful in predicting the clinical outcome of laryngeal carcinoma patients referred for radiotherapy. The role of p53 oncoprotein determination in predicting these outcomes is unclear. Assessment of biologic tumor characteristics could aid in the selection of patients for different treatment strategies.  相似文献   

15.
PURPOSE: To evaluate the spatiotemporal evolution of radiosurgical induced changes both in metastases and in normal brain tissue adjacent to the lesions by serial magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Thirty-five intracranial metastases of different primaries were treated in 25 patients by single high-dose radiosurgery. MR images acquired before radiosurgery were available in all patients. Sixty-three follow-up MR studies were performed in these patients including T2- and contrast-enhanced T1-weighted MR images. The average follow-up time was 9 +/- 5 months (mean +/- standard deviation [SD]). Based on contrast-enhanced T1-weighted MR images, tumor response was radiologically classified in the following four groups: stable disease was assumed if the average tumor diameter after treatment did not show a tumor shrinkage of more than 50% and an increase of more than 25%, partial remission as a shrinkage of tumor size of more than 50%, a disappearance of contrast-enhancing tumor as a complete remission, and an increase of tumor diameter of more than 25% as tumor progress. Moreover, we analysed signal changes on T2-weighted images in brain parenchyma adjacent to the enhancing metastases. RESULTS: The overall mean survival time was 10.5 +/- 7 months, with a 1-year actuarial survival rate of 40%. Stable disease, partial or complete remission of the metastatic tumor was observed in 22 patients (88%). Central or homogeneous loss of contrast enhancement appeared to be a good prognostic sign for stable disease or partial remission. This association was statistically significant (p < 0.05). Three patients (12%) suffered from tumor progression. In eight patients (32%) with stable disease or partial remission, signal changes on T2-weighted images were observed in tissue adjacent to the contrast enhancing lesions. A progression of the high signal on T2-weighted images was seen in seven of the eight patients between 3 and 6 months after therapy, followed by a signal regression 6-18 months after irradiation. CONCLUSION: MR imaging is a sensitive imaging tool to evaluate tumor response as well as the presence or absence of adjacent parenchymal changes following radiosurgery. Loss of homogeneous or central contrast enhancement on Gd-enhanced MR images appeared to be a good prognostic sign for tumor response. Tumor shrinkage seems not to be dependent on time. In addition, most cases of radiation induced changes in normal brain parenchyma observed on T2-weighted images seem to be self limited.  相似文献   

16.
Vestibular schwannoma occurs both as a sporadic tumour and in the dominantly inherited familial cancer syndrome neurofibromatosis type 2 (NF2). The gene for NF2 has recently been isolated on chromosome 22, and the demonstration of inactivating germline mutations in NF2 patients and NF2 associated tumours suggests that it act as a tumour suppressor. We have investigated 85 sporadic and 2 NF2 associated vestibular schwannomas, and one vagal schwannoma for chromosome 22 allele loss and NF2 gene mutations. A further 7 vestibular schwannomas were investigated for NF2 mutations only. Chromosome 22 allele loss was detected in 34 of 87 vestibular schwannomas and in the vagal nerve schwannoma. Six exons of the NF2 gene were investigated by SSCP analysis in all 95 tumours. Somatic NF2 gene mutations were detected in 13 non-familial vestibular schwannomas and in one of the NF2 vestibular schwannomas. Seven non-familial tumours with an NF2 gene mutation also displayed a chromosome 22 allele loss. Thirteen of the mutations were predicted to produce truncation of the NF2 protein. These results suggest that somatic mutations of the NF2 tumour suppressor gene are a critical step in the pathogenesis of both familial and non-familial vestibular schwannoma and that the mechanism of tumourigenesis complies with a 'two-hit' mutation model.  相似文献   

