Dosimetric Comparison of Dedicated Radiosurgery Platforms for the Treatment of Essential Tremor: Technical Report.
Authors: Marianayagam NJ, Paddick I, Persad AR, Hori YS, Maslowski A, Thirunarayanan I, Khanna AR, Park DJ, Buch V, Chang SD, Schneider MB, Yu H, Weidlich GA, Adler JR
Essential tremor (ET) is one of the most common adult movement disorders. As the worldwide population ages, the incidence and prevalence of ET is increasing. Although most cases can be managed conservatively, there is a subset of ET that is refractory to medical management. By virtue of being "reversible", deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the ventral intermediate nucleus (VIM) of the thalamus is one commonly accepted intervention. As an alternative to invasive and expensive DBS, there has been a renaissance in treating ET with lesion-based approaches, spearheaded most recently by high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU), the hallmark of which is that it is non-invasive. Meanwhile, stereotactic radiosurgical (SRS) lesioning of VIM represents another time-honored lesion-based non-invasive treatment of ET, which is especially well suited for those patients that cannot tolerate open neurosurgery and is now also getting a "second look". While multiple SRS platforms have been and continue to be used to treat ET, there is little in the way of dosimetric comparison between different technologies. In this brief technical report we compare the dosimetric profiles of three major radiosurgical platforms (Gamma Knife, CyberKnife Robotic Radiosurgery, and Zap-X Gyroscopic Radiosurgery (GRS)) for the treatment of ET. In general, the GRS and Gamma Knife were shown to have the best theoretical dosimetric profiles for VIM lesioning. Nevertheless the relevance of such superiority to clinical outcomes requires future patient studies.
Introduction
Purpose
Other
Study Objective
To compare the dosimetric profiles of three stereotactic radiosurgery platforms (Gamma Knife, CyberKnife, and Zap-X) for VIM thalamic lesioning in the treatment of essential tremor.
Disease model
Essential tremor
Targeted brain region(s)
Thalamus
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
No direct biological or behavioral effects were measured; dosimetric modelling showed Gamma Knife (4 mm collimator) and Zap‑X Gyroscopic Radiosurgery (GRS, notably the 3 mm and 4 mm collimators, with the 3 mm producing the smallest focus) had the most concentrated VIM lesion profiles (suggesting potentially fewer off‑target effects), and no focused ultrasound parameters were tested.
Safety-related matter
Although SRS is generally described as safe and GK/RRS/GRS have regulatory clearance, the authors warn of risks including 'hyperresponder' behavior, radiation spill to adjacent thalamus/internal capsule, and symptomatic radionecrosis (associated with larger V12Gy volumes). They report an approximately 4-8% risk of contralateral motor symptoms (numbness, tingling, weakness, or permanent disability) and raise concern about low-dose radiomodulation effects (seen at doses as low as 10 Gy) that require further clinical study.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Focal Characteristics
Focal depth: None; Focal length: None; Aperture size: None
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