Nancy ~
I believe that in many AN patients, the tumor does grow at a glacial pace. However, at some point, it can experience a 'growth spurt' that will usually be manifested in the symptoms we all know too well; imbalance, hearing loss, vertigo, facial pain, etc. and these symptoms will usually force us to see a doctor, get an MRI and confront the reality of having an acoustic neuroma that has to be addressed. However, up until the time the symptoms awaken us to the realization that 'something is wrong', the AN can sit dormant or near-dormant for years. My very AN-experienced neurosurgeon guessed that my AN had been growing for 10 to 15 years. The pre-surgery MRI showed it as 4.5 cm and pressing hard on my brainstem but, according to the doctor, the tumor was actually closer to 5 cm when he operated on it. That leads me to believe that even a high-quality MRI with contrast can be less than perfectly accurate in depicting the actual size of a tumor. As you inferred, human error is also a factor that is always has to be considered. Obviously, gauging the size of an AN accurately when the option of radiation is in play is critical but the reality is that even the best MRI and gimlet-eyed doctor can be slightly wrong in gauging tumor size. That being the case, for those who tumors are deemed small enough to be treated with radiation, I would suggest they not postpone scheduling the treatment once the MRI shows the AN growing much beyond 2.5 cm - if they have that option. Of course, some AN patients, (Jim slowly raises his hand) don't find out they have an acoustic neuroma until it's quite large and far too big for radiation. However, that's a separate issue and, as in my case, debulking surgery followed by radiation is an option. Well, my doctors thought that it was. I agreed and the debulking/radiation process rendered a good result.
The takeaway from all this is that, yes, being vigilant with scheduling MRI scans and not waiting too long to undergo radiation once the tumor is anywhere close to 3 cm would be the prudent course.
Jim