Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to compare the defocused (non-therapeutic) irradiation
between the Model-C gamma knife with the automatic positioning system™ (APS) and with
the non-APS mode.
Methods: 41 males and 59 females (mean age: 54 years) had the following pathologies: 38 benign
tumors, 43 malignant tumors, 16 vascular lesions, and 3 trigeminal neuralgias. These
included 192 lesions (mean volume: 4.8 mL), 61 (32%) of them were located deeply.
The radiation treatment time needed and the choice of helmets and shots for each lesion
were analyzed. The inter-group difference is analyzed using the one-way ANOVA method.
Results: The APS mode could be applied alone in 79 patients or was always possible in nearly
95% of patients with benign lesions. APS-treatment failed in three patients due to
unexpected collisions, and the other 18 harbored some advanced peripheral metastatic
lesions. The non-APS mode required 47% more defocused time than the pure APS mode
(1.1 vs. 0.75 minutes, p<0.01) before starting the next shot. Patients treated by
the APS mode are exposed to a 70% less (p<0.05) unplanned, defocused irradiation dose
than those by the non-APS mode. Although there is a tendency in the APS group to use
fewer helmets but more shots per lesion for achieving an optimal dosimetry, there
was no difference in the averaged defocused time per patient.
Conclusions: The APS system makes GK radiosurgery run more smoothly, rapidly, comfortable and
safer than ever. It improves the design of more conformal dose plans, especially for
benign lesions, and the patients will also be exposed to less unnecessary radiation
doses.
Key words
automatic positioning system - gamma knife - irradiation - radiosurgery
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Correspondence
Dr. T. S.M. Chiou
Gamma Knife Center
Department of Neurosurgery
China Medical University Hospital
2 Yuh-Der Road
Taichung
Taiwan
Republic of China
Telefon: +886/4/2205 21 21 ext. 44 34
Fax: +886/4/2205 21 21 ext. 44 35
eMail: tsmchiou@pchome.com.tw