A member recently posted this interview of a House surgeon, Dr. Hitselberger, in which the doctor, when asked about radiosurgery, took the opportunity to make some pretty ridiculous statements, IMO. Since it was posted in the microsurgery section, I felt it appropriate to discuss that particular response in the radiosurgery forum, to try and avoid flaming from surgery patients who feel the need to parrot this misinformation (not meaning Jeff, who only posted the link to an interview he found interesting
).
Here's what was said (with my interjections added, of course).....
Beck: Dr. Hitselberger, can you please share your thoughts on Gamma Knife, Proton Beam and related radiographic treatments for skull base tumors?
Hitselberger: Sure, Great topic! There are a number of things to consider with Gamma Knife and other radiologic therapies like Proton Beam…. First, radiologic therapies don’t remove tumors. If the tumor grows, or the treatment is not successful, when we go in to remove the tumor surgically, it’s a bigger problem. By the time we operate, additional time has gone by and the tumor might be larger. Also, the scarring which results from radiologic treatment makes it more difficult to remove the tumor surgically because the capsule is harder to define and the tumor can be more adherent to healthy brain or other cranial nerve tissue.
First misleading statement, in their own recently published study on the topic, House stated it
may be more difficult to remove the tumor after radiation, and that it was not more difficult in every case, but that's not what this doc is insinuating here, is it? Also, tumors may be more difficult to remove following a regrowth after surgery, for the same reason, scar tissue.
Another serious, yet extremely rare issue, is the tumor can actually change it’s biologic characteristics from benign to malignant following radiologic therapy. We have seen radiated tumors, on rare occasion, which have changed to malignant.
At least he was honest enough to say that this is extremely rare. However, nobody is really sure if in the very few cases in which a previously thought benign tumor turned malignant, if the tumor didn't have a malignant component all along. AN's have turned malignant after surgery as well, when the biopsied tissue showed benign. In those cases the surgeons say the tumor lkely had a portion that was malignant all along, so why do they say radiosurgery
causes the tumor to change?
Radiologic treatment has another important issue and that has to do with recurrence. We’ve probably seen some 50 cases in which tumors have re-grown, it’s not just an odd one or two cases, there are quite a few around and I think our series is probably the largest in the world. We hope to publish that paper late in 2004, or in 2005, detailing our findings.
This actually promotes radiosurgery IMO, of all the surgeries they do at House, only about 50 have been regrowths following radiosurgery? Not bad considering the tens of thousands of patients who have had radosurgery in the U.S. alone. And it
is the odd one or two cases when you look at these cases by the hundred. Published, peer reviewed studies consistently show control rates over 95%, what this doc is saying pretty much supports that, though unintentionally. ÂÂ
On that same issue, when people have radiologic therapy, they need to be followed by radiographic studies every year, and that’s not a great thing either.
Only for the first couple years, then it changes to every two years, then every three to five. After five years, it is almost unheard of for the tumor to start growing again, and the vast majority have shrank significantly. I suspect alot of patients stop having MRI's all together by 10 years. Also, it is recommended that surgery patients have follow ups for life as well, as regrowth is nearly equal between the two treatments options.
Another issue, which few people think about, is getting health or life insurance. The issue is -- almost no one will insure you after radiologic treatment, because you still have a brain tumor -- at least that’s what I’ve heard from underwriters.
I work fo a major insurance company, and that is simply not the case. Radiosurgery is considered proven and effective for benign and malignant brain tumors, and is fully covered. If it were the case that radiosurgery is not curative like this doc is trying to say, we would NOT pay nearly $30,000 for it, only to have to pay for surgery down the road.ÂÂ
Lastly, radiation therapy doesn’t cure benign tumors anywhere else in the body, so I’m not really sure why people try to apply it to acoustic neuromas, it’s just not a great idea most of the time.
There are so many things wrong with this it's hard to find where to start, first radiosurgery has not until very recently been used anywhere else in the body, it just couldn't be done with other machines. CyberKnife is having great success all over the body. Second, is this medical professional saying that ALL benign tumors share the same biology, from schwannomas to meningomas, from warts to moles? That's laughable. Different kinds of tumors, benign or malignant, have different biological make ups, different cells, etc. Some kinds are more radiosensitive than others, and a professional who performs radiosurgery can make the determination as to whether radiosurgery is a good option or not. The doctor who did my CyberKnife has a PhD in tumor biology and immunology, I guess somebody should have told him all benign tumors are the same.ÂÂ
So all-in-all, I think Gamma Knife and Proton Beam therapies are interesting, and they have their place in certain, selected, unusual situations, but I think surgical removal is usually the preferred treatment. In fact, I can only recall referring one patient for radiotherapy, and that was a very unusual case.
So which is it? Does it work or doesn't it? Is it only effective in "certain, selected, unusual situations"? Of course surgical removal is the preferred treatment, they're surgeons.
http://www.audiologyonline.com/interview/displayarchives.asp?interview_id=315