Hi Jim,
I believe going back 20 years ago FSR was the way to go.
Stereotactic radiosurgery was seen as risky.
The one shot nature meant that if you got it wrong there were serious consequences for healthy tissue or the radiosurgery didn't work because too much of the tumour was missed,
This made FSR far safer than early radiosurgery and more effective.
With FSR having such a long track history people see comfort with it and the possible advantages of fractionation were also discovered.
Its still a valid treatment and is often favoured for larger tumours.
But getting FSR a second time isn't done, due to the higher amounts of total radiation received.
It is known that FSR is not as effective at controlling aggressive tumours as Radiosurgery as new cells will be spawned during the treatment. However with AN's and their slow growing nature, this is far less an issue.
Its also know that small AN's remnants left after surgery for hearing and facial nerve preservation mostly don't grow .
Certainly an indicator that a new cell or two probably cant survive on its own after FSR.
I believe the main reason FSR is being used less is cost, profitability for the centre and patient convenience
Older machines from the 80's are gone. Machines from the late 90's have been upgraded.
FSR is now a choice, not a necessity.
Just about everyone can do radiosurgery now, and they do it with the same new machines that deliver FSR.