Treatment of cystic craniopharyngiomas with yttrium-90 colloid solution.
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Published:1997-12
Issue:6
Volume:3
Page:E8
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ISSN:1092-0684
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Container-title:Neurosurgical Focus
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language:
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Short-container-title:FOC
Author:
Julow Jenö,Lányi Ferenc,Hajda Márta,Szeifert György T.,Bálint Katalin,Drasny Gábor,Pásztor Emil,Fedorcsák Imre,Borbély Katalin,Nyáry István
Abstract
The authors analyzed long-term follow-up data to assess the value of intracavitary irradiation with stereotactically implanted beta-emitting radioisotope 90Y-silicate colloid for the treatment of craniopharyngiomas. Fifty-seven craniopharyngiomas in 42 patients were selected for retrospective analysis. The yttrium-90 was implanted intracavitally, using computerized tomography-guided and three-dimensional stereotactic treatment planning. The cumulative dose aimed at the inner surface of the cyst wall was 300 Gy.
An average of 75% shrinkage of the initial cyst volume was observed. In 18 cases the reduction was more than 91%, and the cyst disappeared totally in 11 cases.
A 50% decrease in cyst volume was usually apparent between the 2nd and 4th months. A 70% decrease in cyst volume was seen by the 5th and 6th months and an 80% reduction by the 7th and 8th months. Cysts that were unchanged remained so throughout the observation period. The time course of volume reduction could be expressed mathematically by the formula of 0.73 X e-0.62 X T + 0.27, where “e” is the basic number of natural logarithm and “T” is the time expressed in months. Mean survival duration after intracavitary irradiation was 9.4 years.
The shrinkage of the cyst was a consequence of fibrosis of the wall, as seen on histopathological examination. The neuroophthalmological prognosis was favorable only when the optic disc was normal or nearly normal at the time of the treatment. In the presence of preexisting optic atrophy, visual deterioration proved to be irreversible. The long-term results support the view that intracavitary90Y-irradiation is a noninvasive and very effective method of treatment for craniopharyngioma cysts. Because of the 1.1 mm half-life decay of beta irradiation, it cannot influence the solid part of the tumor; therefore, the best result can be expected in solitary cysts.
Publisher
Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)
Subject
Neurology (clinical),General Medicine,Surgery
Cited by
4 articles.
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