Twelve cases of uveal melanoma (T-3N-0M-0:11 patients, T-4N-0M-0:1 patient) treated with Gamma Knife stereotactic radiosurgery are reported. Our protocol includes preoperative ocular and systemic assessments with complete ocular examination, ophthalmoscopy, fundus photography fluorangiography, standardized echography, CT and MRI, chest X-rays. liver echography and blood tests. The follow-up program is mainly based on echographic evaluation of tumor thickness and size. The procedures include fixation of the eye, application of the stereotactic Leksell frame G, CT/MRI localization of the melanoma, dose planning and treatment with the Gamma Knife (B type). A mean surface dose of 55+-10 Gy was administered at the 60-90% isodose curve using 4- to 14-mm collimators and a number of shots ranging from 1 to 6. A significant reduction (10-41%) in echographic thickness of the tumor was shown in 6 cases with a follow-up of 3-12 months. In 4 patients, the tumor size was still unchanged after 1-10 months. The single high-dose radiation delivered to the target and the high spatial accuracy arc the main advantages of stereotactic radiosurgery for the treatment of posterior uveal melanomas. A longer followup is needed to further validate this new application of Gamma Knife radiosurgery.
Stereotactic radiosurgery of uveal melanomas: preliminary results with Gamma knife treatment
MARCHINI, Giorgio;TOMAZZOLI, Laura;GEROSA, Massimo;BRICOLO, Albino;FORONI, Roberto;BONOMI, Luciano
1995-01-01
Abstract
Twelve cases of uveal melanoma (T-3N-0M-0:11 patients, T-4N-0M-0:1 patient) treated with Gamma Knife stereotactic radiosurgery are reported. Our protocol includes preoperative ocular and systemic assessments with complete ocular examination, ophthalmoscopy, fundus photography fluorangiography, standardized echography, CT and MRI, chest X-rays. liver echography and blood tests. The follow-up program is mainly based on echographic evaluation of tumor thickness and size. The procedures include fixation of the eye, application of the stereotactic Leksell frame G, CT/MRI localization of the melanoma, dose planning and treatment with the Gamma Knife (B type). A mean surface dose of 55+-10 Gy was administered at the 60-90% isodose curve using 4- to 14-mm collimators and a number of shots ranging from 1 to 6. A significant reduction (10-41%) in echographic thickness of the tumor was shown in 6 cases with a follow-up of 3-12 months. In 4 patients, the tumor size was still unchanged after 1-10 months. The single high-dose radiation delivered to the target and the high spatial accuracy arc the main advantages of stereotactic radiosurgery for the treatment of posterior uveal melanomas. A longer followup is needed to further validate this new application of Gamma Knife radiosurgery.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.