I'm trying to decide between two teams and neurosurgery departments for treatment with SRS. The first highly regarded surgeon I met with at UCSF said Gamma knife was the best choice and what he would treat with, and to avoid the Linac based machine that Kaiser uses. He was quite persuasive, citing the superior accuracy of Gamma, but the bill to me will be high (over $65,000.) The latest Kaiser surgeon I met with (I have Kaiser coverage) was persuasive that the newest TrueBeam (a linac machine) witi Brainlab software is highly accurate, and a good choice. (By the way he trained at UCSF, so hmm, dissenting opinions even from that institution), I would not need to pay out of pocket for this treatment, but I want to make the smartest choice overall, for my health. I'm reading many articles about both machines, and am encouraged that UCSF, UCSD, UCLA, Vanderbilt, Sloan Kettering, and Mayo all use the TrueBeam (made by Varian). It seems that UCSF neurosurgery prefers Gamma, but their radio-oncology department is touting their TrueBeam treatment, and since both departments work together on our tumors, that's a bit confusing.
I'd love to hear your experience if you were treated with the Varian TrueBeam, and why you made that choice. For reference, my hearing is already very reduced so saving it is less of a concern than I wish, but vertigo has receded, and dizziness and balance are improving with PT.