From the National Cerebral and Cardiovascular Center, Suita, Osaka, Japan.
From the National Cerebral and Cardiovascular Center, Suita, Osaka, Japan
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. 2023 Feb;44(2):143-149. doi: 10.3174/ajnr.A7772. Epub 2023 Jan 26.
Radiation-induced changes can occur after stereotactic radiosurgery for brain AVMs, potentially causing symptomatic complications. We evaluated the incidence of such changes and the efficacy of repeat gamma knife radiosurgery for incompletely obliterated AVMs.
We retrospectively evaluated 150 patients who underwent gamma knife radiosurgery for AVMs between 2002 and 2020; twenty-five underwent further radiosurgical procedures for incompletely obliterated AVMs. We recorded the median margin doses at the first (median, 20 Gy; range, 12-23 Gy; AVM volume, 0.026-31.3 mL) and subsequent procedures (median, 18 Gy; range, 12-23 Gy; AVM volume, 0.048-9.2 mL).
After the first treatment, radiologic radiation-induced changes developed in 48 (32%) patients, eight of whom had symptomatic changes. After repeat gamma knife radiosurgery, 16 of 25 patients achieved complete AVM obliteration (64%). The development of radiation-induced changes after the first treatment was significantly associated with successful obliteration by subsequent radiosurgery (OR = 24.0, 95% CI 1.20-483, = .007). Radiation-induced changes occurred in only 5 (20%) patients who underwent a second gamma knife radiosurgery, one of whom experienced transient neurologic deficits. Between the first and repeat gamma knife radiosurgery procedures, there was no significant difference in radiologic and symptomatic radiation-induced changes ( = .35 and = 1.0, respectively).
Radiation-induced changes after the first gamma knife radiosurgery were associated with AVM obliteration after a repeat procedure. The risk of symptomatic radiation-induced changes did not increase with retreatment. When the first procedure fails to achieve complete AVM obliteration, a favorable outcome can be achieved by a repeat gamma knife radiosurgery, even if radiation-induced changes occur after the first treatment.
脑动静脉畸形(AVM)立体定向放射外科治疗后可发生放射性改变,可能导致症状性并发症。我们评估了这种改变的发生率以及对未完全闭塞的 AVM 进行重复伽玛刀放射外科治疗的疗效。
我们回顾性评估了 2002 年至 2020 年间接受伽玛刀放射外科治疗的 150 例 AVM 患者;其中 25 例因未完全闭塞的 AVM 行进一步放射外科治疗。我们记录了首次(中位数,20 Gy;范围,12-23 Gy;AVM 体积,0.026-31.3 mL)和随后的放射外科治疗(中位数,18 Gy;范围,12-23 Gy;AVM 体积,0.048-9.2 mL)的边缘剂量中位数。
首次治疗后,48 例(32%)患者出现影像学放射性改变,其中 8 例出现症状性改变。重复伽玛刀放射外科治疗后,25 例患者中有 16 例(64%)完全闭塞 AVM。首次治疗后发生放射性改变与随后放射外科治疗成功闭塞明显相关(OR=24.0,95%CI 1.20-483,.007)。仅 5 例(20%)行第二次伽玛刀放射外科治疗的患者发生放射性改变,其中 1 例出现短暂性神经功能缺损。首次和重复伽玛刀放射外科治疗之间,影像学和症状性放射性改变无显著差异( =.35 和 = 1.0)。
首次伽玛刀放射外科治疗后发生放射性改变与重复治疗后 AVM 闭塞有关。重复治疗时症状性放射性改变的风险不会增加。如果首次治疗未能完全闭塞 AVM,即使首次治疗后发生放射性改变,重复伽玛刀放射外科治疗也可获得良好的效果。