17.
Prognostic factors for disease-free survival in patients with endometrial carcinoma have been retrospectively assessed in 611 cases diagnosed, treated and followed at our institution between 1971 and 1990. Age, symptoms, comorbidity, FIGO clinical stage, and hysterectomy, as well as size and location of the tumor, histologic type, FIGO grade, myometrial invasion, lympho-vascular invasion, and final surgical stage have all been evaluated by univariate and multivariate methods. A mathematical predictive model has been applied to define risk groups, and the applied adjuvant treatments have been evaluated according to these groups. One hundred and thirty-one patients were not treated primarily with surgery, and the actuarial 5 and 10-year disease-free survival was 51.6% and 34.7% respectively. Only clinical stage (FIGO 1971) and modality of radiotherapy were significant prognostic factors. For the 480 patients treated primarily by surgery, independent prognostic factors for 5 and 10-year disease-free survival in multivariate analysis were extrauterine spread, absence of diagnostic comorbidity, FIGO grades 2-3, lympho-vascular invasion, age > 65 years and cervical extension. Five and 10-year disease-free survival was 81.5% and 73.4% respectively. Three risk groups were obtained, whose survival was not affected by the adjuvant treatments applied.  相似文献   

18.
Six novel mutations were identified in the NF2 tumor suppressor gene in a panel of meningiomas and neurinomas. Screening was performed using a combination of single-strand conformation polymorphism and heteroduplex analyses on polymerase chain reaction-amplified DNA from tumors and matched peripheral blood lymphocytes. Mutations involved exons 2, 7, 11 and 12, and corresponded to three frameshift, one nonsense, one missense and one polymorphism.  相似文献   

19.
DF Wilson  RS Hodgson  JM Talbot 《Canadian Metallurgical Quarterly》1997,18(1):101-6; discussion 106-7
The objective of this study was to investigate the effects of endolymphatic sac obliteration for stabilization of progressive hearing loss in patients with the large vestibular aqueduct syndrome. This was a retrospective case review conducted at a private neurootologic office in a metropolitan area. Seven ears in six patients were subjected to surgery for obliteration of the endolymphatic sac in an effort to stabilize progressive hearing loss associated with the large vestibular aqueduct syndrome. The study population was composed of four boys and two girls 4-17 years of age. The large vestibular aqueduct was unilateral in two patients and bilateral in four patients. All seven ears demonstrated progressive sensorineural hearing loss preoperatively. Surgical tissue obliteration was performed via a transmastoid approach in seven ears. The main outcome measure was comparison of pre- and postoperative hearing levels and stability. Magnetic resonance imaging also was performed in all cases at least 6 months postoperatively to determine patency of the endolymphatic sac and vestibular aqueduct. Six of seven ears maintained stable hearing during the follow-up period, which ranged from 6 months to 6 years (mean 3.2 years). One patient showed continued progression of hearing loss postoperatively. All seven ears demonstrated continued obliteration on postoperative imaging studies. Surgical obliteration of the endolymphatic sac may stabilize hearing in patients with the large vestibular aqueduct syndrome and progressive hearing loss. These results support the theory of pressure or fluid reflux into the labyrinth as a cause of progressive hearing loss in these patients.  相似文献   

20.
BACKGROUND: A retrospective study of patients undergoing stereotactic radiosurgery for one to four brain metastases from nonsmall lung cell carcinoma (NSCLC) was performed to document outcomes and risks. METHODS: Seventy-seven patients underwent radiosurgery during a 7-year interval; 71 also underwent whole brain radiation therapy. Univariate and multivariate analyses were used to determine significant prognostic factors affecting survival. RESULTS: The overall median survival was 10 months after radiosurgery, and 15 months from the diagnosis of brain metastases. Five factors significantly affected survival: extent of systemic disease, presence of a neurologic deficit, size of the intracranial tumor, initial imaging appearance of intratumoral necrosis, and initial resection of the primary tumor of the chest. Median survival time was 26 months in a subgroup of patients with no extracranial metastases, no neurologic deficits, and a small tumor without necrosis. The authors evaluated 91 tumors with imaging. Local tumor control was achieved in 77 lesions (85%) and tumoral radiation necrosis developed in 4 lesions (4.4%). Nineteen new metastatic tumors developed during the observation interval. CONCLUSIONS: Stereotactic radiosurgery for NSCLC brain metastases is effective and is associated with few complications. The early detection of brain metastases and treatment with radiosurgery combined with radiation therapy provide the opportunity for extended high quality survival.  相似文献   

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