Hi all,
Many times, in email and in posts, people may refer to "I'm having FSR"... yet, for me, I have to sit back and try to figure which form of "FSR" is being used.... so, hoping this clarifies.
FSR stands for "Fractionated Stereotactic Radiation/Radiosurgery". "Fractionated" notes that the treatments are broken up over a number of days (maybe 3 days, 5 days, 25-30 days, etc). This can be applied to many radio protocols being used today, such as the Novalis technology (usually fractionated in 25-30 days and it seems, when most reference "FSR", they seem to mean this particular type of technology), Cyberknife Machine (sometimes 3-5 days), Trilogy, etc.
There are AN treatment technologies that are also used in 1 day, such as GammaKnife and yes, on occassion, Cyberknife (primarily for meningiomas and such). If a 1 day dose is done, it is not "fractionated'.
Mark did a really great post in this thread, in which his item/bullet point #1 also notes this. FYI for reference:
http://anausa.org/forum/index.php?topic=3822.0"1) Fractionated vs. One dose - The theory with doing the treatment in fractions is that it is less toxic on the healthy tissue by giving it time to recover between treatments as opposed to the abnormal DNA of the tumor which is unable to do so.There is not long term studies on FSR results as opposed to the one dose, but the preliminary studies that are typically in the 5-7 year range do show improved hearing and facial nerve preservation results compared to one dose with comparable tumor control. So either protocol choice is reasonable with perhaps slightly better preservation odds with FSR."
So, for me, bear with me if I get confused if someone notes "FSR".. there are many AN treatment options that are fractionated and we have to decifer which treatment protocol is being referenced.
I didn't have enough coffee yet today... I hope this sounded ok....
thanks.
Phyl