Maruyama Keisuke, Kamada Kyousuke, Ota Takahiro, Koga Tomoyuki, Itoh Daisuke, Ino Kenji, Aoki Shigeki, Tago Masao, Masutani Yoshitaka, Shin Masahiro, Saito Nobuhito
Department of Neurosurgery, University of Tokyo Hospital, Tokyo, Japan.
Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2008 Apr 1;70(5):1330-5. doi: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2007.08.010. Epub 2007 Nov 1.
To minimize the morbidity of radiosurgery for critically located lesions, we integrated diffusion-tensor tractography into treatment planning for gamma-knife radiosurgery. We calculated the refined tolerance of the pyramidal tract (PT) after prospective application of the technique to additional patients.
The relationship between the dosimetry during treatment planning and the development of subsequent motor complications was investigated in 24 patients, 9 studied retrospectively and 15 studied prospectively. The maximal dose to the PT and the volumes of the PT that received > or = 20 Gy (20-Gy volume) and > or = 25 Gy (25-Gy volume) were calculated. Univariate logistic regression analyses were used to produce dose-response curves. Differences in the tolerable dose according to the PT location were calculated.
Univariate logistic regression analysis of the motor complications revealed a significant independent correlation with the maximal dose to the PT and the 20- and 25-Gy volumes. The maximal dose to the PT with a 5% risk of motor complications was 23 Gy compared with 15 Gy in our previous report. The risk of motor complications was significantly greater in the internal capsule than in the corona radiata for the 20- and 25-Gy volumes in generalized Wilcoxon tests (p = 0.031), although no significant difference was observed for the maximal dose.
The tolerable dose of the PT was greater than that previously reported. The internal capsule was more sensitive to high-dose irradiation over a wide area of the PT, probably owing to the dense concentration of motor fibers.