Richard -
surgery vs radiation is a very personal choice. And you must do what you feel is right for you - after educating yourself on ANs, talking to as many docs as you feel you need to, looking at the pros & cons of each type of treatment, etc.
I was lucky enough to have a neurotologist who does both radiation and surgery, and in my case I was a candidate for either. I asked my doc to make the decision for me, but he flat out refused. Pissed me off at first, but ultimate I greatly appreciated this. After weighing both my options, I decided that surgery was my best choice - although originally I told my doc that there was "no way I was having surgery". Never say never
I chose surgery because I just wanted the tumor out of my head. I wanted to know it was gone (surgically removed) not just hopefully dying (from radiation). I wanted to get on with my life; I wanted less follow-up after the procedure. My doc has surgical patients get an annual MRI, whereas his radiation patients usually get more than that - especially until it's obvious that the tumor is dying.
I'm a certified control freak and I'm also a worrier. I knew if I left the tumor inside my head that I'd attribute every headache, ear twinge, etc. to a growing tumor - whether that was a reality or not.
I also like to meet things head on and decided that I wanted to know what side-effects I'd end up with ASAP so that I could deal with them. My doc told me that with radiation I might not experience side-effects for 12-18 months post treatment. I knew with surgery I'd know much sooner what I'd be facing.
I honestly probably also gave some consideration to the fact that the woman in the waiting room who had the appointment after me was there because she had tumor regrowth after radiation (with a different doc, not mine - although it can happen to anyone regardless of doctor).
I'm also probably strange in the fact that I couldn't fathom having a metal frame screwed into my skull with just local anesthestic for the GK treatment, yet I had no issue having a "window" surgically cut into my skull and then replaced because I'd be asleep. I remember my doc laughing at that logic.
Nine months later I went on to have a titanium rod implanted into my skull (for a BAHA) while wide-awake with local sedation. Same doc. I'm sure he appreciated the logic in this also
Surgery was a great choice for me - and even more so when I woke up and my doc told me my tumor ended up being too large to radiate (his threshold is 3 cms) - but it's not for everyone. Those who have chosen radiation are generally just as happy with their choice - so I wouldn't say I'm "leaning a bit toward radiation".
I'm actually leaning towards whatever is right for you and I just want to make sure that you cover all your bases.
As for your age I don't think it's a factor - I was 45 1/2 at the time of my diagnosis and I was given the option of radiation. Lots of docs who don't do radiation don't understand everything about it and often don't really know who is a candidate; lots of misconceptions from the "old" days before radiation was more widely used.
That said, usually size and location are the 2 factors that decide if radiation is a good idea for an AN or not.
Regrowth can happen with radiation or surgery. I don't know the statistics on radiation growth, but regrowth after surgery where it's believed the entire tumor has been removed is 1-2%. I say "where it's believed" because AN surgery is done through a microscope (looking through that "window" I mentioned earlier) and the tumor is peeled away layer by layer. Docs do their best, but even one cell left behind has the potential of regrowth.
Sorry for the long response,
Jan