• Journal of neurosurgery · Nov 2015

    Skull base chondrosarcoma radiosurgery: report of the North American Gamma Knife Consortium.

    • Hideyuki Kano, Jason Sheehan, Penny K Sneed, Heyoung L McBride, Byron Young, Christopher Duma, David Mathieu, Zachary Seymour, Michael W McDermott, Douglas Kondziolka, Aditya Iyer, and L Dade Lunsford.
    • Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania;
    • J. Neurosurg. 2015 Nov 1;123(5):1268-75.

    ObjectStereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) is a potentially important option for patients with skull base chondrosarcomas. The object of this study was to analyze the outcomes of SRS for chondrosarcoma patients who underwent this treatment as a part of multimodality management.MethodsSeven participating centers of the North American Gamma Knife Consortium (NAGKC) identified 46 patients who underwent SRS for skull base chondrosarcomas. Thirty-six patients had previously undergone tumor resections and 5 had been treated with fractionated radiation therapy (RT). The median tumor volume was 8.0 cm3 (range 0.9-28.2 cm3), and the median margin dose was 15 Gy (range 10.5-20 Gy). Kaplan-Meier analysis was used to calculate progression-free and overall survival rates.ResultsAt a median follow-up of 75 months after SRS, 8 patients were dead. The actuarial overall survival after SRS was 89% at 3 years, 86% at 5 years, and 76% at 10 years. Local tumor progression occurred in 10 patients. The rate of progression-free survival (PFS) after SRS was 88% at 3 years, 85% at 5 years, and 70% at 10 years. Prior RT was significantly associated with shorter PFS. Eight patients required salvage resection, and 3 patients (7%) developed adverse radiation effects. Cranial nerve deficits improved in 22 (56%) of the 39 patients who deficits before SRS. Clinical improvement after SRS was noted in patients with abducens nerve paralysis (61%), oculomotor nerve paralysis (50%), lower cranial nerve dysfunction (50%), optic neuropathy (43%), facial neuropathy (38%), trochlear nerve paralysis (33%), trigeminal neuropathy (12%), and hearing loss (10%).ConclusionsStereotactic radiosurgery for skull base chondrosarcomas is an important adjuvant option for the treatment of these rare tumors, as part of a team approach that includes initial surgical removal of symptomatic larger tumors.

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