Hi IZD30
I'm sorry you are dealing with those trying issues, which surely cause concern. I’m sorry you are dealing with this enigmatic situation of how there are so many varying ideas about how to treat it.
My spouse was treated in 2013 with 28 sessions of fractionated Proton Therapy at the The Massachusetts General Hospital Francis H. Burr Proton Beam Therapy Center in Boston- for a 1.5 cm vestibular schwannoma , also known as a acoustic neuroma. Outcome - very good. No swelling of the tumor after proton treatment. Read more about this by looking at my posts under the alias of Keep Smiling. -Usually you send your MRI to a Proton Center and ask for consideration (for us it was free of charge) At a proton therapy center, a team of doctors evaluates and decides (usualy within 2 weeks) whether the patient is ideal for proton treatment and then a consultation is scheduled. The team of docs obviously considers many variables. Not all Acoustic neuroma patients are considered to be ideal candidates for proton therapy. In 2013 when we studied this subject I believe it was stated that if the tumor is larger than 2 cm that this is considered too large for proton treatment. I would have to research it to discover current philosophies. (for example, does complete deafness in one year=good proton candidate?) For one reason or another it seems that the docs at the proton centers do not always accept patients with acoustic neuromas.
My advice: Be your own best advocate. Do your research. Look up current studies. Weigh the pros and cons. You can type in certain words that are important to you personally and you can look up current medical studies. EXAMPLE:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24725695 is one study. Just look up studies. Go here:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=vestibular+schwannoma++proton.
Don’t look up only what I suggested- You can use the pubmed search tool (:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/) and you can look up studies yourself. Learn how to read the studies. Learn the medical lingo. Get help from google about things you don't understand. Try hard and find patients who had bad outcomes from various treatments.
- Is Proton BEAM treatment (which is new and was developed recently) be used in the near future for vestibular schwannomas? Find out which Proton Centers offer this and for which conditions it is meaningful and efficacious.
- Would more AN patients consider Proton therapy if it could actually shrink the tumor rather than stopping tumor growth? From our understanding, the tumor remains stable and doesn’t growth after Proton Therapy.
-Would more AN patients be admitted for proton therapy if there were more Proton Centers? Would more AN patients consider Proton Therapy IF it would be more convenient and less expensive?
-There are many proton therapy centers being built around the world. (see
http://www.proton-cancer-treatment.com/proton-therapy/proton-therapy-around-the-world/clinical-proton-centres-being-built-and-planned-centres/) The construction of these centers requires significant $ investment. If you research, you will find some negative comments about how Proton Therapy has doubtful outcomes for patients with certain problems, such as prostrate issues. Consider how proton therapy could be efficacious for one medical condition and not for another, and also possible biases of the commenters. Research this and try to uncover unbiased statistics and facts. Get on the Internet and research current info with through a critical lens.
-Will the proliferation of new proton centers threaten the revenue stream of medical providers of cyber knife, gamma knife and neurosurgery? Is that happening now? The number of patients who have vestibular schwannomas and who then get Proton Treatment seems to be small. Other treatments seem favored, but it could be wise to ask if this anti-proton therapy bias is because of people suffer with poor outcomes after Proton Therapy or if it is due to other reasons.
- Time slots are highly coveted for proton beam treatment. It seems the teams of doctors who review case studies and decide whether a patient is a good candidate for Proton therapy MAY favor accepting other "needier" patients- for proton therapy, rather than AN patients. For example, Proton Centers are filled with children with cancers. It may well be that the AN patients are shuffled off to other treatments since there are other ways of treating acoustic neuromas are available (Gamma Knife, Cyber knife, etc).
The hardest part of all this is that the doctors don't agree and they contradict each other. We got opinions from 14 doctors and not one of them offered similar opinions. In the end we relied on studies and anecdotes. There are AN patients who had proton therapy and who are now very well. It takes effort to do advanced searches at the discussion forum and find these people and then to schedule telephone calls and actually talk to them-- but that is exactly what we did. We also spoke to other patients who had other types of treatment. One kind AN forum member gave us this advice: Only select a treatment for yourself that you think you would select for your child.
It is a tricky situation. I sincerely hope you find an excellent solution. You will be in my thoughts. Please research and ask lots of questions. Above all- stay positive. Best of luck as you make decisions.